What to bring from the Jewish quarter of Prague. Jewish Quarter in Prague - Josefov. Old Town of Prague on the map

Review article about the sights of the Old Town and the Jewish Quarter in Prague. We give useful tips and information: what to visit, opening hours, prices, addresses.

The Old Town and the Jewish Quarter in Prague smoothly flow into each other, although once the ghetto was fenced off by a wall. We advise you to visit them together to feel the difference.

Old Town (Staré Město)

The Old Town is located around the Old Town Square - the most visited in Prague. Let's just say we didn't like it at all. There is no authenticity: a bunch of tourists, expensive establishments and vulgar souvenir shops. Fresh houses. Below we list what caught our attention.

Old Town Square

The square is usually the first place visited by tourists in Prague. This is where most tours start. There are many attractions accumulated on the square, so we wrote a separate article about it.

Charles Bridge

The bridge is worth visiting at dawn, only if you do not want to get into the market crowd. On the bridge are unfortunate artists and unfortunate musicians. They say that there are also few tourists late in the evening - we did not check.

Crusader Square near Charles Bridge

The ensemble of the square is amazingly beautiful in the evening: the church of St. Francis of Assisi, Cathedral of St. El Salvador and the Old Town Bridge Tower. A rare place in Prague where you stop paying attention to the crowding tourists and really enjoy the beauty of the buildings.

Powder Tower

The 15th-century Gothic gate on Republic Square (Náměstí Republiky) stands out from the surrounding houses. There is an observation deck, it costs 100 crowns. Address: nam. Republican 5.

Excursions in the Old City

We believe that Prague is one of those cities where without knowledge of history, legends and secrets it becomes boring. In order not to be disappointed in the city, take a thematic tour of the Old Town - for example, "Magic and mysticism of Prague" or "Walking tour of the right bank of Prague".

Old Town of Prague on the map

Jewish Quarter in Prague (Josefov)

Josefov is a former Jewish ghetto. The quarter justifies its name by the high cost of visiting attractions. However, it is surprisingly quiet and picturesque, it is pleasant to walk along it and look into the windows of expensive antique shops.

How to get to the Jewish Quarter in Prague? It is best to take the metro and get off at the Staroměstská station, and then walk. You can also take trams No. 17 and No. 18 and get off at the stop of the same name.

Jewish Museum, cemetery and synagogues

The combo ticket costs 330 CZK and includes the Spanish, Maiselova, Pinkas and Klaus synagogues, the Ceremonial Hall, the cemetery and the temporary exhibition. Combo ticket for visiting all the attractions of the quarter - 550 kroons. Alas, it is impossible to purchase a separate ticket only to the museum or only to the cemetery! Synagogues did not interest us too much, so we did not visit.

Opening hours: in winter from 9:00 to 16:30, in summer - until 18:00. Closed on Sundays and Jewish holidays. Specify the dates of the holidays and the opening hours on the official website.

Cathedral of St. Spirit and monument to Kafka

Kostel Svatého Ducha is the only church in the Jewish quarter. You can get inside only during the service. Nearby there is an unusual monument to Kafka.

You can enter the Jewish Quarter unnoticed while looking around the center of Prague. The block is located next to the Old Town Square. The stars of David on the houses will tell you where you are. The main attractions here are the synagogues with a rich history, the town hall, the old Jewish cemetery and the monument to Kafka.

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The Jews settled in these places when there was no talk of Prague yet. Then the peaceful and timid people were expelled by the warlike Celts. According to legend, Princess Libuse in the 8th century. uttered a prophecy: when people who are oppressed by all, who believe in the Creator, come to the local river, the monarch should give them shelter. By this good deed, he will invoke God's mercy on his country. The prophecy came true - in the 9th century. Jews appeared on the banks of the Vltava. They were given permission to build their houses on the left bank. But, despite the mercy of the kings, the life of the Jews was not easy. Craftsmen and merchants were heavily taxed, and Jewish pogroms occurred from time to time.

Starting from the 13th century. Jews lived in a separate walled quarter, and of course, no one had the right to settle at their choice in another place in Prague. Only in the middle of the 19th century. King Joseph II allowed Jews to live anywhere in the city. Since then, the quarter has another name "Josefov". Surprisingly, during the Second World War, the Jewish Quarter was not wiped off the face of the earth by the Nazis. On the contrary, things related to Jewish culture were brought here. The fact is that it was here that Hitler wanted to make a museum of a nation that disappeared from the map of Europe. Today, almost all sights, except for the oldest synagogue, can be viewed by purchasing a single ticket of the Jewish Museum.

