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Alternate names: Split [Croa], Spalato [Ital], Spalatum [Lat], Aspalathos [Grk]. 43°31' N, 16°27' E, in S Croatia, on the Adriatic sea. Largest city in Dalmatia.

Jewish community [January 2010]

City of Split
21000 Split Matice hrvatske 1 roatia
(+385 21) 310-111, 310-253 (+385 21) 310-254
Split-Dalmatia County (17)

Sephardic Jewish History of Split, Pre-Sephardic and Modern History [February 2009]

Jewish Guide to Croatia [July 2014]

Jews lived near Split in Salona in ancient Roman times. Salona (now a suburb of Split called Solin), capital of the Roman province of Dalmatia and one of the most important Roman commercial seaports on the Adriatic, has archeological evidence of a well established Jewish community in the second and third centuries C.E. including a pendant, ceramic oil lamps decorated with menorahs, a fragment of a Jewish sarcophagus marked with a menorah, and the tombstone of a Syrian Jew named Malhos. Destroyed by Avar invaders in the early seventh century, Jews from Salona presumably sought refuge in the neighboring palace of Diocletian and formed the core of the Jewish community of Split. Remaining there,  they developed the Jewish Community of Split. Existence of that Jewish community n the mid-14th century is confirmed in Episcopal church records that mention a "great synagogue" within the walls of the palace. The Jewish community swelled with the arrival of exiles from Spain and Portugal in the late 15th to early 16th centuries. Today about 100 Jews live there. The existing synagogue located on Zidovski prolaz (Jewish passage), a narrow alley in the cramped old Jewish quarter still known as the ghetto and believed to date from about 1500, was part of a residential building in the palace's NW corner. Renovated many times before, Italian fascists sacked the tiny sanctuary in 1942 and destroyed most of the ritual objects and archives in a public bonfire in the main square. Restored after the war, the small room was renovated and ceremonially reopened in September 1996. Archaeologists discovered carvings of menorahs dating from the 12th century. [February 2009]

Jewish Population: 1925/26-210; 1931- 292; 1937/38-200; 1941-415; 1947-175; 1994-130." See Gruber, Ruth Ellen. Jewish Heritage Travel: A Guide to East-Central Europe. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc, 1992. (Pages 242-243)

Split Archaeological Museum [July 2014]

The synagogue is in a residential building (Zidovki Prilaz 1) in the NW corner of the former palace. "In 1942 Italian fascists ravaged the tiny sanctuary, throwing most of the ritual objects, archives, Torah scrolls, and books onto a bonfire in the main town square. The synagogue was restored after  World War II and again renovated and reopened in 1996. It now shares a building with the Jewish community headquarters. The sanctuary is in a rectangular room with arched windows. The stone Ark is flanked by columns set under a decorative arch." Source [July 2014]

CEMETERY:

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Parent Category: EASTERN EUROPE