The Stadttempel Synagogue, Vienna
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Interior view of the "Stadttempel" in
Seitenstettengasse, Vienna, Austria. Beth Hatefutsoth Visual Documentation Center
At the beginning of the 19th century, the
Jewish community of Vienna was granted permission to build the synagogue
under the condition that the building would not be seen from the street.
In the years 1824-26 a monumental and splendid synagogue
was built in Seitenstettengasse in a Neo-Classical style designed by the
architect J. Kornhausel. For the consecration ceremony, held on 9th April ,
1826, cantor
Solomon Sulzer performed a musical arrangement for Psalms 92 written by the
composer Franz Schubert.
The synagogue building was considered at the time as one
of the city’s most innovative structures and it served as a model for other
synagogue buildings in western Europe. It became the first official
Ashkenazi communal synagogue. The prayers were conducted according to the
Reform liturgy.
Two five-storey elongated apartment buildings facing the
street concealed the synagogue from view. The synagogue building was built
as an oval structure, with a dome in the Mannerist style and topped by an
umbrella dome.
The inscription on the entrance was (in Hebrew): "Enter
into his gates with thanks-giving and into his courts with praise" (Psalms,
Chap. 100, V. 4). Around the oval main prayer hall were twelve Ionic columns supporting
a two-tiered women’s gallery with partitions. The ceiling was painted
sky-blue with golden stars. The Bimah was on the east side of the hall and
opposite it, stood the double-level Holy Ark, a splendid architectural
structure in the Baroque style. On top are the Tablets of the Law within a
golden sunburst.
The synagogue was renovated in 1895 and again in 1904 by
the Jewish architect W. Stiassny.
The interior was slightly damaged during the Kristallnacht
(9-10 November 1938). After the war, the "Stadttempel" was the only synagogue in Vienna that had not been
destroyed during Kristallnacht. It was repaired in 1945. In 1946 a 120th
anniversary public prayer was held in it, in the presence of cabinet
ministers, to commemorate the re-dedication of the synagogue.
In August 1949 the coffins of Theodor Herzl and his
parents were displayed at the synagogue, prior to their transfer for burial
in Israel.
In 1963 the "Stadttempel" was renovated
once again by Prof. Otto Niedermoser. It has been declared a historic site
and it still functions today as the central synagogue of the Jewish Community, where
prayer services are accompanied by the Synagogue Choir.
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