Óbuda Synagogue

Óbuda Synagogue
Location within Budapest.
Basic information
Location Budapest
Geographic coordinates 47°32′13″N 19°02′45″E / 47.536944°N 19.045833°E / 47.536944; 19.045833Coordinates: 47°32′13″N 19°02′45″E / 47.536944°N 19.045833°E / 47.536944; 19.045833
Affiliation Orthodox Judaism
Rite Nusach Ari
Status Active
Leadership Slomo Köves
Website http://obudaizsinagoga.zsido.com/ (in Hungarian)
Architectural description
Architect(s) Landherr András
Architectural type Synagogue
Architectural style Greek Revival
Groundbreaking 1820
Completed July 20, 1821

The Óbuda Synagogue is a synagogue built in Óbuda, Hungary, in 1820.

History

Jews settled in Óbuda, today a neighborhood of Budapest, from c. 1712 at a time when Jews were forbidden to live in Buda.[1][2] Countess Zichy invited them to live on Zichy family property in Óbuda. A synagogue was constructed in 1737.[1] The present building replaced it on the same site in 1820.[1] The building's original copper roof was requisitioned by the government and melted for munitions production during World War I.[1][3] The Jewish building had not been singled out; the Holy Trinity Cathedral, Sibiu was only one of the many churches that lost its bells as not only church bells but roofs, gutters, and even brass crucifixes were melted down across the Empire to produce copper for the war effort.[4]

At the time the synagogue was built, the community of Óbuda was the largest Jewish community in Hungary.[2]

According to the boastful author of an 1822 Austro-Hungarian guidebook, not only was the synagogue the "most magnificent" new building in Óbuda, few synagogues elsewhere could compare to its magnificence. It was "undoubtedly" one of the most magnificent synagogues in the entire Austro-Hungarian Empire, and one of the finest in all Europe, "Not even the Jewish temple of Temesvár can compete with it in pomp, not to mention the old synagogues of Prague. The only building that may outdo it in grandiosity is the building of the Jewish community of Amsterdam,"[5] (a reference to the Portuguese Synagogue in Amsterdam).

In 1831, following the death of Rabbi Moses Munz, the congregation left orthodoxy to follow reformist Neolog Judaism.[1]

Beginning in 1848, the congregation expressed its support for Hungarian nationalism by having sermons delivered every other week in Hungarian.[1] In 1850, the town had 3439 Jewish residents, 31.4% of the population.

The community shrank throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as members moved into the flourishing city of Pest.[1] But the town, district III of Budapest was still 10% Jewish in 1926. In the 1970s, the diminished Jewish community sold the building for use as a television studio.[1]

Used for a long time as a TV studio, it was reinaugurated as a synagogue on September 5, 2010, Yona Metzger, chief rabbi of Israel and Zsolt Semjén, Hungarian vice-prime minister, being present.[6] The new rabbi is Slomo Köves, a Lubavitch.

Architecture

The synagogue was designed in French Empire style by architect Andreas Landesherr, who greatly enlarged and embellished the 1731 building, altering the appearance beyond recognition.[7] The pediment and six Corinthian columns of the facade give the synagogue the aspect of a classical temple. The pediment was embellished with carved Classical ornament, and surmounted by the tablets of the Ten Commandments.[8] On the side walls two tiers of round-arched windows alternate with classical pilasters.[1]

Inside, the bimah boasted four impressive corner columns in the form of the then popular Egyptian Revival obelisks. Each obelisk stood atop a plinth, both heavily embellished with carved, classical ornament, capped by a sphere capped by an eagle. The Torah ark was flanked by classical columns, and topped by Tablets of the Law, surmounted by a crown and surrounded by a painted burst of clouds.[8] It once held no fewer than 28 Torah scrolls belonging to the wealthy congregation.[1] The women's gallery ran along the northern and western walls. Fourteen chandeliers hung from the ceiling, causing some congregants to complain about the extravagance of the synagogue's directors.[9]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Carole Herselle Krinsky, Synagogues of Europe; Architecture, History, Meaning, MIT Press, 1985; revised edition, MIT Press, 1986 ( ISBN 0486290786); Dover reprint, 1996, pp. 155–156
  2. 1 2 Geza Komoroczy; Viktoria Pusztai; Andrea Strbik; Kinga Frojimovics (1999). Jewish Budapest Monuments, Rites and History,. Central European University Press. p. 41. ISBN 963-9116-38-6.
  3. Hew Strachan, The First World War: To Arms, Hew Strachan, Oxford University Press, 2003, ISBN 0-19-926191-1, p. 1048.
  4. Arthur James May, The Passing of the Hapsburg Monarchy, 1914–1918, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1966, p. 336.
  5. Geza Komoroczy; Viktoria Pusztai; Andrea Strbik; Kinga Frojimovics (1999). Jewish Budapest Monuments, Rites and History,. Central European University Press. p. 46. ISBN 963-9116-38-6.
  6. (in French)Jean Vidal; "Judaïsme et Israël à Budapest" in L'Arche, n° 629, October 2010
  7. Geza Komoroczy; Viktoria Pusztai; Andrea Strbik; Kinga Frojimovics (1999). Jewish Budapest Monuments, Rites and History,. Central European University Press. pp. 44–45. ISBN 963-9116-38-6.
  8. 1 2 Rachel Wischnitzer, Architecture of the European Synagogue, Jewish Publication Society of America, 1964, p. 180–181
  9. Jewish Budapest; Monuments, Rites and History, by Geza Komoroczy, Viktoria Pusztai, Andrea Strbik, Kinga Frojimovics, Central European University Press (January 1999), p. 45–46.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.