Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Jerusalem Great Synagogue (Hebrew: בֵּית הַכְּנֶסֶת הַגָּדוֹל בּיְרוּשָׁלַיִם) is an Orthodox Jewish congregation and synagogue, located at 56 King George Street, Jerusalem, Israel. [1] Different parts of the congregation worship in the Ashkenazi and Sephardic rites.
The Belz Great Synagogue in Jerusalem. Ades Synagogue, also known as the Great Synagogue Ades of the Glorious Aleppo Community, located in Nachlaot neighborhood, was established by Syrian immigrants in 1901. Baka Chabad Center for the English Speaking; Beis Hamedrash Gur, Geula
Exterior view of Or Zaruaa Synagogue on 3 Refaeli Street. It was founded by Rabbi Amram Aburbeh in the Nahlat Ahim neighbourhood of Jerusalem and has been declared a historic preservation heritage site.
According to Jewish tradition the Great Assembly (Hebrew: כְּנֶסֶת הַגְּדוֹלָה, romanized: Kəneset haGədōlā, also translated as Great Synagogue or Synod) was an assembly of possibly 120 scribes, sages, and prophets, which existed from the early Second Temple period (around 516 BCE) to the early Hellenistic period (which began in the region with Alexander's conquest in ...
The Belz Great Synagogue (Hebrew: בעלזא בית המדרש הגדול, romanized: Belz Beis HaMedrash HaGadol) is an Hasidic Jewish congregation and synagogue, located at 7 Binat Yisas'har Street, in the Kiryat Belz neighborhood of Jerusalem, Israel.
A body is covered on the side walks after a shooting attack near a synagogue in Jerusalem, Friday, Jan. 27, 2023. A Palestinian gunman opened fire outside an east Jerusalem synagogue Friday night ...
Great Assembly, or Anshei Knesset HaGedolah, sometimes referred to as the Great Synagogue, of Temple times. Great Synagogue of Baghdad , an ancient building in present-day Iraq Sardis Synagogue , Manisa, Turkey - The complex destroyed in AD 616 by the Sassanian-Persians.
In 1586, the Ottoman government closed the Ramban Synagogue (est. 1400) because it shared a wall with a mosque.As the only other synagogue in Jerusalem at the time belonged to the Karaite minority, followers of mainstream Rabbinic Judaism, including many descendants of refugees from the 1492 expulsion from Spain, held services in private homes for several years until completing the new ...