- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Lost Synagogues of Europe re-creates in vivid color paintings and chronicles the life stories of seventy-seven majestic—and destroyed—synagogues built from the early 1600s to 1930 in sixteen countries, helping to revive a thriving European Jewish culture and heritage.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Paul LindsaySynagogues of London CB67,99 €
- Paul B JaskotThe Architecture of Oppression176,99 €
- Deslee CampbellSynagogues of the First Century C.E.8,99 €
- Eric Mendelsohn's Synagogues in America50,99 €
- David W Erdman100 Lost Architectural Treasures of Old Charlotte32,99 €
- Jeff SuessLost Cincinnati24,99 €
- Richard CahanLost in America30,99 €
-
-
-
Lost Synagogues of Europe re-creates in vivid color paintings and chronicles the life stories of seventy-seven majestic—and destroyed—synagogues built from the early 1600s to 1930 in sixteen countries, helping to revive a thriving European Jewish culture and heritage.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Jewish Publication Society
- Seitenzahl: 280
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. November 2025
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780827615694
- ISBN-10: 0827615698
- Artikelnr.: 73245481
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Jewish Publication Society
- Seitenzahl: 280
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. November 2025
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780827615694
- ISBN-10: 0827615698
- Artikelnr.: 73245481
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Andrea Strongwater is an author and artist whose artwork has been shown worldwide, including in the collections of the University Medical Center of Princeton, the Herbert F. Johnson Museum in Ithaca, New York, the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York, Or Hadash Synagogue in Atlanta, and the Georges Cziffra Foundation in Senlis, France. Some of her paintings have been sold, and their images have also been sold as prints, postcards, and notecards at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC, the Shoah Memorial in Paris, and to private collectors. The forerunner to this present volume is her award-winning children’s book Where We Once Gathered: Lost Synagogues of Europe. Ismar Schorsch is chancellor emeritus of and Rabbi Herman Abramovitz Professor of Jewish History at the Jewish Theological Seminary. He is the author of several books, including Canon Without Closure: Torah Commentaries and Leopold Zunz: Creativity in Adversity.
Foreword: From a Sacred Place to a Sacred Book by Ismar Schorsch Acknowledgments Introduction: Where Jews Once Gathered Guide: Synagogue Locations by Country 1. 1600s Livorno: 1603, exterior and interior Vilnius: Great Synagogue, 1633, exterior and interior Zab
udów: between 1635 and 1646, exterior Liuboml: mid-1600s–early 1700s, exterior 2. 1700s G
bin: 1710 (rebuilt in the late 1800s), exterior Berlin: Old Synagogue, 1714, exterior and interior Vo
pa: first half of 1700s, exterior Przedbórz: between 1754 and 1760, exterior and interior Niasvi: Great Synagogue, 1700s, exterior Varniai: Wooden Synagogue, late 1700s, exterior 3. 1800s Seesen: 1810, exterior Homie
: Great Synagogue, 1833, exterior Bad Buchau: 1839, exterior and interior Kassel: 1839, exterior and interior Dresden: Semper Synagogue, 1840, exterior and interior Belz: Great Synagogue, 1843, exterior Hamburg: Temple, 1844, exterior and interior Lviv: Temple, 1845, exterior Varniai: Masonry Synagogue, mid-1800s, exterior Vienna: Leopoldstädter Temple, 1858, exterior and interior Kretinga: 1860 (restored after an 1889 fire), exterior Gliwice: New Synagogue, 1861, exterior Telšiai: Great Beit Midrash, 1861, exterior Aachen: 1862, exterior Bochum: 1863 (rebuilt in 1896), exterior Épinal: 1863, exterior Jelgava: 1864, exterior Bytom: 1869, exterior Hannover: New Synagogue, 1870, exterior and interior Riga: Great Choral Synagogue, 1871, exterior Wroc
