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Coordinates: 50°05′25″N 14°25′10″E / 50.09028°N 14.41944°E / 50.09028; 14.41944
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{{Short description|Town quarter and cadastral area of Prague, Czech Republic}}
{{other uses|Josefov (disambiguation)}}
{{Other uses|Josefov (disambiguation)}}
[[File:Flag of Josefov (assumed).svg|thumb|Flag of Josefov (assumed)<ref>See [http://www.crwflags.com/fotw/flags/cz-ab-jo.html FOTW] and [http://www.loeser.us/flags/czech_note1.html Historical Flags of Our Ancestors] for more information.</ref>]]
[[Image:V10p163001 Prague.jpg|thumb|Narrow streets of the ghetto, demolished between 1893 and 1913]]
[[Image:V10p163001 Prague.jpg|thumb|Narrow streets of the ghetto, demolished between 1893 and 1913]]
[[File:Praha Staronova Synagoga.jpg|thumb|The old synagogue]]
[[File:Praha Staronova Synagoga.jpg|thumb|The [[Old New Synagogue]]]]
'''Josefov''' (also '''Jewish Quarter'''; {{lang-de|Josefstadt}}) is a town quarter and the smallest [[cadastre|cadastral]] area of [[Prague]], [[Czech Republic]], formerly the [[Jewish ghettos in Europe|Jewish ghetto]] of the town. It is completely surrounded by the [[Old Town, Prague|Old Town]]. The quarter is often represented by the flag of [[Jews of Prague|Prague's Jewish community]], a yellow Magen David ([[Star of David]]) on a red field.
'''Josefov''' (also '''Jewish Quarter'''; {{lang-de|Josefstadt}}) is a town quarter and the smallest [[cadastre|cadastral]] area of [[Prague]], [[Czech Republic]], formerly the [[Jewish ghettos in Europe|Jewish ghetto]] of the town. It is surrounded by the [[Old Town, Prague|Old Town]]. The quarter is often represented by the flag of [[Jews of Prague|Prague's Jewish community]], a yellow Magen David ([[Star of David]]) on a red field.


==History==
==History==


Jews are believed to have settled in Prague as early as the 10th century. The first [[pogrom]] was in 1096 (the first crusade) and eventually they were concentrated within a walled [[Ghetto]]. In 1262, [[Otakar II of Bohemia|Přemysl Otakar II]] issued a ''Statuta Judaeorum'' which granted the community a degree of self-administration. In 1389, one of the worst [[pogrom]]s saw some 1,500 massacred at [[Easter Sunday]]. The [[ghetto]] was most prosperous towards the end of the 16th century when the Jewish Mayor, [[Mordecai Maisel]], became the Minister of Finance and a very wealthy man. His money helped develop the ghetto.
Jews are believed to have settled in Prague as early as the 10th century. The first [[pogrom]] was in 1096 (the first crusade) and eventually they were concentrated within a walled [[Ghetto]]. In 1262, [[Otakar II of Bohemia|Přemysl Otakar II]] issued a ''Statuta Judaeorum'' which granted the community a degree of self-administration. The [[ghetto]] was most prosperous towards the end of the 16th century when the Jewish Mayor, [[Mordecai Maisel]], became the Minister of Finance and a very wealthy man. His money helped develop the ghetto.


In 1850, the quarter was renamed "Josefstadt" (Joseph's City) after [[Emperor Joseph II|Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor]] who emancipated Jews with the [[Patent of toleration|Toleration Edict]] in 1781. Two years before Jews were allowed to settle outside of the city, so the share of the Jewish population in Josefov decreased, while only orthodox and poor Jews remained living there.
In 1850, the quarter was renamed "Josefstadt" (Joseph's City) after [[Emperor Joseph II|Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor]] who emancipated Jews with the [[Patent of toleration|Toleration Edict]] in 1781. Two years before Jews were allowed to settle outside of the city, so the share of the Jewish population in Josefov decreased, while only Orthodox and poor Jews remained living there.


