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Synagogue of Versailles dans les Yvelines

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine Juif
Synagogue

Synagogue of Versailles

    10 Rue Albert-Joly
    78000 Versailles
Property of a cultural association
Synagogue de Versailles
Synagogue de Versailles
Synagogue de Versailles
Synagogue de Versailles
Synagogue de Versailles
Synagogue de Versailles
Synagogue de Versailles
Synagogue de Versailles
Synagogue de Versailles
Crédit photo : ℍenry Salomé - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1788
Authorization of the Jewish cemetery
1884–1886
Construction of the synagogue
22 septembre 1886
Inauguration
janvier 2010
Historical monument classification
mai 2013
FIE 90-year-old Stele
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The synagogue in full (AK 150): inscription by decree of 27 January 2010

Key figures

Alfred-Philibert Aldrophe - Architect Designer of the synagogue (1884–86).
Cécile Furtado-Heine - Philanthropist Finished the building of the temple.
Claude Lévi-Strauss - Anthropologist Grandson of a rabbi of the synagogue.
Louis XVI - King of France Authorized the Jewish cemetery in 1788.

Origin and history

The synagogue of Versailles, located at 10 Albert Joly Street, was built between 1884 and 1886 by architect Alfred-Philibert Aldrophe (1834–95). Inaugurated on September 22, 1886, it embodies a break with the traditional discretion of Jewish communities, proudly displaying its identity through a monumental facade decorated with a stone torah sefer. His neo-Roman style, mixed with Byzantine influences, reflects a will to assert in urban space.

The synagogue, originally of Ashkenazi rite, is today a sefarate rite, with a community mostly from Morocco. His atypical orientation (northward, without exposure to the sun) and his biblical inscriptions in Hebrew – like "You will love the Eternal" (Deuteronomy 11,1) – underline his sacred character. It remains active and visits at events like Heritage Days.

Nearby, the rabbi house houses a small oratory with stained glass visible from the street. In 2013, a stele commemorated the 90th anniversary of the Jewish Eclaireurs de France (EEIF). The adjacent Israelite cemetery, authorized by Louis XVI in 1788, is one of the few pre-revolutionary Jewish cemeteries in France, with about 400 graves on terraces.

The synagogue owes its existence to the philanthropist Cécile Furtado-Heine, whose two plaques (French and Hebrew) celebrate the contribution to its construction. Claude Lévi-Strauss' grandfather was a rabbi there. Classified as a historical monument in 2010, it illustrates the progressive integration of Jewish communities into the landscape of the Versailles.

The building maintains sober furniture, contrasting with the adjacent Renaissance Oratory, with an Alliance Arche and a golden wooden desk. The Gonard Cemetery also houses a Jewish square managed by La Terre Promise, a foresight society founded in 1854 to offer dignified burials to the poorest.

External links