Czernowitz Synagogue: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Chernivtsi Synagogue.jpg|thumb|250px|An early 20th-century postcard depicting the Czernowitz Synagogue]] |
[[File:Chernivtsi Synagogue.jpg|thumb|250px|An early 20th-century postcard depicting the Czernowitz Synagogue]] |
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The '''Czernowitz Synagogue''' was a domed, [[Moorish Revival]] synagogue built in 1873 in what is now [[Chernivtsi]], [[Ukraine]]. At the time it was built, the city was known as Czernowitz and was part of [[Austria-Hungary]]. The architect was [[Julian Zachariewicz]] (1873–78).<ref name=autogenerated1>[http://cja.huji.ac.il/Architecture/Czernowitz-Temple/Temple-stages. |
The '''Czernowitz Synagogue''' was a domed, [[Moorish Revival]] synagogue built in 1873 in what is now [[Chernivtsi]], [[Ukraine]]. At the time it was built, the city was known as Czernowitz and was part of [[Austria-Hungary]]. The architect was [[Julian Zachariewicz]] (1873–78).<ref name=autogenerated1>[http://cja.huji.ac.il/Architecture/Czernowitz/Czernowitz-Temple/Temple-stages.html Czernowitz, Temple, Building Stages<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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[[File:Кінотеатр Чернівці колишня синагога Чернівці.JPG|thumb|left|200px|Movie theater "Chernivtsi"]] |
[[File:Кінотеатр Чернівці колишня синагога Чернівці.JPG|thumb|left|200px|Movie theater "Chernivtsi"]] |
Revision as of 14:41, 30 May 2013
48°17′35″N 25°55′59″E / 48.29317°N 25.93298°E
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b7/Czernowitz._Israelitischer_Tempel_%2808%29.jpg/250px-Czernowitz._Israelitischer_Tempel_%2808%29.jpg)
The Czernowitz Synagogue was a domed, Moorish Revival synagogue built in 1873 in what is now Chernivtsi, Ukraine. At the time it was built, the city was known as Czernowitz and was part of Austria-Hungary. The architect was Julian Zachariewicz (1873–78).[1]
The synagogue was confiscated and closed by the Soviet government after it gained Northern Bukovina (of which Czernowitz is the largest city) from Romania in 1940. The building was burned by German and Romanian soldiers in 1941, after Nazi-allied Romania retook the city. In 1959, the outer walls were used to partially reconstruct the building for use as a movie theater called "Zhovten" ("October"), and the structure was renamed "Chernivtsi" [1] in early 1990. The building lost its dome and retains very little of its former appearance.
Joseph Schmidt sang in the choir as a boy and served as cantor as an adult.