Jewish Heritage Europe

Calendar

Sep
8
Sun
Six-month “Heritage Season” for 150th anniversary of the Princes Road Synagogue, Liverpool @ Various venues in Liverpool
Sep 8 2024 – Feb 24 2025 all-day
Six-month "Heritage Season" for 150th anniversary of the Princes Road Synagogue, Liverpool @ Various venues in Liverpool | England | United Kingdom

Six month “Heritage Season” of Events (Ceremonial, Concerts, Lectures, Meal, Performances, Talks, Tours, and Walks) to mark the 150th Anniversary of Princes Road Synagogue.​ 

Themes: 

September 2024 – People & Place; 

October 2024 – Charity & Philanthropy and Rituals;

November 2024 – Civil life; December 2024 – Education & Learning; 

January 2025 – Trade & Occupations; February 2025 – Art & Culture

The program is evolving.

Click here to see the program as events are confirmed.

 

NOTE: Tickets for all events must be reserved in advance.

To apply for tickets, please complete the application for tickets form here.

 

 

Sep
29
Sun
Hidden Splendors: The Stunning Baroque Synagogues of Piedmont, Italy @ online- Zoom
Sep 29 @ 13:00 – 14:00
Hidden Splendors: The Stunning Baroque Synagogues of Piedmont, Italy @ online- Zoom

An online Zoom lecture in the Community Scholar Program, by architecture historian Dr. Samuel Gruber, an expert on synagogue architecture worldwide and president of the International Survey of Jewish Monuments.

19-20:00 CET

In Piedmont, Italy the Jewish community built many synagogues over a period of four centuries. The earliest Ghetto synagogues are usually unmarked on the street and occupy residential-type buildings with sanctuaries located on upper floors for greater security and better lighting. Nondescript on the exterior, the sanctuaries are ornately decorated within with richly carved Baroque and Rococo arks and tevahs, and gilded and painted walls and ceiling. The Piedmontese synagogues at Alessandria, Asti, Biella, Carmagnola, Casale Monferato, Cherasco, Cuneo, Ivrea, Mondovi, and Saluzzo, survive as largely unknown architectural treasures, but they are gradually being restored and opened ot the public.

In this talk, lavishly illustrated with his  photos, Dr. Samuel Gruber examines some of the most dazzling synagogues in Europe and relates them to the artistic and religious movements of the time.

Click here to Register

Sep
30
Mon
Czech Jewish cemeteries conference @ Academic Conference Center
Sep 30 – Oct 1 all-day

An expert colloquium RESTORATION, CARE AND DOCUMENTATION: Jewish cemeteries in the Czech Republic, held with the support of ESJF European Jewish Cemeteries Initiative.

The colloquium will focus on Jewish cemeteries in the Czech Republic, and their protection, restoration, care, documentation and research methodology.

The program will include be excursions to Prague Jewish cemeteries.
 
Interested participants are requested to confirm participation by Monday the September 9,  2024.  
 
Please confirm to p.vladarova@matana.cz
 
Program:

 

Oct
13
Sun
Urban Jewish Cemeteries in Central-Eastern Europe @ Decembrie 1918 University of Alba Iulia, Romania
Oct 13 – Oct 15 all-day
Urban Jewish Cemeteries in Central-Eastern Europe @ Decembrie 1918 University of Alba Iulia, Romania | Alba Iulia | Județul Alba | Romania

The conference aims “to foster debate on the strategies applied by the countries of Central and Eastern Europe in the field of Jewish cemetery preservation, as well as the research methods used by specialists and examples of the preservation of Jewish cemeteries from the perspective of their signification as cultural heritage of living communities.”

The conference is supported by the Federation of Jewish Communities in Romania, the Alba Iulia Jewish Community, Bar Ilan University, and Alba County Council, among others.

It is seen as a follow up to several other conferences, including European Jewish Cemeteries: An Interdisciplinary Conference, co-organized by JHE in Vilnius, 2015 and Urban Jewish Heritage: Presence and Absence, Kraków, 2018; as well as published research such as Rudolf Klein’s Metropolitan Jewish Cemeteries of the 19th and 20th Centuries in Central and Eastern Europe: A Comparative Study, 2018; and projects devoted such as those by the European Jewish Cemeteries Initiative, initiated in 2015.

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