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Explore the Jewish neighborhood of Bucharest on a private walking tour

Bucharest
Book online or call: +44 0800 015 4961
Duration: 3 hours
Activity Level: Easy
Experience: Family, Historical, Short Break
Language: English
Permis photo inclus
Visite en transports en commun
Excursion en bateau sur le canal incluse
Billets de train inclus
Convient aux petits enfants
Visite accessible en fauteuil roulant
Billet musée inclus
Collation légère incluse
Déjeuner inclus
Transport inclus
Visite à pied

Overview

Discover the misremembered Jewish neighborhood of Bucharest with its stories of grief and happiness. With your private guide, you will learn the local Jewish history and visit major Jewish landmarks in Bucharest. You will go off-the-beaten-path to explore Romania's current history and discover that the spirit of Jewish Bucharest lives on.

What's included

  • Professional licensed guide
  • Walking tour of Jewish Bucharest
  • Admission fee
  • All fees and taxes
  • Food and drinks (own expense)
  • Personal expenses

Highlights

Bucharest
Bucharest is Romania's capital and largest city, as well as the most important industrial and commercial center of the country. With more than 2.1 million inhabitants in the urban area, Bucharest is one of the largest cities in Southeastern Europe. Bucharest is the primary entry point into Romania. Bucharest is a booming city with many large infrastructure projects changing the old face of the city. Known in the past as "The Little Paris," Bucharest has changed a lot lately, and today it has become a very interesting mix of old and new that has little to do with its former reputation. Finding a 300-year-old church near a steel-and-glass tower that both sit next to a communist-style building is commonplace in Bucharest. Bucharest offers some excellent attractions and has cultivated a sophisticated, trendy, and modern sensibility that many have come to expect from a European capital. Bucharest has benefited from an economic boom along with the EU grants that have helped rebuild parts of the city, including the revamped old town. Those who have known Bucharest in the past but have not visited recently will be surprised by the changes that are taking place. The largest finished project is the impressive Basarab overpass, which is Europe's widest cable bridge.
Bucharest Holocaust memorial
In October 2009, a central Holocaust memorial was unveiled in the Romanian capital of Bucharest. It is dedicated to the victims of the Holocaust in Romania. Between 1940 and 1944, hundreds of thousands of Romanian Jews fell victim to the systematic persecution of Jews by the Romanian authorities.
Jewish neighborhood of Bucharest
Once upon a time, Bucharest was home to a big, prosperous Jewish community. Almost 11% of Bucharest’s population was represented by Jews in the inter-war period. Those days are long gone now, as the Jews were greatly affected by the events of the World War II, migration to Israel and our communist regime. The Jewish neighbourhood (which used to spread from Unirii Square towards the east part of Bucharest) was destroyed in the ’80, during Ceausescu’s Regime. Although only a few marks of the old Jewish district are still standing, we find their legacy and culture still vibrant and rich.
Solly Gold Bucharest
Imobulil Solly Gold, modernist house at Boulevard Hristo Botev 34, Bucharest, designed by Marcel Janco. Built in 1934.
State Jewish Theater
Teatrul Evreiesc de Stat in Bucharest, Romania is a theater specializing in Jewish-related plays. It is the oldest Yiddish-language theater with uninterrupted activity in the world. Its contemporary repertoire includes plays by Jewish authors, plays on Jewish topics, and plays in Yiddish.
The Coral Temple
The Choral Temple is a synagogue located in Bucharest, Romania. It is a copy of Vienna's Leopoldstadt-Tempelgasse Great Synagogue, which was raised in 1855–1858. It was designed by Enderle and Freiwald and built between 1864 - 1866.
The Great Synagogue in Bucharest
The Great Synagogue in Bucharest, Romania was raised in 1845 by the Polish-Jewish community. It was repaired in 1865, redesigned in 1903 and 1909, repainted in Rococo style in 1936 by Ghershon Horowitz, then it was restored again in 1945, as it had been devastated by the far-right Legionaries.

Itinerary

09:00 09:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 13:00

Your guide will meet you at your hotel or other convenient for you place in the center of Bucharest.

During this walking tour of the Jewish neighborhood of Bucharest, you will see all sights listed and much more including impressive architecture built by Marcel Iancu, leading cultural figure of the Jewish community, communist neighborhood Unirii that replaced the historic Jewish quarter, neoclassical buildings created by Jewish architect Leonida Negrescu and Old inns – the remains of some of the most famous inns in Bucharest.

At the end of the tour, the guide will take you back to your hotel.

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