The Ancient Synagogue of Sardis
The ruins of the ancient city of Sardis (also spelled
Sardes) lie near the modern village of Sart (also called Sartmahmut), about
10 kilometers west of the modern town of Sahlihli and some 70 kilometers
east from Izmir (formerly Smyrna) in Western Anatolia (Asia Minor), now
in Turkey. This former capital city of the antique Kingdom of Lydia (7th
century BCE), is remembered today as the place where silver and gold coins
were minted for the first time and as the city of the legendary rich king
Croesus (560 – c.546 BCE). During its long history, Sardis changed many
foreign rulers until its incorporation into the Roman Empire in 133 BCE.
The city served then as the administrative center of the Roman province
of Lydia. Sardis was reconstructed after the catastrophic earthquake of
17 CE and enjoyed a long period of prosperity under the Roman rule and then
within the Byzantine Empire, until it was finally destroyed by the Mongols
in 1402.
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Ruins of the Synagogue of Sardis
Photo: Sam Levy, Portugal
Beth Hatefutsoth – Visual Documentation Center
Courtesy of Sam Levy, Portugal
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Courtyard of the Synagogue of
Sardis
Beth Hatefutsoth – Visual Documentation Center
Courtesy of Jerzy Budziszewski Collection, Israel
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The beginnings of the Jewish settlement in Sardis are
believed to belong to the 3rd century BCE, when Jews from Babylonia and
other countries were encouraged to settle in the city by the Seleucid King
Antiochus III (223-187 BCE). The Jews of Sardis are mentioned by Josephus
Flavius in the 1st century CE, who refers to a decree of the Roman proquestor
Lucius Antonius from the previous century (50-49 BCE): "Lucius Antonius,
the son of Marcus, vice-quaestor, and vice-praetor, to the magistrates,
senate, and people of the Sardians, sends greetings. Those Jews that are
our fellow citizens of Rome came to me, and demonstrated that they had an
assembly of their own, according to the laws of their forefathers, and this
from the beginning, as also a place of their own, wherein they determined
their suits and controversies with one another. Upon their petition therefore
to me, that these might be lawful for them, I gave order that their privileges
be preserved, and they be permitted to do accordingly."1 (Ant., XIV:10,
17). It is generally understood that "a place of their own" refers to the
synagogue serving the local Jewish community of Sardis. Josephus Flavius
also mentions the decree of Caius Norbanus Flaccus, a Roman proconsul during
the reign of Augustus at the end of the 1st century BCE, who confirms the
religious rights of the Jews of Sardis, including the right to send money
to the Temple of Jerusalem. (Ant., XVI:6,6).
The ruins of the Synagogue of Sardis were discovered
in 1962 during archaeological excavations conducted by the Harvard-Cornell
Sardis Expedition. The unearthing of the ruins under the supervision of
the American archaeologists continued for another nine years. The dimensions
of the building, its many decorations, including mosaics on the floors,
marbling of the walls, various pieces of ritual furnishings and especially
the over eighty inscriptions including six fragments in Hebrew and the rest
in Greek that have been found in the interior, have contributed to the reputation
of the site. The Synagogue of Sardis has since its discovery been acclaimed
as the most outstanding Jewish monument from Antiquity unearthed in
the entire region of Asia Minor and the Aegean Sea.
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West End of the Interior Hall
Synagogue of Sardis
Model – Beth Hatefutsoth, Permanent Exhibit
Beth Hatefutsoth – Visual Documentation Center
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Mosaic Floor in the Synagogue
of Sardis
Model – Beth Hatefutsoth, Permanent Exhibit
Beth Hatefutsoth – Visual Documentation Center
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The building of the synagogue was situated at a central
location in the city and apparently was an integral part of a complex that
also included a gymnasium, some shops, and the public bath. The proximity
of those public edifices to the synagogue led to two possible interpretations
about the character of the local Jewish community. On one hand it has been
assumed that the building was converted into a synagogue at a later date
following its acquisition by the Jewish community, while according to the
other view the inclusion of the synagogue within a public space along with
the many Greek inscriptions should be understood as an expression of the
Hellenistic nature of local Judaism. Moreover, the synagogue was not
located within the Jewish quarter of the city, but stood on the main commercial
thoroughfare of Sardis.
Since its discovery in the early 1960's, the common accepted
assumption among the researches considered the synagogue as belonging to
the fourth century CE. The dating was based mainly on the discovery of a
number of coins from the 3rd and 4th century CE beneath the mosaic floors.
However, more recent research (Magness 2005), based on a reconsideration
and new analysis of the original findings and the discovery beneath the
floors of numismatic evidence from the early Byzantine period, suggest a
later date for the building of the synagogue, most probably in the 6th century
CE. Another hypothesis suggests that the building was used as a worship
place by the Jews already from the 3rd or 4th century, but it acquired the
current mosaic floors sometime during the 6th century, following several
renovations of the edifice.