Most of the quarter was demolished between 1893 and 1913 as part of an initiative to model the city on [[Paris]]. What was left were only six synagogues, the old cemetery, and the Old Jewish Town Hall (now all part of the [[Jewish Museum in Prague]] and described below).
Most of the quarter was demolished between 1893 and 1913 as part of an initiative to model the city on [[Paris]]. What was left were only six synagogues, the old cemetery, and the Old Jewish Town Hall (now all part of the [[Jewish Museum in Prague]] and described below).
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==Historical sites==
==Historical sites==
[[Image:OldJewishCemeteryPragueCzechRepublic.jpg|thumb|[[Old Jewish Cemetery, Prague]]]]
[[Image:OldJewishCemeteryPragueCzechRepublic.jpg|thumb|[[Old Jewish Cemetery, Prague]]]]
* [[Franz Kafka|Franz Kafka's]] birthplace.
* [[Franz Kafka]]'s birthplace.
* [[High Synagogue, Prague|High Synagogue]] (Vysoká synagoga): 16th-century synagogue.
* [[High Synagogue (Prague)|High Synagogue]] (Vysoká synagoga): 16th-century synagogue.
* [[Jewish Town Hall, Prague|Jewish Town Hall]] (Židovská radnice): 18th-century [[rococo]] town hall.
* [[Jewish Town Hall (Prague)|Jewish Town Hall]] (Židovská radnice): 18th-century [[rococo]] town hall.
* [[Klausen Synagogue|Klaus Synagogue]] (Klausova synagoga): 16th-century [[baroque]] synagogue.
* [[Klausen Synagogue]] (Klausová synagoga): 16th-century [[baroque]] synagogue.
* [[Maisel Synagogue, Prague|Maisel Synagogue]] (Maiselova synagoga): 16th-century synagogue destroyed by fire, now used as a museum.
* [[Maisel Synagogue]] (Maiselova synagoga): 16th-century synagogue destroyed by fire, now used as a museum.
* [[Pinkas Synagogue]] (Pinkasova synagoga): 16th-century synagogue, now a memorial to Holocaust victims.
* [[Pinkas Synagogue]] (Pinkasova synagoga): 16th-century synagogue, now a memorial to Holocaust victims.
* [[Spanish Synagogue (Prague)|Spanish Synagogue]] (Španělská synagoga): 19th-century synagogue with Moorish interior.
* [[Spanish Synagogue (Prague)|Spanish Synagogue]] (Španělská synagoga): 19th-century synagogue with Moorish interior.
* [[Old Jewish Cemetery, Prague|Old Jewish Cemetery]] (Starý židovský hřbitov): 15th- to 18th-century cemetery. Europe's oldest surviving Jewish cemetery.
* [[Old Jewish Cemetery, Prague|Old Jewish Cemetery]] (Starý židovský hřbitov): 15th- to 18th-century cemetery. Europe's oldest surviving Jewish cemetery.
* [[Old New Synagogue, Prague|Old New Synagogue]] (Staronová synagoga): 13th-century [[Gothic architecture|Gothic]] synagogue.
* [[Old New Synagogue]] (Staronová synagoga): 13th-century [[Gothic architecture|Gothic]] synagogue.
* [[Jewish Ceremonial Hall, Prague]] (Obřadní síň): 20th-century [[neo-renaissance]] hall.
* [[Ceremonial Hall of the Prague Jewish Burial Society]] (Obřadní síň): 20th-century [[neo-renaissance]] hall.


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
* Všetečka, Jiří; Kuděla Jiří (1993). ''The fate of Jewish Prague''. Grafoprint-Neubert. {{ISBN|80-901208-5-7}}
* Všetečka, Jiří; Kuděla, Jiří (1993). ''The fate of Jewish Prague''. Grafoprint-Neubert. {{ISBN|80-901208-5-7}}
* Prague City Tourism (2017). [https://www.praguecitytourism.cz/file/edee/2017/12/100x210-praha-zidovska_eng_webc.pdf ''Prague: Jewish'']. Prague City Tourism.
* Prague City Tourism (2017). [https://www.praguecitytourism.cz/file/edee/2017/12/100x210-praha-zidovska_eng_webc.pdf ''Prague: Jewish'']. Prague City Tourism.


