Old-New Synagogue
(http://www.sacred-destina...). the name sounds strange for a building from the 13th century but it was originally just 'new' to distinguish it from an even older synagogue. this was replaced by the spanish synagogue in the 17th century, when the old-new synagogue acquired its current name.
Pinkas Synagogue
Inside the front door of the Pinkas Synagogue, inscribed in tiny red and black letters on almost every square inch of wallspace are the names of 77,297 Jews who were killed in the war. This visual representation humanizes such a number, attaching names to the statistics. In larger type at the front of the synagogue are the names of the concentration camps in which they perished: Dachau, Mauthausen, Oswiecim Auschwitz and others. The second floor houses a moving exhibit of children's art which is smaller than the original exhibit at Terezin but no less sad.
Old Jewish Cemetery
Czech: Starý Židovský HÅbitov, Siroká ulice. On the left wall before the entrance is a plaque detailing conservation efforts which cost 1 million crowns per year. Over 20,000 people are buried in about twelve layers of graves, stacked to save space. Avigdor Kara is the earliest known person buried here - he was a poet who lived to tell about the 1389 pogrom. The reddish, grey and black tombstones are tilted at crazy angles, some covered with moss, some newly cleaned. Walking along the path that winds around the perimeter, Rabbi Loew's tombstone is about halfway through. It has a lion on it and a plaque on the wall across from it. Loew is known as the father of the Golem legend in Prague.The Spanish Synagogue, VÄzeÅská 1. The Spanish Synagogue, so-called because Sephardic Jews expelled from Spain at the end of the 15th century built a previous synagogue on this site, is a wild combination of neo-Renaissance and Moorish-Spain style. Think the Alhambra crossed with a Victorian wallpaper store, with some Islamic geometric and floral flourishes thrown in for good measure. The predominant color is red, which lends a regal aura to the interior, but there are also multiple shades of green and blue. The background behind the altar is blue covered with gold stars, visually implying the intercession of the deity in the holy space of the building, drawing one's eyes upward to the vast ceiling.
Church of the Holy Ghost
Klausen Synogogue
Pariska Street
Jewish Town Hall
Rudolfinum
Jewish Museum
(http://www.jewishmuseum.c...)This is not a single site but consists of four synagogues, the Old Jewish Cemetery and the Memorial Hall - entrance to all being covered by a single ticket. A combined ticket that includes the Old-New Synagogue can be obtained at a considerable extra cost but the interest of the building justifies it.