Attractions of the Jewish Quarter

Tourists are curious about the old houses of the Jewish Quarter. And yet, synagogues are of the greatest interest, of which there are 6. The most ancient - the Old New Synagogue was built in the 13th century, that is, it is the oldest in Europe. It is made in the Gothic style, its interior decoration is not just modest - ascetic. Here the Jews in former times took refuge from persecution, but today their main spiritual center is concentrated here. According to legend, somewhere inside there is a secret room without an entrance, from where the Golem, the protector of the Jews, appears. Once it was fashioned from clay by Rabbi Loew, and God breathed life into it.

The Pinkas synagogue was built later, in the 16th century, and in its architecture the features of the Baroque harmoniously combined with the features of the Renaissance. Today there is a museum here. The museum is also housed in the Klaus synagogue dating back to the 17th century. It will be interesting for tourists to visit the Maisel synagogue, whose construction was completed in the last years of the 16th century. Here you will be told about Meisel, who, thanks to his work, from a poor Jew became one of the richest people in Europe, lending money to the royal court. At the same time, Meisel was engaged in extensive charitable activities and did a lot for his people.
Another synagogue, which is called the High, is combined with the town hall. And the greatest impression on the guests of the quarter is made by the Spanish Synagogue, richly decorated inside, and reminiscent of a luxurious palace. It is the youngest among other religious buildings.

Without a doubt, the old Jewish cemetery will impress tourists. The Jews were forbidden to bury their dead anywhere but this place. Therefore, the dead were literally laid on top of each other - in 12 layers. According to the most conservative estimates, at least 100 thousand people are buried here. Tombstones covered with moss stand close together. The very sight of this cemetery speaks of the oppression that the Jewish people have been subjected to for centuries. The town hall was built in the 16th century, when Jews already made up a third of the population of the Czech capital. Of course, the building survived both fires and destruction, but today it has been completely restored. On the town hall you can see the clock: some have Roman numerals, others have Hebrew letters. The arrows of the latter go in the opposite direction. Because the Israelis write from right to left. The monument to Franz Kafka, opened at the beginning of the 20th century, is unusual. The great writer is carried on his shoulders by a man without a head. Tourists like to take pictures near this monument.


How to get on your own

To get to the Jewish Quarter, you can use trams No. 17, 18. Or take the Green metro line and get off at Staromestska station.

Not far from the Old Town Square there is a small quarter with narrow streets, ancient synagogues, a cemetery and very expensive shops of famous European brands. This is all that remains of one of the largest Jewish communities in Europe.

Nowhere earlier in our travels did we come into contact with Jewish culture and did not even suspect that there was a museum in Prague - a whole quarter that became museum of the Jewish community, one of the oldest in Europe. We decided to take a walk around this area.

The exhibitions of the Jewish Museum in Prague are located in 6 separate buildings:

  1. Spanish Synagogue
  2. Pinkas Synagogue
  3. Old Jewish cemetery
  4. Klaus Synagogue
  5. ritual hall

Official website of the Jewish Museum in Prague. The Russian version of the site is not working yet and there is no Russian audio guide. There you can find ticket prices and timetables. We did not buy tickets, they would cost us 2 times more than tickets. But you can walk along the streets of the Jewish quarter absolutely free of charge, there is something to see there.

History of the Jewish Quarter

The Jewish ghetto arose in the 13th century, it was at this time that the streets with a large Jewish population were united into a separate area - the Jewish city. Thus, within the fortifications of Stare Mesto, a walled enclave was formed with gates that served as an exit for the Jews to the often insecure Christendom.

All activities of the population outside the Jewish city were strictly regulated by a multitude of rules and decrees. So, if in previous times the Jews could engage in any kind of activity, now they were limited to a small set of professions, primarily usury. The period of the Middle Ages bore on itself either a clear or a more moderate imprint of intolerance towards the Jews, sometimes taking on the character of outright persecution.

Despite all the persecution and harassment, the ghetto grew and strengthened its position over the course of several centuries. After the abolition of the humiliating “Pale of Settlement” back in the 18th century, the wealthiest part of the population left Jewish quarter in order to settle in the suburbs, safer in sanitary and social terms, and gradually the ghetto became a refuge for the poor and Orthodox Jews who did not want to assimilate with the outside world. By the end of the 19th century, the Jewish city finally turned into an overpopulated slum, where vices and diseases flourished.

