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This List of synagogues in Ukraine contains active, otherwise used and destroyed synagogues in Ukraine . In all cases the year of the completion of the building is given. Italics indicate an approximate date.
Dnipropetrovsk Oblast [ edit ]
Name
Location
Image
Completed
Destroyed
Remarks
Golden Rose Synagogue
Dnipro
1868
1924 workers' club and storehouse; 1996 returned to Jewish community[ 3]
Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast [ edit ]
Name
Location
Image
Completed
Destroyed
Remarks
Kherson Old Synagogue
Kherson
[15]
1780
1940s
Kherson New Synagogue
Kherson
[16]
1895
Khmelnytskyi Oblast [ edit ]
Name
Location
Image
Completed
Destroyed
Remarks
Kamianets-Podilskyi Synagogue
Kamianets-Podilskyi
c. 1850 ; middle of 18th century
Today used as restaurant
Great Synagogue
Sataniv
1514
Used as a warehouse from 1933; restored as a synagogue in 2012 and one of the oldest synagogues in Ukraine[ 8]
Zarichanka Synagogue
Zarichanka (Lanckorun)
[17]
end of 17th century
1940s
Name
Location
Image
Completed
Destroyed
Remarks
Oleksandrivsk Synagogue
Oleksandrivsk
[20]
Name
Location
Image
Completed
Destroyed
Remarks
Beit Chabad Synagogue
Odesa
Bejt-Chabat-Synagoge
1893
Brodsky Synagogue
Odesa
1867
Since c. 1925 workers' club "Rosa Luxemburg"; later city archive; 2016 returned to Jewish community and under restoration[ 29]
Kenesa Synagogue
Odesa
Karaite-Kenesa
1895
Nachlas Eliezer Synagogue
Odesa
Nachlas Elieser Synagoge (2014)
1890
Or-Sameach Synagogue
Odesa
Or-Sameach-Synagoge
1855
Since 1923 used as a museum, music theater, sports hall; 1996 returned to Jewish community
Name
Location
Image
Completed
Destroyed
Remarks
Kremenchuk Synagogue
Kremenchuk
[27]
19th century
1994
Name
Location
Image
Completed
Destroyed
Remarks
Dubno Synagogue
Dubno
[28]
1784
1939
Rivne Synagogue
Rivne
1874
Name
Location
Image
Completed
Destroyed
Remarks
Chortkiv Old Synagogue
Chortkiv
1771
Devastated during WW II
Chortkiv Hasidic Synagogue
Chortkiv
1885
Dolyna (Terebovlia) Synagogue
Dolyna (Terebovlia) (Janów Trembovelski)
c. 1700
c. 1941
Burnt down in WW II
Great Synagogue
Husiatyn
1654
Damaged during WW II; renovated c. 1960 as a museum; deteriorating since c. 1990 [ 30] [ 31]
Kozliv Synagogue
Kozliv
[29]
Kremenets Great Synagogue
Kremenets
1839
1941
Great Synagogue
Pidhaitsi
c. 1648
2019
Abandoned during WWII; used for grain storage thereafter, then in a ruinous state before its collapse in 2019 and subsequent demolition[ 32]
Ternopil Synagogue
Ternopil
[30]
1628
1940s
Yazlovets Synagogue
Yazlovets
c. 1650
c. 1941 ; in WWII
Zaporizhzhia Oblast [ edit ]
Name
Location
Image
Completed
Destroyed
Remarks
Berdyansk Synagogue
Berdyansk
Zaporizhzhia Synagogue
Zaporizhzhia
[40]
19th century
Name
Location
Image
Completed
Destroyed
Remarks
Berdychiv Choral Synagogue
Berdychiv
1850
Norynsk Synagogue
Norynsk
Norynsk Wooden Synagogue
c. 1800 ; end 18th, begin 19th century
Radomyshl Synagogue
Radomyshl
1887
c. 1930
Burnt down in 1926; demolished in the 1930s[ 40]
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^ "Great City Synagogue" . Virtual Shtetl . POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews. n.d. Retrieved 1 April 2024 .
^ Boyko, Oksana, ed. (n.d.). "VUL. VUHILNA, 1-3 – FORMER JANKEL JANCER SHUL SYNAGOGUE" . Lviv Interactive . Retrieved 30 March 2024 .
^ "Synagoga Tempel we Lwowie" . Virtual Shtetl (in Polish).
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^ "The Tsori Gilead Synagogue in Lviv (4 Brativ Mikhnovskykh Street)" . Virtual Shtetl . Warsaw, Poland: POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews. 2017. Retrieved 7 April 2024 .
^ Gruber, Samuel D. (2005). "Jewish Cemeteries, Synagogues, and Mass Grave Sites in Ukraine" . United States Commission for the Preservation of America's Heritage Abroad: Paper 94 . School of Architecture.
^ "Great Synagogue in Velyki Mosty, Ukraine" . The Center for Jewish Art . Israel. n.d. Retrieved 29 March 2024 .
^ Zakaliuzna, Bozhena; Kerzhner, Anatoliy. "Zhovkva: Guidebook" . Shtetl Routes . Retrieved 6 April 2022 .
^ "Zhovkva Synagogue" . World Monuments Fund . 2022. Retrieved 6 April 2022 .
^ Levin, Vladimir (2020). "Reform or Consensus? Choral Synagogues in the Russian Empire" . Arts . 9 (72). Jerusalem, Israel: The Center for Jewish Art, Hebrew University of Jerusalem : 6–10. doi :10.3390/arts9020072 . Retrieved 5 April 2024 – via ResearchGate.
^ "Synagogye" . Judaica.kiev.ua. Archived from the original on 11 February 2012. Retrieved 3 March 2014 .
^ "Deteriorating Husiatyn, Ukraine fortress synagogue is for rent" . Jewish Heritage Europe . 26 November 2014. Retrieved 4 October 2019 .
^ "Ukraine: Collapse of buttress threatens long-abandoned 17th century Pidhaitsi synagogue" . Jewish Heritage Europe . 13 May 2019. Retrieved 29 March 2024 .
^ "Synagogue (Shilekhl) in Bershad" . Historic Synagogues of Europe . Jerusalem, Israel: Center for Jewish Art and Foundation for Jewish Heritage. Hebrew University of Jerusalem . 1998. Retrieved 9 April 2024 .
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^ "Уездный город Радомысль Киевской губернии начала ХХ века" (in Russian). Retrieved 10 June 2019 .
[41] Old postcards and photos of synagogues in Ukraine
[42] Old pictures of synagogues (many in Ukraine) - alamy.de
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Piechotka, Maria; Piechotka, Kazimierz (2015). Heaven's Gates. Wooden synagogues in the territories of the former Polish-Lithuanian Commenwealth . Warschau: Polish Institute of World Art Studies & POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews. ISBN 978-83-942048-6-0 .
Piechotka, Maria; Piechotka, Kazimierz (2017). Heaven's Gates. Masonry synagogues in the territories of the former Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth . Warschau: Polish Institute of World Art Studies & POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews. ISBN 978-83-949149-5-0 .
Kravtsov, Sergey R.; Levin, Vladimir. Synagogues in Ukraine VOLHYNIA . Vol. 1 and 2. The Center Of Jewish Art. ISBN 978-965-227-342-0 .