Jewish Museum of Venice

Petite museum chronicling the history of the Ghetto and its residents

Nearby Attractions

See all attractions in Venice
Grand Canal Venice
Grand Canal, Italian Canale Grande, the main waterway of Venice.
Cannaregio District
Explore Cannaregio, one of the six districts of Venice where you will see the true local life of Venetians and eat authentic cuisine with Travel Curious.
San Giacomo dell'Orio
San Giacomo dall'Orio is one of the oldest churches in Venice
Venetian Jewish Ghetto
The old Jewish Ghetto is an area where Venice's Jews lived between 1516 and 1797.
Thriving Jewish Cultural Centre
Until 1650, almost every Jewish book, like the Torah and the Talmud, were published and distributed from the Venetian Ghetto.
Banco Rosso
An old bank in the Ghetto, where a famous expression comes from...

Related Tours

Venice Jewish Heritage: Private Walking Tour with Jewish Ghetto

Discover the long history of the Jewish Ghetto in Venice, established in 1516 it is one of the oldest gated Jewish communities with a rich, tragic – and ultimately inspiring history.

On your private Jewish Heritage tour, you will:

  • Learn about the history and persecution of the Jewish people in Italy;
  • Walk through Venice’s ghetto established in 1516 by the doge, with the decree that Jews should live segregated from Christians;
  • See Jewish Bridge, which separated The ghetto (the word originates from the copper foundry or ‘ghetto’) which was to be walled and gated with its inhabitants locked in at night;
  • Hear about the strict rules imposed on the Jewish people: what work they could do (money lending, printing) and how they should dress (with yellow markers on their clothes);
  • Discover how this appalling set-up, against the odds, led to the Jewish Ghetto becoming a thriving cultural hub over several centuries;
  • Learn about the publishing of the Hebrew Bible and Talmud;
  • Find out how Shakespeare-based characters and storylines in the Merchant of Venice off on the lives of people who lived in the ghetto and Shylock’s famous speech calling for Jewish equality ‘if you prick us, do we not bleed?”;
  • See the exterior of the five synagogues located within minutes of each other;
  • Explore the small area of the Ghetto, rich in history, beautiful architecture and sometimes harrowing yet inspiring stories;
  • Join a 1-hour group tour of the Jewish Museum and see the inside of one of the Venetian Synagogues.

Venice is surely one of the most beautiful and romantic cities on Earth but it has a darker history for the Jews who lived there.

The Jewish Ghetto of Venice was established five hundred years ago in 1516 by order of the doge and negotiated for by the Jewish Community. The word ghetto originated in Venice, it was used to describe the copper foundry ‘ghetto’.

However, it was a way to both include and exclude Jews, who had worked in the city as merchants and moneylenders for centuries, by forcing them to live in a gated community and wear yellow coloured insignia like a badge, stitched circle or a hat, separated from the Christians and locked in at night. Only Jewish doctors did not have to wear yellow, being in high demand they were allowed to wear black hats.

Although they were locked in at night, twelve years after the Ghetto was established, the Jewish people felt secure enough to build their own synagogues. The area was so small, however, that they had to build upwards, the first vertical city.

Many Jews from all over Europe and further afield - Spain, Portugal, Germany, and the Levant - came to settle in the Ghetto, making it a multicultural and cosmopolitan place to live! Almost all Hebrew books printed before 1650 came from the Jewish Ghetto of Venice.

The Jews were liberated by Napoleon - and indeed by the end of the 19th Century were active in political and public life. Luigi Luzzati, who began his political career organizing an aid society for the gondoliers, was elected Italy’s first Jewish Prime Minister in 1910.

Of course, we know things then deteriorated in the 20th century with the rise of the Nazis – the ghetto made it very easy for the Jewish community to be rounded up by the Fascists, and your guide will tell of this very dark period in Venetian history.

Finally, learn about contemporary life in Venice for the Jewish Community. Visit some of the major public buildings, including the Italian synagogue and Scola Levantina, stop by the ThaumArt Gallery and end outside the Jewish Museum. Your entrance tickets are included for you to explore at your leisure. 

Please note: Tours in The Jewish Ghetto are delivered exclusively by their guides, so you will join a small group tour at the end of your private tour. The Jewish Museum, German Synagogue and Canton Synagogue are temporarily closed for renovations. 

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