The Great City
Synagogue of Vilna
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The old synagogue in
Vilna, Lithuania, built in 1572.
Photograph taken by the German army during
WW I. Beth Hatefutsoth Visual Documentation Center, Courtesy of Polska Akademia Nauk, Warsaw
The Great City Synagogue of Vilna was built of
stone from 1630 to 1633, after permission was given to build a stone
structure to replace the Old Synagogue. In 1635 the synagogue was pelted
with stones by rioters, the interior was destroyed and all it contained was
looted.
It was rebuilt in Renaissance-Baroque style in the schulhof, and in the
course of time it was surrounded by a complex of some twenty synagogues,
among them an old wooden 15th century synagogue, rebuilt between the 18th
and 19th century, prayer-houses of the artisans’ guilds, a beth-midrash, a
mikveh, the community center, the famous Strashun rabbinical library; the
prayer-house of Rabbi Eliyahu ben Solomon Zalman, The Gaon of Vilna
(1720-1797), built in 1800. The whole complex became a great Talmud Torah
study center and the heart of the movement of the Mitnaggedim.
The Great City Synagogue was a high one-story
building with a slanted roof. In 1800 a gable with a two-tiered wooden
portal was added on the western side. The entrance, with a vestibule and the
“pillory” was located on the northern side of the building. The main prayer
hall was square and could hold 300 people. It had a three-tiered bimah in
the center, composed of twelve pillars (some say it was the gift of Rabbi
Yehuda Ben-Eliezer), and it was surrounded by four pillars in Tuscan style,
supporting the dome. The two-tiered Holy Ark on the eastern wall was a
splendid structure, with gilded woodcarvings, representing plants, animals
and Jewish symbols, with a double-headed eagle on top. On both sides of the
Holy Ark there were two-story structures, serving as the women’s sections,
connected to the prayer hall by little windows. Hanging from the walls and
ceilings there were numerous bronze and silver chandeliers. The synagogue
contained a valuable collection of ritual objects. The building was repaired
in the 19th century. In 1846, when Moses Montefiore (1784-1885) and his
retinue visited the synagogue, the treasurers distributed entrance tickets
to the masses of people.
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The Holy Ark of the
great Synagogue,
Vilna, 1920-1930 Beth Hatefutsoth Visual Documentation Center Courtesy of Leibl Korinsky, Israel
The synagogue was partly destroyed by the Germans during World War 2. After
the war the synagogue and the whole schulhof complex were destroyed by the
Soviet authorities and replaced by housing blocks.
Three original pieces from the Great Synagogue
of Vilna survived the destruction quite miraculously and are now on display
at the Vilna Gaon Jewish Museum: a door of the Holy Ark, a reader’s desk (Omed),
and a bas-relief with the Ten Commandments.
A model of the synagogue is exhibited
permanently at Beth Hatefutsoth - The Nahum Goldmann Museum of the Jewish
Diaspora Museum.
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