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Coordinates: 46°33′24.34″N 15°38′51.92″E / 46.5567611°N 15.6477556°E / 46.5567611; 15.6477556
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{{Short description|Former synagogue and current museum in Maribor, Slovenia}}
{{Infobox religious building
{{Infobox religious building
|building_name=Maribor Synagogue
|building_name=Maribor Synagogue

Revision as of 14:34, 21 March 2024

Maribor Synagogue
Religion
AffiliationOrthodox Judaism
StatusMuseum
Location
LocationMaribor, Slovenia
Geographic coordinates46°33′24.34″N 15°38′51.92″E / 46.5567611°N 15.6477556°E / 46.5567611; 15.6477556
Architecture
TypeSynagogue
Completedlate 13th century
Website
www.sinagogamaribor.si

Maribor Synagogue (Template:Lang-sl) is a former synagogue and current museum in the city of Maribor, Slovenia. Located in what was the center of the medieval Maribor ghetto Židovska ulica ("Jewish Street"), it is one of the oldest preserved synagogues in Europe, and one of only two left in Slovenia; the other being the Lendava Synagogue (Template:Lang-sl). It once functioned as the centre of the medieval Jewish community in Maribor, among the most prominent in the Eastern Alps-area.

History

First mentioned in 1354, the synagogue is thought to have been built sometime in the late 13th century.[1] Located next to the city walls, it was part of a complex that included a Jewish cemetery, rabbinical residence, and Talmudic school. A fortified tower nearby - part of the walls themselves - was known as the Židovski stolp ("Jewish Tower"), while a building housing ritual baths stood outside the walls on the Drava riverbank.[2]

At points throughout its history, the synagogue served as a temporary seat of the Supreme Rabbinate of Styria, Carinthia and Krain. In 1497, the Jews of Maribor were expelled, scattering all over Europe, especially Italy. After the expulsion, the synagogue was in 1501 turned into a Catholic church, the Church of All Saints (Template:Lang-sl). The former rabbi's residence to the west of the main building became a curate office, while another, smaller building on the eastern side housed the sexton.

Exhibit case, interior of synagogue

In 1785, during the anticlerical reforms of Joseph II, the church was confiscated, deconsecrated, and converted into a military warehouse. It served in this capacity until 1811, when it was sold to private owners for use as a merchant storage, a wine cellar, a brush factory, an art studio, and an apartment house, which it remained until the 1980s.[1]

Following several years of renovations, taking place from 1992 until 2000, including a reconstruction of the late Gothic sanctuary, the building opened in 2001 as a museum and cultural-exhibition venue devoted to the history of the Jewish community of Maribor, and of Slovenia.[1] The site was initially administered by the Regional Museum of Maribor.[3] Since 2011 it is an independent public institution under the name od Center of Jewish Cultural Heritage Synagogue Maribor.[4] Since 2015 the synagogue is labeled a Cultural monument of State significance in Slovenia.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Janez and Anja Premk, Mariborska sinagoga, ZRC SAZU, Ljubljana 2015
  2. ^ "City Guide: Main Square". University of Maribor. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011.
  3. ^ "Profile of the Synagogue". Center of Jewish Cultural Heritage Synagogue Maribor. sinagogamaribor.si. Retrieved July 5, 2019.
  4. ^ "Sinagoga Maribor". Center judovske kulturne dediščine Sinagoga Maribor.
  5. ^ "Register of cultural heritage in Slovenia".

Official website

46°33′24.34″N 15°38′51.92″E / 46.5567611°N 15.6477556°E / 46.5567611; 15.6477556