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The Great Synagogue 

how the great synagogue became how it was, and the history books found.

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Choral Synagogue

The only active running Synagogue left. Find out how it survived. 

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Jewish Life

Here we tell you the story about the Jews in Vilna

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Great Synagogue Tour

Check how the

Great Synagogue of Vilnius once looked like.


Once the heart of Judaism in Lithuania, the Great Synagogue of Vilna was founded at the end of the 16th century, but heavily damaged during World War Two and completely razed to the ground under the Soviet rule.



3D designers have now revived the edifice in realistic footage presenting a crucial part Lithuania’s Jewish heritage.



Three videos show key areas of the Great Synagogue: the site’s entire complex, the courtyard, and the interior.


The reconstructions are based on archival photos and architectural designs that survived after the synagogue’s final destruction in the 1950s.



The building originally stretched across five floors, two of which were below the ground level. It could accommodate up to 5,000 worshipers, significantly more than other similar structures of the time.



Inga Romanovskienė, the director of Go Vilnius, says the three-dimensional reconstruction of the Litvak heritage site is an important contribution to this year’s mission: 2020 has been designated as the Year of the Vilna Gaon and the History of the Jews of Lithuania.





“In a city that’s deeply rooted in the intellectual, spiritual, and political history of European Judaism, we dare to use newest technology methods to preserve layers of our Jewish heritage,” Romanovskienė is quoted in the press release.


Three original pieces from the Great Synagogue of Vilna have been preserved to this day: a door of the Holy Ark, a reader’s desk, and a bas-relief of the Ten



Commandments.




All can be seen at the Vilna Gaon Jewish Museum.

A team of archeologists from the US, Israel and Lithuania have been exploring the site since 2011. Vilnius plans to create a Jewish memorial centre at the site by 2023, when the city will celebrate its 700th anniversary.


Palaces In Vilnius

Sapieha Palace is in the heart of Antakalnis district of Vilnius, Lithuania.

It is the only surviving palace formerly belonging to the Sapieha family.

The palace was was built in Baroque style in 1691-1697.

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Strashun Library 

Matityahu Strashun (1817-1885) was a major book collector, who owned thousands of Hebrew texts and manuscripts, including religious writings, fiction, poetry, scientific works, Jewish and Karaite historical works, travel accounts, and Hasidic texts.

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The Great Synagogue

Once the heart of Judaism in Lithuania, the Great Synagogue of Vilna was founded at the end of the 16th century, but heavily damaged during World War Two and completely razed to the ground under the Soviet rule.

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Jewish Hospital

The Jewish hospital was established in the mid-19th century, and was the largest of the three in Vilna. The Jewish hospital is situated right opposite the Choral Synagogue.

Mishmeret Cholim building was erected next to the hospital at the end of the 19th century.

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