Obj. ID: 24865
Jewish Architecture Great Neolog (Dohány St.) Synagogue in Budapest, Hungary
Although the synagogue preceded the emancipation, it became a model for many other synagogues in the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy and beyond. The synagogue complex also includes a large communal building (facing 12 Síp St.), the Hungarian Jewish Museum and Archives added in 1930, the Talmud Torah school, the Heroes’ Temple (1931), the “provisional” Jewish cemetery of early 1945, and several Holocaust memorials.
sub-set tree:
Gerõ, László, Magyarországi zsinagógák (Budapest, 1989);
Gazda, Anikó, Zsinagógák és Zsidó községek Magyarországon (Budapest, 1991);
Orbán, Ferenc, Magyarország Zsidó emlékei, nevezetességei (Budapest, 1991);
Rivka and Ben-Zion Dorfman, Synagogues without Jews and the Communities that Built and Used Them (Philadelphia, 2000), p. 329;
Kinga Frojimovics, Géza Komoróczy, Viktória Pusztai, Andres Strbik, Jewish Budapest: Monuments, Rites, History (Budapest, 1999), pp.105-113 with ills and plans, ills. on p. 127, 235-236, 288-289-293;
Rudolf Klein, The Great Synagogue of Budapest (Budapest, 2008);
Rudolf Klein, Zsinagógák Magyarországon, 1782–1918: Fejlődéstörténet, tipológia és jelentőség / Synagogues in Hungary, 1782–1918: Genealogy, Typology and Architectural Significance (Budapest: TERC, 2011), ill. 3.376-389, pp. 462-478;
Szegő, Dóra and György Szegő, Synagogues (Budapest, 2004), pp. 25-34.
http://search.cjh.org/primo-explore/fulldisplay?docid=cjh_digitool300510&context=L&vid=beta&lang=en_US&search_scope=CJH_SCOPE&adaptor=Local%20Search%20Engine&tab=default_tab&query=sub,exact,Synagogues,AND&mode=advanced&offset=0
https://jewish-heritage-europe.eu/2019/12/26/photo-essay-tracing-the-history-of-budapests-dohany-street-synagogue/