The structure of the Synagogue of Sardis recalls a typical
Roman basilica. It is an impressive rectangular structure of 120 meters
long and 18 meters wide on an east to west axis, between the palestra of
the Gymnasium and the public road. It had a capacity of approximately 1000
persons, a hint to both the number of the Jewish population of the city
and its economic and political status.
The building boasts a long central hall flanked by two
rows of columns. Archaeological evidence suggests that the hall was created
at a later date by the merging of three smaller rooms that used to be an
integral part of the Bath and Gymnasium complex erected as early as the
1st century CE, during the construction period that followed the powerful
earthquake of 17 CE. The remodelling of the complex and the creation of
the long hall occurred sometime during the late 1st century and early 2nd
century CE, most probably in order to adapt the structure to the functions
of a civic center. It was only towards the end of the 3rd century or early
4th century that the building was occupied by the Jewish community. Converting
the building into a synagogue led to some alterations to the original plan
of the edifice, most notably the blocking of the only remaining doorway
between the hall and the Gymnasium, thus ensuring a total separation of
the Jewish religious activities from the pagan worship conducted in the
other buildings of the complex.
The entrance was located at the east end and the hall
ended with and apse and three rows of curved stepped benches situated at
the west end. It is believed that those seats were reserved for the elders
of the community. A marble table with two eagles bas-reliefs on the outer
sides of its legs along with two sculptures of lions standing on both lateral
sides of the table has been preserved in front of the apse and probably
served as the bimah of the synagogue. The decoration had a double symbolism:
the eagle was a known Roman symbol while the lions were frequently used
in the local art of Lydia, a region that in Antiquity was renowned for the
wild lions that still roared its countryside. On the other hand both animals
expressed also a strong Jewish symbolism, especially the lion, a common
motif of Jewish art of the epoch that had long been emblematically associated
with the Tribe of Judah and the city of Jerusalem. The overall length of
the interior hall was shortened at a later stage with the east end redesigned
by the addition of two shrines on both sides of the central door. These
niches, one built in the Doric style and the other one in late Corinthian
style, apparently served for sheltering the Torah scrolls, a practice found
also in the synagogue of Ostia (a port town near Rome) and other antique
synagogues. A forecourt with a central fountain was built at the east end
of the hall and was linked to the main hall by three doorways.
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View from the East End of the
Interior Hall towards the Courtyard of the Synagogue of Sardis
Model – Beth Hatefutsoth, Permanent Exhibit
Beth Hatefutsoth – Visual Documentation Center
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The Table and the Statues of
the Two Lions at the West End of the Interior Hall of the Synagogue
of Sardis
Model – Beth Hatefutsoth, Permanent Exhibit
Beth Hatefutsoth – Visual Documentation Center
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The floor mosaics cover both the main hall and the forecourt
and have geometric, floral and animal decorations. The remaining portions
of the walls are covered by colored marbles. The Greek inscriptions commemorate
the names of various community members, its benefactors and their wives,
both Jews and God-fearers, i.e. non-Jewish adherents of the synagogue. Some
donors are listed as goldsmiths while others held various positions in the
Roman civic administration of the city – the inscriptions mention a "count"
and a former "procurator" among those who made financial contributions to
the synagogue. One inscription mentions the vow of Samoe, an individual
described as "priest and teacher of wisdom".
Adjacent to the long southern wall of the synagogue and
facing the main road, there was during Byzantine times a long row of shops,
some owned by Jewish merchants others belonging to Christian traders, as
indicated by a number of crosses found among the ruins.
The building of the Synagogue of Sardis was destroyed
in 616, when the city was captured by the Sassanian Persians. It was never
rebuilt and the Jewish community of Sardis ceased to exist.
The restoration of the synagogue started in 1965. The
current appearance of the ruins attempts to reflect the way the synagogue
looked like during the last years before its destruction.
A model of the synagogue is
displayed in the "Faith" section of the
Permanent Exhibit of
Beth Hatefutsoth.
HFG
Notes
1. Josephus
Flavius.
Antiquities of the Jews. English Translation by William
Whiston.
Bibliography
CROSS, Frank Moore. The
Hebrew inscriptions from Sardis Harvard Theological Review, 95,1
(2002) 3-19
KROLL, John H.. The
Greek inscriptions of the Sardis synagogue. Harvard Theological
Review, 94,1 (2001) 5-127
MAGNESS, Jodi.
The
Date of the Sardis Synagogue in Light of the Numismatic Evidence.
American Journal of Archeology, 109:3 (July 2005): 443-475
SEAGER, Andrew R. The
Building History of the Sardis Synagogue. American Journal of
Archeology, 76 (1972):425-35
Links
Sardis
Images of the Sardis Synagogue
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