Great Synagogue
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Great Synagogue or Grand Synagogue may refer to:
- Belz Great Synagogue, in Jerusalem, the largest synagogue in the world
- Dohány Street Synagogue the Great Synagogue (Nagy Zsinagóga) of Budapest, Europe's largest and the world's third largest synagogue.
- Great Synagogue of Europe, built Brussels in 1878, dedicated as the Synagogue of Europe in 2008
- Great Synagogue (Białystok), destroyed in 1941
- Great Synagogue (Copenhagen)
- Great Synagogue (Deventer)
- Great Synagogue (Florence)
- Great Synagogue (Gdańsk), destroyed in 1939
- Great Synagogue (Gibraltar), oldest synagogue on the Iberian Peninsula
- Great Synagogue (Grodno)
- Great Synagogue (Iaşi)
- Great Synagogue (Jasło), destroyed during World War II
- Great Synagogue (Jerusalem)
- Great Synagogue (Katowice), destroyed in 1939
- Great Synagogue (Łódź), destroyed in 1939
- Great Synagogue (Łomża), destroyed during World War II
- Great Synagogue of London, destroyed by aerial bombing in the London Blitz in 1941
- Great Synagogue (Oran), converted into a mosque in 1975
- Great Synagogue (Petah Tikva)
- Great Synagogue (Plzeň), the world's fourth largest synagogue
- Great Synagogue (Piotrków Trybunalski)
- Great Synagogue (Rome), the largest synagogue in Rome
- Great Synagogue (Sydney), opened in 1878
- Great Synagogue (Stockholm)
- Great Synagogue (Tbilisi)
- Great Synagogue (Tel Aviv), opened in 1926
- Great Synagogue (Vilna), destroyed during and after World War II
- Great Synagogue (Warsaw), destroyed in 1943 after the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
Museums
- Amsterdam Esnoga, a historical Great Synagogue in Amsterdam, now part of the Joods Historisch Museum (Jewish History Museum)
- Włodawa Great Synagogue, built between 1769-1774, now a museum complex in Poland
Synagogues in antiquity
- Great Assembly, or Anshei Knesset HaGedolah, sometimes referred to as the Great Synagogue, of Temple times.
- Great Synagogue of Baghdad, an ancient building in present day Iraq
- Sardis Synagogue, Manisa, Turkey - The complex destroyed in 616 AD by the Sassanian-Persians.
See also
- New Synagogue
- Old Synagogue
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