Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Szeged Synagogue

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Location
  
Szeged, Hungary

Opened
  
1902

Affiliation
  
Neolog Judaism

Architectural type
  
Synagogue

Phone
  
+36 62 423 849

Architect
  
Lipót Baumhorn

Szeged Synagogue

Address
  
Szeged, Jósika u. 10, 6722 Hungary

Similar
  
Szeged Cathedral, Szeged Zoo, Pick Szalámi és Szegedi, Regionális Összművészeti Központ, Móra Ferenc Museum

The Szeged Synagogue (Hungarian: Szegedi zsinagóga) is a synagogue in Szeged, Hungary. It is a 1907 building designed by the Jewish Hungarian architect Lipót Baumhorn (1860–1932,), whose work is considered to contain the finest examples of the unique fin de siècle Hungarian blending of Art Nouveau and Historicist styles sometimes known as Magyar style. It served Szeged's large Neolog community.

The building's interior, with its 48.5 meters (159 feet) tall domed ceiling, draws on multiple historical styles to produce its overall Art Nouveau/Moorish Revival style. The rib-like wall above the organ has Gothic origins, while the columns supporting the galleries are Roman.

The interior of the great dome, and all of the building's stained glass, are the work of the artist Miksa Róth.

The design of the Torah Ark alludes to the Holy of Holies in the Temple of Solomon by using sittimwood from the banks of Nile, the wood called for in the building of the Temple of Solomon in 1 Kings. The hinges are in the shape of the Hyssop plant, a plant used in the ancient Temple service.

The Szeged Synagogue is the second largest in Hungary after the Dohány Street Synagogue in Budapest, and the 4th largest in the world.

References

Szeged Synagogue Wikipedia