Ahrida Synagogue of Istanbul

Ahrida (Ohrid) Synagogue (Hebrew: קהל קדוש אכרידה) is one of the oldest[1] synagogues in Istanbul, Turkey. It is located in Balat, once a thriving Jewish quarter in the city.

It was built by Romaniotes (Macedonian Jews), dating back to the 1430s, from the city of Ohrid (called ‘Ahrid’ in Greek) in what was then the Ottoman Empire and is now North Macedonia.[1] Neve Shalom is said to have moved to Constantinople more than 550 years ago[clarification needed]. Sephardi Jews arrived in the Ottoman Empire from the Iberian peninsula beginning in 1492, and soon were a larger group of Jews in population than the Romaniotes. The Romaniotes of Istanbul, as in many communities, including Thessaloniki became assimilated into the Sephardic culture and adopted the Sephardic liturgy as well as the language of the Sefardim, Judezmo. The synagogue building, one of the two ancient synagogues in Istanbul’s Golden Horn, was renovated in 1992 by the Quincentennial Foundation, in celebration of the 500th anniversary of Sephardic Jews’ arrival in the Ottoman Empire. Ahrida Synagogue is known for its boat-shaped tevah (the reading platform, known in Ashkenazi communities as a bimah).[2] Ahrida Synagogue is also the only synagogue in Istanbul at which Sabbatai Zevi, founder of the Jewish Sabbatean movement, prayed.[3]

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