Jewish Ghetto
Rome's Jewish Quarter holds Europe's oldest continuous Jewish community, dating back over 2,000 years.
About Jewish Ghetto
Rome's Jewish Quarter holds Europe's oldest continuous Jewish community, dating back over 2,000 years. You'll walk narrow cobblestone streets lined with kosher restaurants, see the Great Synagogue's distinctive square dome rising above medieval buildings, and explore ruins of the ancient Portico d'Ottavia where Roman Jews once conducted business. The area spans just four blocks but contains synagogues, Jewish bakeries, and trattorias serving Roman-Jewish specialties like carciofi alla giudia.
The quarter feels intimate and lived-in rather than touristy, with locals shopping at kosher butchers and elderly men chatting outside cafes. You'll notice Hebrew inscriptions on doorways, stumbling stones commemorating Holocaust victims embedded in sidewalks, and fragments of ancient Rome incorporated into Renaissance buildings. The contrast strikes you immediately - 2,000-year-old marble columns supporting medieval apartments while modern Roman families go about daily life.
Most guidebooks oversell the Synagogue tour (€11) which only shows you standard interiors and rushed history. Instead, focus on wandering the streets freely, trying supplì al telefono at a local bakery, and examining the Portico ruins carefully - you'll spot ancient marble reliefs and original Roman masonry. The area takes 90 minutes to explore thoroughly, but skip it entirely on Saturdays when everything Jewish closes for Shabbat.
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