Spanish Synagogue (Venice)
Spanish Synagogue | |
---|---|
Religion | |
Affiliation | Orthodox Judaism |
Status | Active |
Location | |
Location | Venice, Italy |
Architecture | |
Architect(s) | Baldassare Longhena |
Style | Baroque |
Completed | 1581 |
The Spanish Synagogue is one of the two functioning synagogues in the Venetian Ghetto of Venice, northern Italy. It is open for services from Passover until the end of the High Holiday season.
The Spanish Synagogue was founded by Jews expelled from the Iberian peninsula in the 1490s who reached Venice, usually via Amsterdam, Livorno or Ferrara, in the 1550s. The four-story yellow stone building was constructed in 1580 and was restored in 1635. It is a clandestine synagogue, which was tolerated on the condition that it be concealed within a building that gives no appearance being a house of worship form the exterior, although the interior is elaborately decorated.[1]
View towards the ark
Gate on campo delle scole
Shoah memorial
The synagogue's ornate interior contains three large chandeliers and a dozen smaller ones, as well as a huge sculpted wooden ceiling.
References[]
- ^ Kaplan, Benjamin J., Religious Conflict and the Practice of Toleration in Early Modern Europe, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2007, Chapter 8, pp. 194. ff.
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Scola spagnola (Venice). |
- Dutch-Jewish diaspora
- Orthodox synagogues in Italy
- Synagogues in Venice
- Sephardi synagogues
- Jews and Judaism in Venice
- Sephardi Jewish culture in Italy
- 16th-century synagogues
- Religious buildings and structures completed in 1580
- 1580s establishments in the Republic of Venice
- Baldassare Longhena buildings
- Portuguese-Jewish diaspora in Europe
- Spanish-Jewish diaspora in Europe
- European synagogue stubs
- Italian religious building and structure stubs