Between 1883 and 1913, on the initiative of the city municipality in the Jewish quarter in Prague was a complete renovation. As a result, the area has changed beyond recognition - on the site of the former dirty courtyards, dark alleys and dens, wide street highways were laid and luxuriously decorated houses in the style of the "Prague secession" grew.



Chic houses of the Jewish quarter in the style of the Prague Secession Chic houses of the Jewish quarter in the style of the Prague Secession

Through the efforts of the Prague intelligentsia, the historical core Yosefova was saved from demolition, and half a century later, six ancient synagogues, the Jewish Town Hall and the Old Jewish Cemetery "lucky" once again in the dark era of the Nazi protectorate (1930-1945) the Nazis, who took up the "final solution of the Jewish question", deployed on the territory of the former ghetto Museum of the Lost Race.

Jewish scholars were temporarily granted life and allowed to work there in order to inventory the most valuable items brought to Prague from the synagogues of occupied Europe. Thanks to their dedication, the vast majority of exhibits were saved.

Jewish Quarter - Parizhskaya Street, Josefov's most chic street



Chic houses of the Jewish quarter in the style of the Prague Secession

Chic houses of the Jewish quarter in the style of the Prague Secession

A modern tourist cannot even imagine how striking was the contrast between the hopeless darkness of the ghetto and the elegant festivity of shops and respectable houses that replaced it and on both sides of the wide Parizhskaya Street, laid in the early years of the 20th century between Old Town Square and Chekhov Bridge on the Vltava.

Jewish Quarter - Old Jewish Cemetery



Ceremonial hall, immediately behind it begins the Jewish cemetery

Jews were buried in the old Jewish cemetery for several centuries, namely from 1439 to 1787, until the emperor issued a decree prohibiting burials within the Jewish quarter. In total, more than 80,000 people were buried there, but the size of the cemetery is small and therefore sometimes up to 12 people were buried in the same place at different times. Most of the burials became nameless, the inscriptions were erased under the influence of time, many inscriptions were lost in the Middle Ages, old tombstones were thrown away to bury another body. But the tombstones of some famous people have been preserved. For example, the tombstone of the legendary Rabbi Lev (Yehuda ben Bezalel). According to legend, he created the famous Golem, a clay monster.

The Jewish Quarter - The Legend of the Golem

Rabbi Loew, in the darkness of the night on the bank of the river nearby, molded a figure resembling a man from clay, with the help of a magical shema tablet, on which the secret name of God was written, he revived his offspring. The golem became an obedient servant of the rabbi and helped him in his ministry in the synagogue and around the house. Every Saturday, when Shabbat came, the magic tablet was removed from the Golem's mouth and the monster became motionless. But one day, the rabbi's beloved daughter fell ill, and he forgot to take the shem tablet out of the Golem's mouth out of chagrin. The monster raged and began to destroy everything around him. The rabbi heard the terrible screams of the neighbors, ran and tore the tablet out of the mouth of the clay monster. The golem crumbled and turned into a heap of clay, which to this day is stored somewhere in the attic of the Old New Synagogue.

The tale of the Golem exists in different versions in other Jewish quarters of Europe.

Old New Synagogue

The construction of this structure was completed around 1270 and is one of the oldest Gothic structures in the Czech Republic and the oldest functioning synagogue in the world.

The history of construction and the very name of the Old New Synagogue are shrouded in myths and legends. According to one of them, it was built from stones taken from the ruins of the Jerusalem temple and after the coming of the Messiah, the synagogue was supposed to be moved to Jerusalem.



It was in this synagogue that Rabbi Yehuda ben Bezalel served, the legendary creator of the Golem, a clay colossus, the remains of which are supposedly kept in its depths to this day.

Sculpture of Moses



In 1905, Frantisek Bilek created a statue depicting Moses, but only 32 years later the statue was installed near the Old New Synagogue, until that time it had stood in the villa of an outstanding sculptor of the modernist era.

Monument to Franz Kafka

In 2003, on the occasion of the 120th anniversary of the birth of Franz Kafka, an unusual statue 3.5 meters high was installed. Its author, the sculptor Jaroslav Ron, was inspired by the writer's early short story "Description of a Struggle", which tells about a certain man who wandered around Prague, sitting on the shoulders of another person. The sculptor decided to depict Kafka on the shoulders of a headless giant costume. This paradoxical composition resurrects the legendary image of the Golem and symbolizes the pain and confusion that forever settled in the soul of the great writer.

