12021-01-13T15:40:12-08:00Queens College Special Collections and Archivese5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0377133plain2021-01-28T11:17:44-08:00Queens College Special Collections and Archivese5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0
Today, the main entrance to the prayer hall is from the courtyard, in the west wall of the synagogue through a delicate classically inspired gable front porch made of wood with a metal roof. The six-pointed star (Magen David) is the only Jewish symbol on the building exterior. An original earlier is a door on the building’s northeast corner. Another door on the building’s northeast corner may have been an earlier entrance for men, or the entrance for women.
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1media/05 Courtyard and main (mens) entrance.JPG2020-12-14T10:53:05-08:00Queens College Special Collections and Archivese5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0Exterior of Ioannina SynagogueQueens College Special Collections and Archives21splash10464422021-01-13T15:48:41-08:00Queens College Special Collections and Archivese5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0
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1media/07 MensEntrance_thumb.jpg2020-12-14T12:04:04-08:00Men's Entrance1Today, the main entrance for men to the prayer hall is from the courtyard, in the west wall of the synagogue. It through a delicate classically inspired gable front porch made of wood with a metal roof. The six-point star (Magen David) is the only Jewish symbol on the building exterior. An original earlier is a door on the building’s northeast corner.media/07 MensEntrance.jpgplain2020-12-14T12:04:04-08:00Queens College Special Collections and Hellenic American Projectcirca 1999-2010Vincent Giordano Collection on the Greek-Jewish Community in New York City and Ioannina, GreeceShared under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial 4.0 License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/Iōannina (Greece)Giordano, Vincent