aw: New Synagogue, 1872, exterior Vienna: Turner Temple, 1872, exterior Nuremberg: Synagogue at Hans-Sachs-Platz, 1874, exterior Heilbronn: 1877, exterior and interior Karlovy Vary: 1877, exterior and interior Warsaw: Great Synagogue, 1878, exterior and interior Bruchsal: 1881, exterior and interior Teplice: 1882, exterior and interior Tübingen: 1882, exterior and interior Bydgoszcz: 1884, exterior Landau in der Pfalz: 1884, exterior and interior Mariánské Lázn
: 1884, exterior K
odzko, 1885, exterior Gdäsk: Great Synagogue, 1887, exterior and interior
ód
: Great Synagogue, 1887, exterior and interior
eské Bud
jovice: 1888, exterior Rawicz: 1889, exterior Horokhiv: Great Synagogue, 1880s, exterior Graz: 1892, exterior Pforzheim: 1892, exterior Vienna: Polish Shul, 1892, exterior and interior Vukovar: 1889, exterior Bratislava: Neolog Synagogue, 1893, exterior Luxembourg: Great Synagogue, 1894, exterior Kaliningrad: New Synagogue, 1896, exterior Slavonski Brod: 1896, exterior Olomouc: 1897, exterior and interior Strasbourg: Synagogue du Quai Kléber, 1898, exterior Baden Baden: 1899, exterior Chemnitz: 1899, exterior Kemarok: second half of 1800s, exterior 4. 1900s Dortmund: 1900, exterior Katowice: Great Synagogue, 1900, exterior and interior Bad Kissingen: New Synagogue, 1902, exterior Vienna: Neudeggergasse Synagogue, 1903, exterior and interior Tartu: 1903, exterior and interior Bielefeld: 1905, exterior Jas
o: 1905, exterior Darmstadt: Orthodox Synagogue, 1906, exterior and interior Frankfurt: Synagogue at Friedberger Anlage, 1907, exterior and interior Tarnów: Jubilee Synagogue, 1908, exterior and interior Mainz: Main Synagogue, 1912, exterior and interior Biäystok: Great Synagogue, 1913, exterior and interior Essen: 1913, exterior and interior Amsterdam: Synagogue at Linnaeusstraat, 1928, exterior and interior Vienna: Hietzinger Synagogue, 1928, exterior Plauen: 1930, exterior and interior Notes Bibliography
udów: between 1635 and 1646, exterior Liuboml: mid-1600s–early 1700s, exterior 2. 1700s G
bin: 1710 (rebuilt in the late 1800s), exterior Berlin: Old Synagogue, 1714, exterior and interior Vo
pa: first half of 1700s, exterior Przedbórz: between 1754 and 1760, exterior and interior Niasvi: Great Synagogue, 1700s, exterior Varniai: Wooden Synagogue, late 1700s, exterior 3. 1800s Seesen: 1810, exterior Homie
: Great Synagogue, 1833, exterior Bad Buchau: 1839, exterior and interior Kassel: 1839, exterior and interior Dresden: Semper Synagogue, 1840, exterior and interior Belz: Great Synagogue, 1843, exterior Hamburg: Temple, 1844, exterior and interior Lviv: Temple, 1845, exterior Varniai: Masonry Synagogue, mid-1800s, exterior Vienna: Leopoldstädter Temple, 1858, exterior and interior Kretinga: 1860 (restored after an 1889 fire), exterior Gliwice: New Synagogue, 1861, exterior Telšiai: Great Beit Midrash, 1861, exterior Aachen: 1862, exterior Bochum: 1863 (rebuilt in 1896), exterior Épinal: 1863, exterior Jelgava: 1864, exterior Bytom: 1869, exterior Hannover: New Synagogue, 1870, exterior and interior Riga: Great Choral Synagogue, 1871, exterior Wroc
aw: New Synagogue, 1872, exterior Vienna: Turner Temple, 1872, exterior Nuremberg: Synagogue at Hans-Sachs-Platz, 1874, exterior Heilbronn: 1877, exterior and interior Karlovy Vary: 1877, exterior and interior Warsaw: Great Synagogue, 1878, exterior and interior Bruchsal: 1881, exterior and interior Teplice: 1882, exterior and interior Tübingen: 1882, exterior and interior Bydgoszcz: 1884, exterior Landau in der Pfalz: 1884, exterior and interior Mariánské Lázn
: 1884, exterior K
odzko, 1885, exterior Gdäsk: Great Synagogue, 1887, exterior and interior
ód
: Great Synagogue, 1887, exterior and interior
eské Bud
