Designed by Vincenzo Costa and Osvaldo Armanni and built between 1901 and 1904 is one of the most imposining Jewish temples in Europe. Its dome compares with the domes of the Christian churches around, completing our unique skyline, and it's symbolic of the reconquered freedom after the years of the Ghetto. It's style- new Assirian-Babylonian - is a good example of the eclectic taste typical of the turn of the century. It can be visited together with the annexed Jewish Museum, witness to the bimillenary presence of the Jews in Rome.