Jewish HistorySpeyer's synagogue, dedicated in 1104, marked the ascent of the most significant Jewish community in what later became known as the Palatinate. Under the protection of Emperor Henry IV (1056-1106), it forged a religious and intellectual center. The community maintained a "Yeshiva", as the school to train scribes was called. Trainees came from everywhere in order to learn from the wise men of Speyer. The remains of the synagogue, the women's prayer room which was added after 1230, and the Mikveh of 1128, the oldest preserved ritual bath in Middle Europe, are consdered cultural landmarks of the first order. The SchPIRA Museum was designed to preserve the findings that commemorate Speyer's great Jewish past. |