jovice: 1888, exterior Rawicz: 1889, exterior Horokhiv: Great Synagogue, 1880s, exterior Graz: 1892, exterior Pforzheim: 1892, exterior Vienna: Polish Shul, 1892, exterior and interior Vukovar: 1889, exterior Bratislava: Neolog Synagogue, 1893, exterior Luxembourg: Great Synagogue, 1894, exterior Kaliningrad: New Synagogue, 1896, exterior Slavonski Brod: 1896, exterior Olomouc: 1897, exterior and interior Strasbourg: Synagogue du Quai Kléber, 1898, exterior Baden Baden: 1899, exterior Chemnitz: 1899, exterior Kemarok: second half of 1800s, exterior 4. 1900s Dortmund: 1900, exterior Katowice: Great Synagogue, 1900, exterior and interior Bad Kissingen: New Synagogue, 1902, exterior Vienna: Neudeggergasse Synagogue, 1903, exterior and interior Tartu: 1903, exterior and interior Bielefeld: 1905, exterior Jas
o: 1905, exterior Darmstadt: Orthodox Synagogue, 1906, exterior and interior Frankfurt: Synagogue at Friedberger Anlage, 1907, exterior and interior Tarnów: Jubilee Synagogue, 1908, exterior and interior Mainz: Main Synagogue, 1912, exterior and interior Biäystok: Great Synagogue, 1913, exterior and interior Essen: 1913, exterior and interior Amsterdam: Synagogue at Linnaeusstraat, 1928, exterior and interior Vienna: Hietzinger Synagogue, 1928, exterior Plauen: 1930, exterior and interior Notes Bibliography
Foreword: From a Sacred Place to a Sacred Book by Ismar Schorsch Acknowledgments Introduction: Where Jews Once Gathered Guide: Synagogue Locations by Country 1. 1600s Livorno: 1603, exterior and interior Vilnius: Great Synagogue, 1633, exterior and interior Zab
udów: between 1635 and 1646, exterior Liuboml: mid-1600s–early 1700s, exterior 2. 1700s G
bin: 1710 (rebuilt in the late 1800s), exterior Berlin: Old Synagogue, 1714, exterior and interior Vo
pa: first half of 1700s, exterior Przedbórz: between 1754 and 1760, exterior and interior Niasvi: Great Synagogue, 1700s, exterior Varniai: Wooden Synagogue, late 1700s, exterior 3. 1800s Seesen: 1810, exterior Homie
: Great Synagogue, 1833, exterior Bad Buchau: 1839, exterior and interior Kassel: 1839, exterior and interior Dresden: Semper Synagogue, 1840, exterior and interior Belz: Great Synagogue, 1843, exterior Hamburg: Temple, 1844, exterior and interior Lviv: Temple, 1845, exterior Varniai: Masonry Synagogue, mid-1800s, exterior Vienna: Leopoldstädter Temple, 1858, exterior and interior Kretinga: 1860 (restored after an 1889 fire), exterior Gliwice: New Synagogue, 1861, exterior Telšiai: Great Beit Midrash, 1861, exterior Aachen: 1862, exterior Bochum: 1863 (rebuilt in 1896), exterior Épinal: 1863, exterior Jelgava: 1864, exterior Bytom: 1869, exterior Hannover: New Synagogue, 1870, exterior and interior Riga: Great Choral Synagogue, 1871, exterior Wroc
aw: New Synagogue, 1872, exterior Vienna: Turner Temple, 1872, exterior Nuremberg: Synagogue at Hans-Sachs-Platz, 1874, exterior Heilbronn: 1877, exterior and interior Karlovy Vary: 1877, exterior and interior Warsaw: Great Synagogue, 1878, exterior and interior Bruchsal: 1881, exterior and interior Teplice: 1882, exterior and interior Tübingen: 1882, exterior and interior Bydgoszcz: 1884, exterior Landau in der Pfalz: 1884, exterior and interior Mariánské Lázn
: 1884, exterior K
odzko, 1885, exterior Gdäsk: Great Synagogue, 1887, exterior and interior
ód
: Great Synagogue, 1887, exterior and interior
eské Bud
jovice: 1888, exterior Rawicz: 1889, exterior Horokhiv: Great Synagogue, 1880s, exterior Graz: 1892, exterior Pforzheim: 1892, exterior Vienna: Polish Shul, 1892, exterior and interior Vukovar: 1889, exterior Bratislava: Neolog Synagogue, 1893, exterior Luxembourg: Great Synagogue, 1894, exterior Kaliningrad: New Synagogue, 1896, exterior Slavonski Brod: 1896, exterior Olomouc: 1897, exterior and interior Strasbourg: Synagogue du Quai Kléber, 1898, exterior Baden Baden: 1899, exterior Chemnitz: 1899, exterior Kemarok: second half of 1800s, exterior 4. 1900s Dortmund: 1900, exterior Katowice: Great Synagogue, 1900, exterior and interior Bad Kissingen: New Synagogue, 1902, exterior Vienna: Neudeggergasse Synagogue, 1903, exterior and interior Tartu: 1903, exterior and interior Bielefeld: 1905, exterior Jas
