Obj. ID: 24870
Jewish Architecture Synagogue in Óbuda, Budapest, Hungary
The synagogue was designed by András Landherr in the Neo-Classicist style and built in 1821. The synagogue’s prayer hall is spanned by sail vaults; its central bimah has four corner obelisks alluding to a bimah-support layout. The copper tin of the building’s original roof was requisitioned by the government and melted for munitions production during World War I. After World War II it was occupied by various governmental institutions. The synagogue was returned to the community in 2010 and restored. Currently, it serves the Chabad congregation of Budapest.
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);
Kinga Frojimovics, Géza Komoróczy, Viktória Pusztai, Andres Strbik, Jewish Budapest: Monuments, Rites, History (Budapest, 1999), pp. 44-49 with ills. and plan, ill. on p. 231;
Rudolf Klein, Zsinagógák Magyarországon, 1782–1918: Fejlődéstörténet, tipológia és jelentőség / Synagogues in Hungary, 1782–1918: Genealogy, Typology and Architectural Significance (Budapest: TERC, 2011), ills. 4.133-143;
http://www.zsinagogak.hu/index.php/obudai/
Rudolf Klein & Gergely D. Nagy, "The Synagogue in Óbuda – An Architectural Witness to the Jewish Religious Reform", in Andreas Brämer, Mirko Przystawik and Harmen H. Thies, eds.,Reform Judaism and Architecture (Petersberg: Michael I,hof Verlag, 2016), pp. 97-110.
Szegő, Dóra and György Szegő, Synagogues (Budapest, 2004), pp. 16-20.
https://jewish-heritage-europe.eu/2019/09/26/hungary-discovering-budapests-lesser-known-synagogues-part-3/