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File:Ciezarnakobietajosefov.jpg|A monument of a pregnant woman made of mirrors
File:Ciezarnakobietajosefov.jpg|A monument of a pregnant woman made of mirrors
</gallery>
</gallery>

== See also ==
* [[History of the Jews in Prague]]


==References==
==References==
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==External links==
==External links==
{{commons category|Josefov (Prague)}}
{{Commons category|Josefov (Prague)}}
*[http://www.jewishmuseum.cz Jewish Museum in Prague]
*[http://www.jewishmuseum.cz Jewish Museum in Prague]
*[https://www.xn--4dbe6cq.co.il/ Prague Tours]


{{Districts and cadastral areas of Prague}}
{{Districts and cadastral areas of Prague}}


{{coord|50|05|25|N|14|25|10|E|display=title|region:CZ_type:city_source:dewiki}}
{{coord|50|05|25|N|14|25|10|E|display=title|region:CZ_type:city_source:dewiki}}
{{Authority control}}


[[Category:Districts of Prague]]
[[Category:Districts of Prague]]
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[[Category:Jewish ghettos in Europe]]
[[Category:Jewish ghettos in Europe]]
[[Category:Tourist attractions in Prague]]
[[Category:Tourist attractions in Prague]]
[[Category:Josefov (Prague)]]
[[Category:Josefov (Prague)| ]]

Latest revision as of 09:38, 22 February 2024

Narrow streets of the ghetto, demolished between 1893 and 1913
The Old New Synagogue

Josefov (also Jewish Quarter; ‹See Tfd›German: Josefstadt) is a town quarter and the smallest cadastral area of Prague, Czech Republic, formerly the Jewish ghetto of the town. It is surrounded by the Old Town. The quarter is often represented by the flag of Prague's Jewish community, a yellow Magen David (Star of David) on a red field.

History

[edit]

Jews are believed to have settled in Prague as early as the 10th century. The first pogrom was in 1096 (the first crusade) and eventually they were concentrated within a walled Ghetto. In 1262, Přemysl Otakar II issued a Statuta Judaeorum which granted the community a degree of self-administration. The ghetto was most prosperous towards the end of the 16th century when the Jewish Mayor, Mordecai Maisel, became the Minister of Finance and a very wealthy man. His money helped develop the ghetto.

In 1850, the quarter was renamed "Josefstadt" (Joseph's City) after Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor who emancipated Jews with the Toleration Edict in 1781. Two years before Jews were allowed to settle outside of the city, so the share of the Jewish population in Josefov decreased, while only Orthodox and poor Jews remained living there.

Most of the quarter was demolished between 1893 and 1913 as part of an initiative to model the city on Paris. What was left were only six synagogues, the old cemetery, and the Old Jewish Town Hall (now all part of the Jewish Museum in Prague and described below).

Currently Josefov is overbuilt with buildings from the beginning of the 20th century, so it is difficult to appreciate exactly what the old quarter was like when it was reputed to have over 18,000 inhabitants. Medieval Josefov is depicted in the 1920 film The Golem, composed of cramped, angular, squinted buildings, but this impression is used purely to convey the expressionist nature of the film.

Historical sites

[edit]
Old Jewish Cemetery, Prague

Further reading

[edit]
  • Všetečka, Jiří; Kuděla, Jiří (1993). The fate of Jewish Prague. Grafoprint-Neubert. ISBN 80-901208-5-7
  • Prague City Tourism (2017). Prague: Jewish. Prague City Tourism.
[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]

50°05′25″N 14°25′10″E / 50.09028°N 14.41944°E / 50.09028; 14.41944