o: 1905, exterior Darmstadt: Orthodox Synagogue, 1906, exterior and interior Frankfurt: Synagogue at Friedberger Anlage, 1907, exterior and interior Tarnów: Jubilee Synagogue, 1908, exterior and interior Mainz: Main Synagogue, 1912, exterior and interior Biäystok: Great Synagogue, 1913, exterior and interior Essen: 1913, exterior and interior Amsterdam: Synagogue at Linnaeusstraat, 1928, exterior and interior Vienna: Hietzinger Synagogue, 1928, exterior Plauen: 1930, exterior and interior Notes Bibliography
udów: between 1635 and 1646, exterior Liuboml: mid-1600s–early 1700s, exterior 2. 1700s G
bin: 1710 (rebuilt in the late 1800s), exterior Berlin: Old Synagogue, 1714, exterior and interior Vo
pa: first half of 1700s, exterior Przedbórz: between 1754 and 1760, exterior and interior Niasvi: Great Synagogue, 1700s, exterior Varniai: Wooden Synagogue, late 1700s, exterior 3. 1800s Seesen: 1810, exterior Homie
: Great Synagogue, 1833, exterior Bad Buchau: 1839, exterior and interior Kassel: 1839, exterior and interior Dresden: Semper Synagogue, 1840, exterior and interior Belz: Great Synagogue, 1843, exterior Hamburg: Temple, 1844, exterior and interior Lviv: Temple, 1845, exterior Varniai: Masonry Synagogue, mid-1800s, exterior Vienna: Leopoldstädter Temple, 1858, exterior and interior Kretinga: 1860 (restored after an 1889 fire), exterior Gliwice: New Synagogue, 1861, exterior Telšiai: Great Beit Midrash, 1861, exterior Aachen: 1862, exterior Bochum: 1863 (rebuilt in 1896), exterior Épinal: 1863, exterior Jelgava: 1864, exterior Bytom: 1869, exterior Hannover: New Synagogue, 1870, exterior and interior Riga: Great Choral Synagogue, 1871, exterior Wroc
aw: New Synagogue, 1872, exterior Vienna: Turner Temple, 1872, exterior Nuremberg: Synagogue at Hans-Sachs-Platz, 1874, exterior Heilbronn: 1877, exterior and interior Karlovy Vary: 1877, exterior and interior Warsaw: Great Synagogue, 1878, exterior and interior Bruchsal: 1881, exterior and interior Teplice: 1882, exterior and interior Tübingen: 1882, exterior and interior Bydgoszcz: 1884, exterior Landau in der Pfalz: 1884, exterior and interior Mariánské Lázn
: 1884, exterior K
odzko, 1885, exterior Gdäsk: Great Synagogue, 1887, exterior and interior
ód
: Great Synagogue, 1887, exterior and interior
eské Bud
jovice: 1888, exterior Rawicz: 1889, exterior Horokhiv: Great Synagogue, 1880s, exterior Graz: 1892, exterior Pforzheim: 1892, exterior Vienna: Polish Shul, 1892, exterior and interior Vukovar: 1889, exterior Bratislava: Neolog Synagogue, 1893, exterior Luxembourg: Great Synagogue, 1894, exterior Kaliningrad: New Synagogue, 1896, exterior Slavonski Brod: 1896, exterior Olomouc: 1897, exterior and interior Strasbourg: Synagogue du Quai Kléber, 1898, exterior Baden Baden: 1899, exterior Chemnitz: 1899, exterior Kemarok: second half of 1800s, exterior 4. 1900s Dortmund: 1900, exterior Katowice: Great Synagogue, 1900, exterior and interior Bad Kissingen: New Synagogue, 1902, exterior Vienna: Neudeggergasse Synagogue, 1903, exterior and interior Tartu: 1903, exterior and interior Bielefeld: 1905, exterior Jas
o: 1905, exterior Darmstadt: Orthodox Synagogue, 1906, exterior and interior Frankfurt: Synagogue at Friedberger Anlage, 1907, exterior and interior Tarnów: Jubilee Synagogue, 1908, exterior and interior Mainz: Main Synagogue, 1912, exterior and interior Biäystok: Great Synagogue, 1913, exterior and interior Essen: 1913, exterior and interior Amsterdam: Synagogue at Linnaeusstraat, 1928, exterior and interior Vienna: Hietzinger Synagogue, 1928, exterior Plauen: 1930, exterior and interior Notes Bibliography