Synagogue in Coventry

The Synagogue in Coventry is an Ashkenazi synagogue completed in 1870 by architect Thomas Naden. The synagogue was restored in 1964. In use until 2013, this brick synagogue in the Victorian style now serves as a dwelling.

About this building

For more information visit on this building visit http://historicsynagogueseurope.org/browser.php?mode=set&id=25302

Other nearby buildings

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Coventry Cathedral

For a thousand years, Coventry has been a place of pilgrimage where visitors are greeted with a warm welcome, and this continues within Coventry Cathedral today. Combining the evocative ruins of the bombed Cathedral Church of St Michael with the magnificent ‘casket of jewels' designed by Sir Basil Spence, and voted the nation's favourite 20th century building, Coventry Cathedral is a truly inspirational place to visit.

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All Saints

As one of England's largest parish churches, All Saints rivals many cathedrals in size. With its stunning gothic style architecture, the eminent art historian Sir Nikolaus Pevsner described it as 'a church as out of the ordinary for scale as for style'.

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St Peter

St Peter's Wootton Wawen, near Stratford upon Avon, is one of the oldest structures in England's idlands. Its tower dates back to the 900s, if not earlier.