By the way, next to the monument there is a ticket center, you can buy one ticket for all the objects of the Jewish quarter. The site of the Jewish Museum, in Russian they have some kind of glitch, but you can estimate the cost of tickets and the schedule in English.

Spanish Synagogue



The Spanish Synagogue, built between 1864 and 1868 in the Neo-Moorish style, which was very popular in those years, is one of the few 19th-century contributions to Josefov's architecture. Its name retains the memory of Sephardic Jews, who were expelled from Spain in the 16th century, found their refuge in Prague, and then finally settled in the Netherlands.

high synagogue

Clock at the High Synagogue in the Josefov district, note the dial of the lower clock

In the foreground of this photo you can see the wall of the Old New Synagogue.



The High Synagogue has a common history with the Jewish Town Hall: they were built at the same time and formed a single whole for a long time. It got its name due to the fact that the prayer hall, connected by a passage with the meeting room of the town hall, was located not at ground level, but on the second floor. In the 19th century, the buildings were divided and the synagogue received a separate entrance with a staircase.



It was built in 1592 for family worship by the head of the Prague Jewish community, Marek Mordechai Meisel, who remained in the people's memory as a generous and fair owner of untold wealth. This synagogue was seriously damaged by fire twice, was restored and was finally rebuilt in 1905 in neo-Gothic style.

The monastery is not one of the Jewish museums in Prague, but is located nearby, so you can also see it.

Founded in 1234 by King Wenceslas I at the urging of his sister Anežka (Agnes) and one of the finest examples of Gothic architecture on Czech soil, the Claritist Monastery now houses the collection of medieval art from the National Gallery.

The next photo clearly shows that the monastery stands, as it were, in a pit. This is due to the fact that it was built even before the decision was made to raise the level of the banks in order to protect against floods. Many of the old buildings in Prague either stand in a pit, or their ground floor has been filled in and turned into a magnificent basement.



Monastery of St. Anezka Czech - here you can see that it stands in a pit

Church of Saints Simon and Jude

This church is also not related to the Jewish Museum, but is located on the territory of the Jewish quarter. And just like the monastery of St. Anezka Bohemia stands in a pit.



Church of Saints Simon and Jude

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The Josefov Quarter or the Jewish Quarter is one of the largest centers of Jewish culture in Central Europe. Located next to and is a small quarter with narrow streets and expensive boutiques. Memorable objects are concentrated here: synagogues, the town hall, a cemetery, as well as monuments.

The main objects of the Jewish Museum

The most significant object in the quarter is (1), where you can learn the history, culture, traditions, as well as the customs of the Jewish people from the moment they appeared in Prague (X century) to the present day.

The museum was founded in 1906. The main purpose of the museum was to preserve the values ​​of the demolished synagogues.

Today, the museum fund has 40,000 different exhibits and 100,000 books. The main part of the collection was collected by the Nazis, during the confiscation of the property of Czech Jews in the period from 1939 to 1944.

Most of the objects in the quarter belong to, so it makes sense to purchase a single ticket and go for a detailed study. We advise you to purchase a ticket with a visit to the Jewish Museum and the Old New Synagogue, so you will not only save money, but also see all the objects available for visiting. The following objects belong to the Jewish Museum.

Klaus Synagogue

Sculpture of Moses

Sculpture (10) is located near the Old New Synagogue. This is the work of the sculptor Frantisek Bilek, dated 1905.

For many years, the sculpture was located on the territory of the sculptor's villa, and only 32 years later it was installed in the Jewish quarter.

Monument to Franz Kafka


Popular tours of the quarter

  • (75.00 €, 2 hours)
  • (15.00 €, 2 hours)
  • (175.00 €, 4 hours)

History of the quarter

The first Jews appeared in the capital in the 10th century, which is why the Prague ghetto is considered the oldest in Europe. Initially, Jews, mostly small traders, settled in the Visegrad region. By the 13th century, the Czech capital had become the largest center of European Jewry, and already in the middle of the 13th century, a separate quarter was formed in the Old Town. Such isolation was specially organized by the authorities, who also excluded Jews from participation in the political life of the country and often provoked anti-Semitic pogroms. During this period, the Old New Synagogue and the Jewish cemetery appeared in the quarter.

