30, rue des Marchands, 68000 Colmar +33 (0)3 89 41 90 60 http://www.musee-bartholdi.fr/
Plus d'infosContenus associés au mot-clé “synagogue”
Old Synagogue of Obernai
9, Rue de Sélestat, 67210 Obernai
Plus d'infosRosenwiller’s Jewish cemetery
3, Route d’Oberhausbergen, 67200 Rosenwiller +33 (0)3 88 60 90 90 https://www.rosenwiller.com/patrimoine/
Plus d'infosMikvah of Bischheim
Cour des Boecklin – 17, rue Nationale, 67800 Bischheim +33 (0)3 88 81 49 47
Plus d'infosMusée de l’œuvre Notre Dame
3, place du Château, 67000 Strasbourg Tel : +33 3 68 98 50 00 http://www.musees.strasbourg.eu/
Plus d'infosAlsatian Museum of Strasbourg
23-25, quai Saint-Nicolas, 67000 Strasbourg Tel : +33 3 68 98 50 00 http://www.musees.strasbourg.eu/
Plus d'infosSynagogue of Strasbourg
1A, Rue René Hirschler, 67000 Strasbourg Tel : +33 3 88 14 46 50
Plus d'infosMuseum of Popular Arts and traditions of Marmoutier
6, rue du général Leclerc, 67440 Marmoutier +33 (0)3 88 02 36 30 http://www.museedemarmoutier.fr/
Plus d'infosOld Synagogue of Marmoutier
11, rue du Plan, 67440 Marmoutier
Plus d'infosHouse of Albert Kahn
8, rue du 22 novembre (ancienne rue des juifs), 67448 Marmoutier
Plus d'infosHouse of Alphonse Lévy
5, rue des Ecoles, 67440 Marmoutier
Plus d'infosJudeo-Alsatian Museum of Bouxwiller
62, Grand Rue, 67330 Bouxwiller +33 (0)3 88 70 97 17 http://judaisme.sdv.fr/today/musee/
Plus d'infosOld Synagogue of Pfaffenhoffen
Passage du Schneeberg, 67350 Pfaffenhoffen +33 (0)3 88 07 80 05 (Musée de l’Image populaire)
Plus d'infosTourism Development Agency of Bas-Rhin
4, rue Bartisch, 67100 Strasbourg +33 (0)3 88 15 45 88 http://www.tourisme67.com/
Plus d'infosSynagogue of Saint-Louis
5, rue de la Synagogue, 68300 Saint-Louis +33 (0)3 89 69 84 50
Plus d'infosSynagogue and Museum of Hochfelden
12, place du Général Koenig, 67270 Hochfelden +33 (0)3 88 89 04 52
Plus d'infosOld Synagogue of Rouffach
8, rue Ullin, 68250 Rouffach
Plus d'infosSynagogue of the Hebrew Cultural Association
46, avenue de la Libération, 14000 Caen +33 (0)2 31 43 60 54 https://aci-caen.org/
Plus d'infosPalais de justice – Monument juif
36, rue aux Juifs, 76000 Rouen Tel : + 33 2 35 52 48 09 http://www.lamaisonsublime.fr/
Plus d'infosTrondheim
Trondheim’s synagogue is doubly unusual: it is the northernmost synagogue in Europe and the only one that has served as a train station, before the building became a synaogue in 1925!! Jews first settled in Trondheim in the 1880s. They quickly became very integrated, participation in all economical, social and cultural aspects of life. The Jewish community in Trondheim has never really ...
Plus d'infosOslo
It was not until the law passed in 1814, prohibiting the entry of Jews into Norway, was revoked in 1851, that Jews could officially settle in Oslo. A small Jewish community was organised and recognised in 1892, with 29 members. Following a separation of the community, two separate synagogues were opened in 1920. Norwegian Jewish cultural activity developed, especially through the press. First ...
Plus d'infosNorway
Visitors walking on the street named after Norway's national poet Henrik Wergeland (1808-45) will be reminded that it was Wergeland who was behind the law that allowed Jews to immigrate to this country. Most of Norway's Jews live in Oslo (950 people), with about 100 living in Trondheim. The Norwegian community can pride itself on having given Israel a minister: the great rabbi Michael Melchior, who
Plus d'infosGöteborg
Jews have lived in Göteborg since 1782. The Conservative (masorti) rite synagogue is located at the same address as the community center. There is also an Orthodox minyan in Göteborg. Before settling in the city of Gothenburg in 1792, Jews were welcomed along with other minorities to the nearby island of Marstrand. Although the first synagogue was built in 1808, the presence of a rabbi did ...
Plus d'infosMalmö
Danish Jews evacuated during the Nazi occupation arrived by boat in Malmö thanks to Count Folke Bernadotte. Some Jews died after their arrival and are buried in the city cemetery, where a monument honors their memory. A Jewish community (originally made up of German Jews) was established in this city on the Baltic coast facing Copenhagen in 1871, shortly after the emancipation. It now numbers ...
Plus d'infosUppsala
The large university city of Uppsala does not have a Jewish community but it does have a Jewish studies department.
Plus d'infosStockholm
Established in 1775, the Jewish community of Stockholm numbers 5200 members. Its is situated near Raoul Wallenberg Square. The square was named after the Swedish diplomat who, after saving a number of Hungarian Jews, was arrested and then most likely assassinated by the Soviets. A sculpture by Willy Gordon representing a Jew fleeing with a Sepher Torah stands in front of the building. The ...
Plus d'infosSweden
Sweden's Jewish community is the most important one in Scandinavia, as much in terms of the number of practicing faithful (18000-20000) as culturally. In February 2000, the Swedish capital hosted the International Conference of the Shoah, dedicated to drawing attention to the process of Jewish stolen goods and to the teaching of the genocide.
Plus d'infosHelsinki
, a fortress island opposite Helsinki, was the site of the first Jewish place of worship. According to legal developments, a decree from 1869 and the letter from the Senate from 1876, demobilised soldiers were allowed to work in the civilian sector. The city of Helsinki decided to donate a plot of land to the Jewish community in 1900 in order to build a synagogue. It is located on Malminkatu ...
Plus d'infosFinland
The first Jews who settled in Finland were of Russian origin and were soldiers of the czar's army, called cantonists. With its independence in 1917, the country promptly granted civil rights to the Jews. In 1939, when Finland became an ally of the Third Reich against the Soviet Union, Finnish Jews found themselves in the uneasy position of serving in an army allied with the Nazis: a prayer ...
Plus d'infosHornbaek
The only glatt kosher hotel in Scandinavia, the Strand Hotel is located in the well-known spa town of Hornbaek. It operates between Passover and Rosh Hashanah and has a synagogue on the premises.
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