Showing Results 1 - 10 of 75
Restricted
Image
Morpurgo was most interested in documenting everyday life. The photographs he took during his 1927 trip to Palestine portray Jewish, Muslim, and Christian communities and focus on coexistence rather…
Contributor:
Luciano Morpurgo
Places:
Safed, Mandate Palestine (Safed, Israel)
Date:
1927
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Image
The Dohány Street Synagogue in Budapest is the largest synagogue in Europe, and the second largest in the world, capable of accommodating three thousand people. The Moorish- and Byzantine-inspired…
Contributor:
Ludwig Förster
Places:
Pest-Buda, Austrian Empire (Budapest, Hungary)
Date:
1854–1859
Categories:
Restricted
Image
In the nineteenth century, especially in the era before photography, it was common for artists to travel to exotic or picturesque locations in Europe, North Africa, and the Near East, and to produce…
Contributor:
Solomon Alexander Hart
Places:
London, United Kingdom
Date:
1850
Categories:
Restricted
Image
Based on a painting, now lost, by Maurits Leon, this lithograph by Johannes Heinrich Rennefeld (1832–1877) seems to depict a scene from an 1837 novel about Spinoza by German Jewish author Berthold…
Contributor:
Maurits Leon
Places:
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Date:
ca. 1865–1870
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Image
Congregation Shearith Israel was the first Jewish congregation established in North America, and the only Jewish congregation in New York City from 1654 until 1825. Between 1654 and 1730, it used…
Contributor:
Esther Oppenheim
Places:
New York, British America and the British West Indies (New York City, United States of America)
Date:
1730 and 1818
Categories:
Restricted
Image
The Great Synagogue of Lutsk (Łuck) in Ukraine was built in 1626. Renaissance in style, the synagogue is an example of a fortress synagogue, built not only as a house of worship but also with the…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown, Photographer Unknown
Places:
Łuck, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (Lutsk, Ukraine)
Date:
1626–1628
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Image
The ceiling and wall paintings in the baroque-style Kupa Synagogue in Kraków, which dates from 1643, were damaged during World War II and in a pogrom that occurred in August 1945 immediately following…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Kraków, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (Kraków, Poland)
Date:
17th Century
Categories:
Restricted
Image
This print depicting a Jewish wedding in Fürth is from the beginning of the eighteenth century, a period of prosperity for the city’s Jewish community. There were between 350 and 400 Jewish families…
Contributor:
Johannes Alexander Böner
Places:
Nuremberg, Holy Roman Empire (Nuremberg, Germany)
Date:
1705
Categories:
Restricted
Image
Wooden synagogues were a distinctive style of vernacular architecture that first developed in the lands of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in the sixteenth century and then flourished in the…
Contributor:
Photographer Unknown
Places:
Gwoździec, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (Hvizdets, Ukraine)
Date:
Mid–17th Century
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Image
The Gerush (Hebrew for “expulsion”) synagogue in Bursa, Turkey, dates back to the early sixteenth century and is unique in its dual-ark design; one upper section is located in the women’s gallery…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Bursa, Ottoman Empire (Bursa, Turkey)
Date:
Early 16th Century