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Though construction ended in 1888 after eight years, the neo-Byzantine and Moorish revival Grand Choral Synagogue in St. Petersburg was not consecrated until 1893. The grand, imposing building, which…
Contributor:
Leon I. Bakhman, Ivan I. Shaposhnikov
Places:
St. Petersburg, Russian Empire (St Petersburg, Russia)
Date:
1893
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The Lazar Brodsky Choral Synagogue is built in the Romanesque revival style, with elements of Moorish revival. It is known as the Brodsky Choral Synagogue because it was built on the estate of the…
Contributor:
Georgiy Schleifer
Places:
Kiev, Russian Empire (Kyiv, Ukraine)
Date:
1898
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The elaborate art-nouveau tomb of the wealthy Schmidl family in the Rákoskeresztúr Jewish cemetery in Budapest is made of ceramic tile made by the Zsolnay factory, famous for its art-nouveau ceramics…
Contributor:
Béla Latja, Ödön Lechner
Places:
Budapest, Austro-Hungarian Empire (Budapest, Hungary)
Date:
1903
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The neoclassical Villa Ephrussi de Rothschild, designed for the Baroness Charlotte Béatrice de Rothschild, remains Aaron Messiah’s most famous work. Located in Cap Ferrat in southern France, the…
Contributor:
Jacques-Marcel Auburtin, Aaron Messiah
Places:
Saint-Jean-Cap Ferrat, France (Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat, France)
Date:
1905
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The wooden synagogue in Jabłonów was built in the second half of the seventeenth century. Its walls were covered in colorful paintings. It was burned down at the beginning of World War I by Russian…
Contributor:
Alois Breier
Places:
Jablonow, Russian Empire (Ukraine)
Date:
1910
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Founded in 1897 in New York City, the democratic socialist Yiddish daily Forverts quickly became the most popular Jewish newspaper in the United States (and the most widely circulated non-English…
Contributor:
George Boehm
Places:
New York City, United States of America (New York, United States of America)
Date:
1912
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The Israel Museum complex was designed to harmonize with its surroundings. Its low, flat-roofed buildings with facings of Jerusalem limestone were intended to resemble an Arab village on a hilltop…
Contributor:
Alfred Mansfeld
Places:
Jerusalem, Israel
Date:
1965
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“Four-room” house plan, Iron Age II. The typical Israelite dwelling was a rectangular or square house of between roughly 500 and 1,200 square feet (50–110 sq m). It is often called a “four-room” or…
Places:
Land of Israel (Israel)
Date:
Iron Age II, 10th–6th Century BCE
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The masonry in the royal palace of Samaria, the capital of the Northern Kingdom, is considered the finest example of ashlar masonry from the Iron Age. The blocks are cut so well that they fit together…
Places:
Samaria, Land of Israel (Samaria, Israel)
Date:
Iron Age IIA, 9th Century BCE
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In designing this synagogue, Alschuler drew on photographs of the remains of a second-century Byzantine synagogue in Tiberias. He wrote that he designed the synagogue “not in sense of slavish…
Contributor:
Alfred S. Alschuler
Places:
Chicago, United States of America
Date:
1924