9, Rue de Sélestat, 67210 Obernai Obernai (judaisme-alsalor.fr)
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9, Rue de Sélestat, 67210 Obernai Obernai (judaisme-alsalor.fr)
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3, Route d’Oberhausbergen, 67200 Rosenwiller +33 (0)3 88 60 90 90 Le Cimetière Israélite – Rosenwiller Site officiel
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Cour des Boecklin – 17, rue Nationale, 67800 Bischheim +33 (0)3 88 81 49 47 Le miqvé, ou bain rituel juif – Bischheim.alsace
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3, place du Château, 67000 Strasbourg Tel : +33 3 68 98 50 00 http://www.musees.strasbourg.eu/
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23-25, quai Saint-Nicolas, 67000 Strasbourg Tel : +33 3 68 98 50 00 http://www.musees.strasbourg.eu/
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20, rue des Charpentiers, 67000 Strasbourg +33 (0)3 88 52 28 28
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1A, Rue René Hirschler, 67000 Strasbourg Tel : +33 3 88 14 46 50
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6, rue du général Leclerc, 67440 Marmoutier +33 (0)3 88 02 36 30 http://www.museedemarmoutier.fr/
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11, rue du Plan, 67440 Marmoutier Communauté de Marmoutier (judaisme-alsalor.fr)
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8, rue du 22 novembre (ancienne rue des juifs), 67448 Marmoutier
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5, rue des Ecoles, 67440 Marmoutier
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62, Grand Rue, 67330 Bouxwiller +33 (0)3 88 70 97 17 http://judaisme.sdv.fr/today/musee/
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Passage du Schneeberg, 67350 Pfaffenhoffen +33 (0)3 88 07 80 05 (Musée de l’Image populaire) La Synagogue (valdemoder.fr)
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4, rue Bartisch, 67100 Strasbourg +33 (0)3 88 15 45 88 http://www.tourisme67.com/
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5, rue de la Synagogue, 68300 Saint-Louis +33 (0)3 89 69 84 50
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12, place du Général Koenig, 67270 Hochfelden +33 (0)3 88 89 04 52 Hochfelden (judaisme-alsalor.fr)
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8, rue Ullin, 68250 Rouffach
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46, avenue de la Libération, 14000 Caen +33 (0)2 31 43 60 54
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36, rue aux Juifs, 76000 Rouen Tel : + 33 2 35 52 48 09 La Maison Sublime (visitezlamaisonsublime.fr)
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The Jewish community of Copenhagen has been active since the end of the 17th century. Today, most of Denmark’s 7000 Jews live in Copenhagen. Abraham Salomon of Rausnitz was its first rabbi, appointed in 1687. Six years later, a Jewish cemetery was established in Mollegade. Destroyed by a fire in 1795, no synagogue was active until a liberal one was built in 1833 in Krystalgade. Years ...
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The city of Galati has been a major Romanian trade hub since the seventeenth century. In 1868, it was the theater for acts of vandalism against Jews following accusations of their having committed ritual murders. The imposing “Synagogue of Artisans” was the only temple to remain standing out of the twenty-nine that were active here during the 1930s. Built in 1875, the synagogue ...
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Approximately thirty miles northeast of Presov, the small city of Stropkov had one of the largest Jewish communities in the region and was an important center of Judaism. Many of its Jews arrived from Poland in the seventeenth century, victims of the pogroms who were in search of the relative security in lands belonging to the Hapsburg Empire. Although allowed to work in the city, they did ...
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Bardejov possessed a large Jewish quarter where some 5000 Jews lived before World War II. This small medieval city of 35000 inhabitants lies thirty-seven miles north of Presov near the Polish border. Most of Bardejov’s Jewish community was wiped out during the war. Despite the devastations of the war and postwar reconstruction, a few houses and an interesting eighteenth-century ...
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Not far from Kosice, Presov was also an important center of Jewish life. More than 6000 Jews from the city and surrounding villages were killed during the war. Today fewer than 100 Jews live here in Presov. The area from near the old city center with its Renaissance homes and palace to beyond the city walls once marked the extent of the Jewish quarter. Close to the Jewish community center ...
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The capital of eastern Slovakia, Kosice is a large industrial city of 250000 inhabitants. Its sizable Jewish community was almost totally annihilated during the Second World War. The city os now home to 800 Jews. The spacious nineteenth-century is in a building adjacent to the community headquarters. The building also includes a mikvah, a kosher butcher shop, and a prayer hall. This ...
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Archaeologists have recently unearthed traces of a Jewish presence in Salona (Solin), capital of Roman Dalmatia and sister city to Split, that dates as far back as the first centuries C.E. Salona was destroyed in the seventh century, and its survivors, some of whom were Jewish, took refuge behind the solid walls of Emperor Diocletian’s palace, the origin of present-day Split. ...
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The Ashkenazic synagogue, built in the nineteenth century after a design by Hungarian architect Lipot Baumhorn, was destroyed in 1944. The Sephardic synagogue, built in 1928, is still used by the city’s Jewish residents. The community today consists of around a hundred members, as compared to the nearly 2000 it numbered before the war. The Jewish presence in Rijeka probably dates back ...
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Varazdin is an important trading town located between Vienna and Trieste. The Jewish presence probably dates from the 18th century, mainly from Moravia, Hungary and Austria. They worked there mainly in the cattle trade. Among the town’s most prominent figures was Mirko Breyer, a patriotic author and book collector, who donated many works to national institutions. The synagogue was ...
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Zagreb is the capital of Croatia. The Jewish presence probably dates back to the 10th century, originating from surrounding areas, but also from Spain and France. A place of prayer was mentioned at the end of the 15th century. Following the expulsion of 1526, the Jews were not able to return until two centuries later. About 50 Jewish families from Bohemia, Moravia and Hungary lived in Zagreb ...
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Piran is a former possession of the City of Doges, which explains its Venetian atmosphere. It contains some beautiful architecture, including a replica of the Campanile in the Piazza San Marco. This charming little coastal town has preserved its medieval ghetto square, Zidovski Trg, which can be entered through an arcade. The square is surrounded by several multistory houses that undeniably ...
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