[2] Described as "one of the loveliest and most splendid in Galicia",[3] and as "exquisite",[4] the former synagogue building is listed as a monument of Architectural Heritage of National Importance of Ukraine.
[4][10][11] After a fire in 1742, the synagogue was rebuilt and almost lost all its distinctive defensive features.
Damaged during and after World War II the building ceased to operate as a synagogue following invasion by German Nazis in 1941.
[2] In 1972 the standing ruin was renovated and turned into a Jewish history museum.
This article about a synagogue or other Jewish place of worship in Ukraine is a stub.