Fortress synagogues

Fortress synagogues are synagogues built to withstand attack while protecting the lives of people sheltering within them.

Fortress synagogues first appear in the Polish-Lithuanian commonwealth in the sixteenth century at a time of frequent invasions from the east by Ottoman, Russian and Walachian troops.[1] The Old Synagogue (Przemyśl) is a typical example. The region also had fortified churches, of which St. Andrew's Church, Kraków is a surviving example.

The Old Synagogue (Krakow), a rare, surviving Fortress synagogue, was rebuilt in 1570 with an attic wall featuring loopholes and windows placed far above ground level, features borrowed from military architecture. It has been altered many times since.[2] Walls were thick masonry, with heavy buttressing to withstand assault. [3] Like other fortifications, the synagogues were often built on hills.[4] The Husiatyn Synagogue is another example of a surviving, sixteenth century Fortress synagogue.

See also

references

  1. ^ Historic Cities and Sacred Sites: Cultural Roots for Urban Futures, By Ismail Serageldin, Ephim Shluger, Joan Martin-Brown, World Bank Publications, 2001, pp. 307-8.
  2. ^ Historic Cities and Sacred Sites: Cultural Roots for Urban Futures, By Ismail Serageldin, Ephim Shluger, Joan Martin-Brown, World Bank Publications, 2001, pp. 307-8.
  3. ^ Historic Cities and Sacred Sites: Cultural Roots for Urban Futures, By Ismail Serageldin, Ephim Shluger, Joan Martin-Brown, World Bank Publications, 2001, pp. 307-8.
  4. ^ Erased: Vanishing Traces of Jewish Galicia in Present-day Ukraine, By Omer Bartov, Princeton University Press, 2007, p. 105 ff.