By the beginning of the 17th century, the number of Jews was 15,000 people, which was 30% of the population of the capital. Prague received the unspoken status of the "city of three peoples" - Czechs, Germans and Jews lived here. If until the end of the 19th century Prague Jews spoke Yiddish, then until the 20th century they spoke German, Hebrew was used only for ritual purposes. It was not until the twentieth century that Jews began to use the Czech language.

The chief rabbi in 1597-1609 was Maharal, or in the world Yehuda Lev Ben Bezalel, one of the greatest Jewish scholars of the capital. Today, his grave in the Jewish cemetery is a place of Jewish pilgrimage.

The life of the Prague Jews was not so simple. The political situation of the Jews with the Austrian authorities in the 18th century was tense. Thus, by decree of Empress Maria Theresa, in 1745 the Jews were expelled from Prague, because there were fears that the Jewish community would join the Prussian army. However, three years later, in 1748, the Jews were allowed to return to Prague.

Only after the revolution of 1848, Jews received civil and political rights on Czech soil. Two years later, in 1850, the Prague Ghetto officially received the status of the administrative quarter of the capital, having received the name "Josefov", in honor of Emperor Joseph II, who issued decrees, thanks to which Jews received equal rights with Christians.

In the late XIX - early XX centuries, most of the quarter was destroyed in connection with the redevelopment of Jewish slums, but most of the architectural monuments were not demolished. The following objects have survived: the synagogues of Staronovaya, Pinkasova, Maizelova, Klausovaya, High, Spanish, as well as the Jewish Town Hall and the Old Jewish Cemetery.

At the beginning of the 20th century, native Czechs began to settle in Prague, in connection with which the number of Jews was only 10%.

The main part of the population of Prague Jews was destroyed during the Second World War, during the Holocaust. The memory of the deceased was preserved in the works of Franz Kafka, in Meyrink's novel "The Golem", as well as in Borges' story "The Secret Miracle".

Quarter number 5

The Jewish quarter is sandwiched between and the river. Its history began in the 13th century, when the Jewish community in Prague was forced to leave their habitual homes and move to one area surrounded by a wall. This is how the Prague Jewish ghetto was formed - a kind of city where Jews settled their lives and developed their culture, without having such privileges as the rest of Prague.

The quarter was named "" in memory of Joseph II, whose reforms and patent of religious tolerance made life easier for Jews. Thanks to the constitution of 1848, they received equal rights with the inhabitants of Prague and the opportunity to leave the ghetto. This permission led to the fact that wealthy Jews moved to more prestigious areas of the city, and the "Fifth Quarter" itself (this was the number of the ghetto according to the administrative division) fell into disrepair. Sanitation at the end of the 19th century was at zero there, and the Prague authorities decided to eliminate the threat of an epidemic. 300 houses were demolished and 20 medieval streets destroyed.

The Jewish quarter of Prague, bearing the name of Josefov, is known throughout the world. It is located in the center of the Old Town, on one side of it is the Old Town Square, on the other - the Vltava River. This is a very ancient quarter with a unique history and inimitable atmosphere of the surviving buildings, reminiscent of the fate of the Jewish people. The uniqueness of the quarter has been preserved to this day, oddly enough, thanks to the Nazis, who decided to create a bizarre pantheon of the disappeared people in Prague. For this purpose, exhibits were brought from all European countries.

NAVIGATION

History of the quarter

From the beginning of the XII century. the first Jews settled in the Old City, which later turned into a genuine Jewish district with sovereign administration. In the 13th century, all Prague Jews were forcibly relocated from their native housing to a common fenced area. Thus, a ghetto arose in the city, which became the center of Jewish life.

Here the Jews, who did not have equal rights with other townspeople, arranged their way of life, formed their own civilization. Their way of life, political views and spiritual traditions were not similar to the customs of the rest of the population.

The name Josefov Quarter was acquired in 1850 by the name of Emperor Joseph II, thanks to whose transformations and the document he issued on tolerance for faith, the living conditions of the Jews became much easier.

In the constitution of 1848, Jews were granted civil equality and were allowed to leave their reservation. Taking advantage of this, wealthy residents moved into elite housing, and the Fifth Quarter (as it was listed in the city register) became impoverished. At the end of the 19th century, its sanitary condition became so deplorable that in order to prevent an epidemic, the administration of the capital decided to demolish about 300 buildings and eliminate all the old streets.

Attractions

The current Jewish quarter is a unique Jewish memorial ensemble, which has no equal in all of Europe. Of the old historical buildings, only the town hall, the old Jewish cemetery and 6 synagogues, which are the second largest Jewish museum in the world, have survived. This is a kind of open-air pantheon, which includes 6 expositions in different places of the quarter.

