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Valencia de Alcántara Synagogue

Coordinates: 39°24′52″N 7°14′29″W / 39.4145°N 7.2414°W / 39.4145; -7.2414
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Valencia de Alcántara Synagogue
Spanish: Sinagoga de Valencia de Alcántara
View from outside, with the roof sloping off each of the four walls, in 2016
Religion
AffiliationJudaism (former)
RiteNusach Sefard
Ecclesiastical or organizational status
Status
  • Abandoned (as a synagogue);
  • Repurposed
Location
LocationValencia de Alcántara, Cáceres, Extremadura
CountrySpain
Valencia de Alcántara Synagogue is located in Extremadura
Valencia de Alcántara Synagogue
Location of the former synagogue in Extremadura
Geographic coordinates39°24′52″N 7°14′29″W / 39.4145°N 7.2414°W / 39.4145; -7.2414
Architecture
TypeSynagogue architecture
Completed15th century
Specifications
Length10 m (33 ft)
Width10 m (33 ft)
MaterialsMasonry

The Valencia de Alcántara Synagogue (Spanish: Sinagoga de Valencia de Alcántara) is a former Jewish congregation and synagogue, located in Valencia de Alcántara, in the province of Cáceres, in Extremadura, Spain.

While no documentary evidence attests to the building being a synagogue, it was identified as such by academics Carmen Balesteros and Jorge Oliveira.[citation needed] Evidence included it dating from the late 15th century when Jews settled near the Portuguese border due to increased persecution in Castile, and its architectural similarity to the Synagogue of Tomar in Portugal. After the expulsion of Jews in 1492, it was used for various purposes, mainly as a slaughterhouse for swine.

Location and design

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The building is located in what was the Jewish quarter in the Middle Ages. The nineteen streets, of Gothic influences, have formed a Bien de Interés Cultural since 1997.[1]

The square-shaped structure measures approximately ten by ten metres (thirty-three by thirty-three feet), and is made of whitewashed plastered masonry. The roof disperses rain in four directions, forming a pyramidal structure The one entrance through the west side enters in to the main prayer room, where there are four granite columns with Doric bases and capitals. Linking the columns are four semi-circular arches, which support the beams and the roof.[2]: 310  The design is similar to the Synagogue of Tomar, a Portuguese structure of the same era.[1]

According to historians Carmen Balesteros and Jorge Oliveira, the two doors which are no longer used due to new buildings, used to lead to a side hall and the women's prayer room. On the wall opposite the main entrance, there is a significant patch without plastering. According to the same academics, this is a tribute to the Destruction of the Second Temple by the Roman emperor Titus in 70 AD.[2]: 311 

History of the structure

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Evidence including metal remains and a 13th-century Portuguese coin indicate that the building was first used as a forge. Another Portuguese coin from the mid-15th century in the foundation of the columns indicates that it was around that time that the building was first used as a synagogue; the deteriorating political conditions for Jews in the Crown of Castile meant that a position on the border with Portugal was preferred in case of needing to flee. Its use was brief, as the Alhambra Decree was issued in 1492, expelling all Jews from the realm.[2]: 312 

The former synagogue was deliberately burned in the 16th or 17th century. Evidence of animal bones indicates that it was then used as a slaughterhouse until the 20th century, when it was a garage, a tavern and a coal shed.[2]: 312  Its time as a slaughterhouse would have been for the regional ham speciality, Jamón ibérico.[1]

The identification of the structure as a synagogue by Balesteros and Oliveira was controversial in the field of Jewish medieval archaeology in the 1990s and early 2000s, as it was based entirely on material evidence, as no documentation attests that the building was used as such.[3]

See also

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Interior view with the four columns, topped by arches. Note the former door on the far wall, and the deliberate patch without plaster to its left

References

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  1. ^ a b c "La Judería de Valencia de Alcántara" [The Jewish quarter of Valencia de Alcántara] (in Spanish). Sfarad.es. November 20, 2019. Retrieved February 8, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d Bravo Escudero, Berta M. (2002). "Restauración y rehabilitación de un edificio histórico olvidado: la sinagoga de Valencia de Alcántara (Cáceres)". Norba: Revista de arte (in Spanish) (22): 309–324. ISSN 0213-2214.
  3. ^ Numhauser, Alexander Bar-Magen (May 25, 2021). Hispanojewish Archaeology (2 vols.): The Jews of Hispania in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages through Their Material Remains. BRILL. pp. 37–38. ISBN 978-90-04-41992-6. Retrieved February 9, 2022 – via Google Books.
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Media related to Synagogue of Valencia de Alcántara at Wikimedia Commons