Jewish Ghetto of Venice
This is the world's original ghetto, where Venice confined its Jewish population starting in 1516.
About Jewish Ghetto of Venice
This is the world's original ghetto, where Venice confined its Jewish population starting in 1516. You'll walk through Campo del Ghetto Nuovo, surrounded by the tallest buildings in Venice (up to 9 stories, built vertically since the community couldn't expand horizontally), and visit five remarkable synagogues through guided tours. The Museo Ebraico tells the story of Venetian Jews across five centuries, but the real draw is seeing synagogues hidden on upper floors of ordinary buildings, each representing different Jewish communities: Ashkenazi, Sephardi, Italian, Levantine, and Canton.
The museum feels intimate rather than overwhelming, and the synagogue tours reveal spaces you'd never know existed from street level. You'll climb narrow staircases to discover ornate interiors with hand-carved arks, gilded decorations, and crystal chandeliers that seem impossible in such a confined area. The guide explains how each community adapted their worship space to Venetian building restrictions, creating some of the most ingenious religious architecture you'll see. The contrast between the plain exteriors and elaborate interiors is genuinely striking.
At EUR 8 for museum entry plus all synagogue tours, this is exceptional value compared to Venice's usual tourist traps. Most visitors rush through without understanding the architectural constraints that shaped these spaces. Skip the audio guide and stick with the live tours, they run every 30 minutes and the guides know stories you won't read elsewhere. The morning tours are smaller and more personal than afternoon crowds.
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