Synagogue of Josefov

The Old New Synagogue is the most famous building in the Jewish Quarter in the early Gothic style. It was built in the last third of the 13th century. and was called new, but after the construction of other synagogues, it was renamed the old one. It is otherwise called the synagogue of the Maharal, the largest Jewish sage who lived in the 16th century. His writings are known only to specialists, but the legend of the Golem is known to everyone.

Legend has it that to protect the Jews, he created a humanoid clay creature of incredible strength. However, fearing the giant's unpredictability, the rabbi rendered him harmless by removing the clay from his mouth, and did not revive him again. According to legend, the remains of the Golem were placed in the attic of the Old New Synagogue, strictly forbidding anyone to enter there.

Naturally, the legend has nothing to do with reality, but tourists really like it. It is for this reason that the Jewish Quarter and the Old New Synagogue are very popular among vacationers.

In addition, there is something mystical in the appearance of the synagogue. The interior of the synagogue looks like an ancient interior, decorated with an altar and an ark for the Torah - the Pentateuch of Moses, written in Hebrew and considered sacred by Jews. There is a statue of Moses in the square.

The synagogue is located at: Maiselova 18, you can get there by metro to the Staroměstská stop, by tram 17 to the Právnická fakulta stop. The nearest hotel is Gorgeous Prague Rooms, located 200 meters from the Old Town Square and 300 meters from the Prague Astronomical Clock.

jewish cemetery

Josefov has another monument of world significance - the Old Jewish Cemetery, which also retains a mystical atmosphere that attracts many tourists. The oldest tombstone is dated 1439.

Jews were forbidden to bury their dead outside the ghetto, so due to lack of free space, this had to be done in layers. In some places there are up to 12 such grave floors. Quite famous personalities rest here, for example, the financier Rudolf II and the philanthropist Mordechai Meisel, the sponsor of the construction of the town hall, synagogues and roads, and the religious thinker and creator of the Golem ben Bakalel.

It is easy to find it: we sit down at the nearest metro station Staroměstská, along the green line A, then we pass along Žatecká street and go straight to the cemetery.

Jewish town hall

The Rococo Jewish Town Hall, financed by Meisel in the 16th century, is located midway between the Jewish cemetery and the Old New Synagogue. The building was the control center of the Jewish quarter. The building is crowned with a tower with a wonderful clock equipped with Hebrew numerals and running backwards.

Klaus Synagogue

The building of the Klaus Synagogue, the second most important after the Staronov, was also built with Meisel's money and was named so because it included three buildings. It is located at the main entrance to the Jewish cemetery. The current building was erected on the site of the old one after a fire.

One of the original buildings served as a synagogue, in the second there were classes of the Talmud school, in the third there was a funeral brotherhood.

Since the mid 80s. 20th century The Jewish Museum exhibits a regular exhibition of various publications and manuscripts collected by Czech-Moravian Jews. In the main hall there are exhibits and paintings that explain the values ​​and foundations of the Jews, acquainting visitors with the celebrations and celebrations in the Jewish family.

Maisel synagogue

Meisel's finances helped to build a private synagogue, which received his name. Permission for it was given by Emperor Rudolf II, whom the banker provided with funds for the war with Turkey. The Maisel synagogue became famous for its Renaissance splendor, but as a result of periodic fires, it lost it, acquiring a neo-Gothic appearance. Today it serves as an exhibition hall and archive.

Pinkas Synagogue

The Pinkas synagogue was originally the home of the Horowitz family. It was repeatedly rebuilt, because during the floods of the Vltava River it was flooded with water, and it was destroyed.

After the end of the Second World War, a memorial was organized in it for 77,297 Czech Jews - prisoners of concentration camps. The second floor houses the most touching part of the exhibition - drawings of 10,000 children from the Terezin concentration camp are shown.

You can get to the Pinkas Synagogue by bus number 207 to the Staroměstská stop or by metro on the green line A to the station of the same name.

Spanish Synagogue

The youngest synagogue in the quarter was the Spanish Synagogue, built in the middle of the 19th century and rightfully considered the most beautiful of European and world. Nearby is an obelisk to one of the most famous writers of Prague - Franz Kafka. A man is depicted riding an empty suit. The monument is rather strange, but it has a deep meaning. Most likely, he deeply conveys the mood of his books, which defy any logic.

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