Great City Synagogue (Lviv)
Great City Synagogue | |
---|---|
Ukrainian: Велика міська синагога | |
Religion | |
Affiliation | Orthodox Judaism (former) |
Ecclesiastical or organisational status | Synagogue (1801–1943) |
Status | Destroyed |
Location | |
Location | Staroyevreiska Street, Lviv, Lviv Oblast |
Country | Ukraine |
Location of the destroyed synagogue in Ukraine | |
Geographic coordinates | 49°50′28″N 24°2′6″E / 49.84111°N 24.03500°E |
Architecture | |
Type | Synagogue architecture |
Style | Neoclassical |
Date established | 1320s (as a congregation) |
Completed | 1801 |
Destroyed | 14 August 1941 |
[1] |
The Great City Synagogue (Ukrainian: Велика міська синагога, romanized: Velyka miska synahoha, Polish: Wielka Synagoga Miejska we Lwowie) was a former Orthodox Jewish synagogue in the city of Lviv (Polish: Lwów, German: Lemberg), in what is now the Lviv Oblast of Ukraine. It was situated in the former Jewish Quarter near today's city centre.
History
[edit]Earlier synagogues
[edit]The first synagogue in Lviv, in what was then the Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia, was situated nearby in 29 Feodorova Street. It was a wooden synagogue building that was built around 1320. On 15 June 1527 a catastrophic fire destroyed parts of the city including the synagogue.[1] A new brick synagogue in the Gothic style was constructed on 54 Staroyevreiska Street in 1555. It served as the Great City Synagogue until 1797, when it was ordered for demolition, based due to its small size.[2]
In 1606, the role of the Great City Synagogue shifted to the Golden Rose Synagogue. When this synagogue also became too small, the Jewish community began to construct a new, considerably bigger, synagogue on the site of the disassembled old synagogue.[1]
New building
[edit]A new rectagonal Neoclassical synagogue was built between 1799 and 1801. After the Jewish community transferred the reliquaries from the Golden Rose Synagogue to the newly constructed synagogue in 1801, the latter became the main city synagogue. A single-storey Beit Midrash adjoined the synagogue. In 1878 the shingles on the roof of the temple were replaced with tin. The staircase was reconstructed and a new stairway was added, leading to the women's prayer room on the gallery, completed in 1910.[2]
During World War II, on 14 August 1941, the German Nazis burned the synagogue. The following year, the ruins were destroyed.[2]
Memorial
[edit]In 2010, an initiative of the L’viv City Council, the L’viv Center for Urban History, and the German Society for International Cooperation, The Space of Synagogues was announced to commemorate the sites of the former Great City Synagogue, the former Golden Rose Synagogue, remnants of the Old Jewish Cemetery, and the site of the Janowska concentration camp. After a design competition, the first stage was opened in 2016 featuring landscape designs by Franz Reschke,[3][4] with additional stages planned.[5]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c "VUL. STAROYEVREISKA, 54 – FORMER GREAT CITY SYNAGOGUE". Lviv Interactive. n.d. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
- ^ a b c "Great City Synagogue". Virtual Shtetl. POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews. n.d. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
- ^ "The Space of Synagogues". Center for Urban History of East Central Europe. 2016. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
- ^ "Ukraine: Inauguration of Space of Synagogues in L'viv". Jewish European Heritage. 5 September 2016. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
- ^ "Ukraine: Work on second stage of Lviv Space of Synagogues monument is about to get under way". Jewish European Heritage. 2 June 2019. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
External links
[edit]- Gelston, Józef (1997). "Synagogi Lwowa" [Synagogues in Lviv] (in Polish). Wydawnictwo "Centrum Europy".
- "The Space of Synagogues // Franz Reschke architecture" (still images). ArchDaily. n.d.
- 1320s establishments in Europe
- 19th-century synagogues in Europe
- Buildings and structures destroyed in 1941
- Synagogues in Ukraine destroyed by Nazi Germany
- Jewish organizations established in the 14th century
- Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia
- Neoclassical architecture in Ukraine
- Neoclassical synagogues
- Orthodox synagogues in Ukraine
- Synagogues completed in 1801
- Religious buildings and structures destroyed by arson
- Synagogues in Lviv
- Lwów in World War II
- European synagogue stubs
- Ukrainian building and structure stubs