The list of wooden synagogues shows destroyed and extant synagogues, the builders of which adapted an architecture traditional in Central and Eastern Europe to the requirements of Jewish worship. All the large, representative wooden synagogues were destroyed by the end of World War II. Today only a few simple wooden synagogues exist, most of them in Lithuania. Synagogues that no longer exist are recorded as far as they are more precisely known from drawings or photographs.
If years are given in italics, then these are approximate values.
The use of wood as a building material for synagogues was obvious in a wooded region; churches were also initially built as wooden structures. However, a synod in Piotrków in the 16th century demanded that synagogues always be made of wood, not stone, so that stone buildings for Jewish communities were only possible with special permission. Wooden synagogues remained the norm at a time when Christian churches were mostly built as stone. The political space in which wooden synagogues with typical construction features and painting patterns developed was the Poland-Lithuania Commonwealth (1569âÂÂ1795), in which the Jewish Council of the Four Lands existed (1580âÂÂ1764).
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Since the publication of the book Wooden Synagogues by Maria and Kazimierz Piechotka (1959), some American architects have referred to the formal language of Polish wooden synagogues:
There is a replica of the Woà Âpa Synagogue is in Bilgoraj, and another replica of the synagogue (Poà Âaniec) is in Sanok.
POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw has a partial reconstruction of the Gwoà ºdziec Synagogue. The ceiling painting of the synagogue in Chodoriw was reconstructed for the ANU - Museum of the Jewish People (Beit Hatefusot) in Tel Aviv.
In the Musée d'Art et d'Histoire du Judaïsme (Museum of Jewish Art and History) in Paris there are models of several wooden synagogues.