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Plymouth Synagogue

18th-century synagoguesAshkenazi Jewish culture in EnglandAshkenazi synagoguesBuildings and structures in Plymouth, DevonDutch-Jewish culture in the United Kingdom
German-Jewish culture in the United KingdomGrade II* listed buildings in DevonGrade II* listed religious buildings and structuresOrthodox synagogues in EnglandSynagogues in DevonUse British English from October 2013
Plymouth Synagogue
Plymouth Synagogue

The Plymouth Synagogue is a synagogue in the city of Plymouth, England and the home of the Plymouth Hebrew Congregation. Built in 1762, it is a listed Grade II* building and the oldest extant synagogue built by Ashkenazi Jews in the English speaking world.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Plymouth Synagogue (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Plymouth Synagogue
Catherine Street, Plymouth Barbican

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Latitude Longitude
N 50.369366 ° E -4.140816 °
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Address

Guildhall

Catherine Street
PL1 2AD Plymouth, Barbican
England, United Kingdom
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Plymouth Synagogue
Plymouth Synagogue
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Plymouth
Plymouth

Plymouth (pronounced as Plimeth; ) is a port city and unitary authority in Devon, South West England. It is located on the south coast of Devon, approximately 36 miles (58 km) southwest of Exeter and 193 miles (311 km) southwest of London. It is bordered by Cornwall to the west and southwest. Plymouth's early history extends to the Bronze Age when a settlement emerged at Mount Batten, which was a trading post for the Roman Empire. By the ninth century Mount Batten had been surpassed by the village of Sutton on the opposite side of the mouth of the River Plym. Sutton was granted a charter making it a market town in 1254. As Sutton grew it also became known as Plymouth, with the change of name being formalised in 1439 when it was made a borough. In 1588, an English fleet based in Plymouth intercepted and defeated the Spanish Armada. In 1620, the Pilgrim Fathers departed Plymouth for the New World and established Plymouth Colony, the second English settlement in what is now the United States of America. During the English Civil War, the town was held by the Parliamentarians and was besieged between 1642 and 1646. Throughout the Industrial Revolution, Plymouth grew as a commercial shipping port, handling imports and passengers from the Americas, and exporting local minerals (tin, copper, lime, china clay and arsenic). From 1690 onwards a new dock for the Royal Navy was built on the banks of the River Tamar, 2 miles (3.2 km) west of Plymouth, around which grew a town called "Plymouth Dock", renamed Devonport in 1824. In 1914 Devonport and the neighbouring town of East Stonehouse were absorbed into the borough of Plymouth. Plymouth was awarded city status in 1928. During World War II, due to the city's naval importance, the German military targeted and partially destroyed the city by bombing, an act known as the Plymouth Blitz. After the war, the city centre was completely rebuilt. Subsequent expansion led to the incorporation of Plympton, Plymstock, and other outlying suburbs, in 1967. The city is home to 264,727 (2021) people, making it the 30th-most populous built-up area in the United Kingdom and the second-largest city in the South West, after Bristol. It is governed locally by Plymouth City Council and is represented nationally by two MPs. Plymouth's economy remains strongly influenced by shipbuilding and seafaring but has tended toward a service economy since the 1990s. It has ferry links to Brittany (Roscoff and St Malo) and to Spain (Santander). It has the largest operational naval base in Western Europe, HMNB Devonport, and is home to the University of Plymouth. Plymouth is categorized as a Small-Port City using the Southampton System for port-city classification.

Prince Christian Victor Memorial
Prince Christian Victor Memorial

The Prince Christian Victor Memorial is a war memorial on The Hoe in Plymouth. It was erected in 1902 to commemorate the death of Prince Christian Victor of Schleswig-Holstein, the eldest son of Queen Victoria's third daughter Princess Helena. He died of typhoid fever during the Second Boer War. It became a Grade II listed building in 1975. The memorial was designed by the architect Frederick William Marks, with three bronze panels made by the sculptor Onslow Whiting and one by Emil Fuchs. It comprises a tall obelisk of pink granite, about 12 m (39 ft) high, in several sections, the third from the bottom decorated with a palmette motif, the next fluted, and the last flaring out to the base. The obelisk stands on a square green granite plinth with plaques, on a lighter grey granite base of two steps. An inscription on the south face records that its foundation stone was laid by Lady Butler on 4 August 1902, and (now almost illegible) that the completed memorial was unveiled on 8 August 1903 by Lady Audrey Buller, wife of General Redvers Buller. Each side of the plinth has an arched recess with a bronze panel. The front panel (south) by Fuchs shows two angels lifting a soldier "towards another world" with an inscribed dedication of the memorial to Prince Christian Victor: "IN MEMORY OF / CHRISTIAN VICTOR PRINCE OF SCHLESWIG-HOLSTEIN / CAPTAIN & BREVET MAJOR, THE KING'S ROYAL RIFLE CORPS / DIED AT PRETORIA OCTOBER 29TH 1900, / ELDEST SON OF PRINCE AND PRINCESS CHRITIAN OF SCHLESWIG-HOLSTEIN / GRANDSON OF VICTORIA, QUEEN OF GREAT BRITAIN & IRELAND / EMPRESS OF INDIA". The other three sides have panels by Whiting which show, on the east and west sides, battles from the Boer War, including one (east) showing an attack by the Devonshire Regiment at Wagon Hill during the Siege of Ladysmith, and the other (west) showing the Somerset Light Infantry and the Gloucestershire Regiment in action; and the rear (north) has a long inscription, recording that the memorial was erected by the South Africa diamond merchant Alfred Mosely "TO THE MEMORY OF / CHRISTIAN VICTOR. PRINCE OF / SCHLESWIG-HOLSTEIN, AND / TO THE OFFICERS, NON-COM-/ISSIONED OFFICERS & MEN / OF THE GLOUCESTERSHIRE, / SOMERSET & DEVONSHIRE / REGIMENTS WHO FELL DURING / THE BOER WAR, 1899-1902". A plaster modello for this main inscription panel is held by the National Army Museum. To the sides of each panel, the granite is inscribed with the names of Boer War battles, with some repetition. On the south side are "COLENSO / SPION KOP / VAALKRANTZE / MONTE CARISTO" and "PIETER'S HILL / LADYSMITH / LAINGS NEK / BELFAST"; to the east "PIETFONTEIN / DEFENCE OF / LADYSMITH / KIMBERLEY" AND "PAARDEBERG / DREIFONTEIN / KNEIS / POPLAR GROVE"; on the north side "WITTEBERGEN / JOHANNESBERG / DIAMOND HILL / BOTHAVILLE" and "RELIEF OF / LADYSMITH / TUGELA HEIGHTS / LOMBARD'sKOP "; and to the west "ELANDSLAACTE / WAGON HILL / LADYSMITH / BERGENDAL" and "COLENSO / SPION KOP / LAINGS NEK / TUGELA HEIGHTS". The memorial is set on a small square of grass delimited by low chains hanging between granite bollards, at the east end of Hoe Park below the north west bastion of the Royal Citadel.