• The Pinkas Synagogue (Czech: Pinkasova synagoga) is a former Jewish congregation and synagogue, located at Široká 3, in the Jewish Town of Prague, in the Czech Republic.
  • The Pinkas Synagogue is the second oldest preserved synagogue in Prague. Built in the late Gothic style in 1535, it was founded by Aaron Meshulam Horowitz...
  • The entrance to the synagogue is included in the admission price Pinkas Synagogue is open from 9 am to 4:30 pm Sundays through Friday.
  • At present, in the Pinkas Synagogue, there is a memorial of almost 80,000 Czech and Moravian Jews who have been victims of the Holocaust.
  • Just around the corner from the Old-New Synagogue, is the Pinkas Synagogue, a Renaissance building that has survived undamaged and unaltered to this...
  • The Pinkas Synagogue stands at the entrance to the Old Jewish Cemetery, but is worth seeing in its own right. ... The Pinkas Synagogue is a sobering place.
  • During the Second World War, the synagogue in Pinkas was used as a warehouse for Jewish liturgical utensils.
  • The Late Gothic and Renaissance Pinkas Synagogue is situated in close proximity to the Old Jewish Cemetery. ... The Pinkas Synagogue is still active today.
  • On the first floor of the synagogue there is an exhibition of pictures drawn by children in the Theresienstadt Ghetto. ... Pinkas Synagogue has no reviews yet.
  • Pinkas Synagogue (Pinkasova Synagoga). Founded in 1479 by Rabbi Pinkas, one of the Jewish community wealthy member, it is now one of the memorials to the...
  • Located in Prague’s evocative Jewish Quarter is the Pinkas Synagogue. ... The Pinkas Synagogue today is an important memorial for the victims of the Nazis.
  • Pinkas Synagogue is the second oldest building in the Prague ghetto. It began in 1535 as a private house of prayer.
  • The Pinkas Synagogue originally served as a private prayer hall for the prosperous and influential Horovitz family.