Leipzig Synagogue
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The ornate Moorish Revival Leipzig Synagogue in Leipzig, Saxony, Germany, was built in 1855 by German Jewish architect Otto Simonson who had studied under Gottfried Semper, architect of the Semper Synagogue in Dresden.
The synagogue was commissioned by the small Leipzig Jewish community and by Jewish merchants from throughout Europe who gathered for the annual Leipzig Trade Fair.[1]
The interior featured horseshoe arches, an Aron Kodesh in the style of a mihrab and a pulpit in the style of a mimbar.[2] Because so many businessmen gathered in Leipzig for the fairs, the synagogue is thought to have influenced the decision to build Moorish revival synagogues in other cities.
The synagogue was destroyed on Kristallnacht by the Nazi regime.
References
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- Articles needing translation from foreign-language Wikipedias
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- Moorish Revival synagogues
- Religious buildings completed in 1855
- 19th-century synagogues
- Former synagogues in Germany
- Buildings and structures in Leipzig
- Religion in Leipzig
- Synagogues in Saxony
- Synagogues destroyed during Kristallnacht (Germany)
- European synagogue stubs
- German religious building and structure stubs