Synagogue
Synagogue

Synagogue

Historic buildings and places Places of worship

Strada Babadag, Tulcea, Romania

About

On the Babadag Street, one of the most important streets of the municipality, is located the Synagogue, known as the Israelit Temple, as it appears in official documents and as it is called by the local-jews people, as many as are left.

It looks like a construction that has traveled through time, being the only one of its kind on the entire street, guarded on both sides by concrete blocks. In the old days, Babadag street, together with the surrounding streets, was the center of the Jewish quarter of Tulcea, whose number of souls reached, in 1910, approximately two thousand. The Israelite neighborhood, as it was called by the Tulceni, was formed later and more slowly than the Romanian, Greek or Bulgarian ones, perhaps also due to the fact that the Tulcean trade was for a long time a fiefdom of the Greeks and the Armenians.

The Israelit Temple is an almost lonely vestige of a large and important community of the city, of which only a few dozen representatives still exist today. From time to time, the beautiful synagogue hosts various cultural events.

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The church is located on St. Heroilor no. 30, near the Heroes' Cemetery and in the middle of the "Comorovca" neighborhood, between Lupeni, Eroilor, Libertatii streets and the Heroes' Cemetery. The old church was built in 1847. As for the current church, it was built in 1888-1898, the former branch of the St. Nicholas parish until 1943, consecrated in November 1898. The church was built of brick, at the behest of the Russian priest Patapie Lebedov, who encouraged the collection of funds and the provision of cult objects, brought from Ukraine. The shape is of a cross with two towers, one of which houses the belfry with four bells returned in 1935 to the workshops of the Patriarchate in Bucharest with the financial contribution of the city hall, during the time of the parish priest Gh. Racovita. Initially, the church had side doors, facing the pews, closed after the 1977 earthquake. The mural painting was done in 1932 by Geo Cardas (only the painting from the capital was preserved), being redone in 1950 and between 1983-1985 by Victor Negoi 1983-1985, during the time of the priest Lazar Victor. The first archpriest of Tulcea, Fr. Gheorghe Rascanu, awarded with the "Order of the Star of Romania and the Crown of Romania", died on January 29, 1896. The eldest daughter of the archpriest, Ecaterina, born in 1867 in Ismail-Bessarabia, married in 1889 the schoolmaster Brutus Cotov (d. 8.01.1940 in Constanta). The archpriest's other daughter, Maria, also born in Ismail, in 1871, married Ion in 1890. D. Magura, the minor son of the priest "Dimitre Constantinescu dis si Magura" and Maria. Nichifor de Carpat, the last head of the Diocese of Tulcea, who died on the night of July 29 to 30, 1893, is also buried here. Source: Prof. Lelia Postolache via tulcealibrary.ro
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