Sha‘ar Hashamayim Synagogue Dome
Maurice Joseph Cattaui
Eduard Matasek
1905
Credits
Published in: The Posen Library of Jewish Culture and Civilization, vol. 7.
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Creator Bio
Maurice Joseph Cattaui
Born in Cairo to the wealthy, well-educated, and Europeanized Cattaui (or Cattaoui, Cattawi, Cattavi) family, Maurice Cattaui studied architecture at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Returning to Cairo, he opened an architecture firm with Eduard Matasek, an Austrian Roman Catholic. Their Sha‘ar Hashamayim Synagogue was inspired by Charles Chipiez’s and Georges Perrot’s models of the Temple of Jerusalem (1889) but drew on Egyptian, Assyrian, and art-nouveau motifs as well. This synagogue design was later borrowed for the Karaite community’s Moshe Dar‘i Synagogue (1931). Cattaui and Matasek also designed a number of Cairo villas, the Cairo Stock Exchange (1928), and the Austro-Hungarian Hospital in the Cairene neighborhood of Shubra (1913).
Creator Bio
Eduard Matasek
Born into a Roman Catholic family in Vienna, Eduard Matasek received no formal architectural training. He studied under his father, a master builder, and worked with a number of Viennese architectural firms, specializing in exterior decoration and ornamentation. After working on the Egyptian government pavilion at the World’s Fair (Columbian Exposition) in Chicago, he moved to Cairo, where he opened a firm with Maurice Cattaui. In addition to the Sha‘ar Hashamayim synagogue, the firm produced a number of Cairo’s landmarks, including the Bab el- Louk market (1912), villas, schools, and a hospital. Matasek’s villa in Ma‘adi was acquired by the U.S. Embassy in Cairo in the 1960s.