Portuguese plumbers discover 600 year old mikvahs

This  find, in the basement of a building on Rua do Visconde da Luz, Coimbra, may be considered among the oldest mikvahs ever discovered in Europe.

By JTA

 

Plumbers fixing a water leak in central Portugal discovered what appears to be a cluster of 600-year-old Jewish ritual baths.

1of 3 -The mikvahs of Coimbra may be considered among the oldest mikvahs ever discovered in Europe  - Photo sourse:  DR/Publico.pt

1 of 3 -The mikvahs of Coimbra may be considered among the oldest mikvahs ever discovered in Europe – Photo source: DR/Publico.pt

The discovery was made earlier this year in the city of Coimbra as the plumbers were replacing the piping of an old building in what used to be the Jewish part of the Old City, according to a report Thursday by the Publico daily.

Jorge Alarcao, an archeologist who was called upon to study the structures, told the paper: “This could be the only discovery of its kind made in Portugal.”

The structures appear to be mikvahs, or ritual baths, predating the 14th century which were designed for Jewish women, according to Alarcao.

2 of 3 -The mikvahs of Coimbra appear to be mikvahs, or ritual baths, predating the 14th century which were designed for Jewish women - Photo source: DR/Publico.pt

2 of 3 -The mikvahs of Coimbra appear to be mikvahs, or ritual baths, predating the 14th century which were designed for Jewish women – Photo source: DR/Publico.pt

“It could be the most important archeological discovery made in Coimbra over the past 70 years,” Coimbra Mayor Manuel Machado told the paper.

The Jewish presence in Coimbra dates back to at least 1370, and the mikvahs may have been in operation even before that date, Alarcao said. If additional researchers confirm the find, the mikvahs of Coimbra may be considered among the oldest mikvahs ever discovered in Europe, he said.

3 of 3 -The mikvahs were enclosed in a room whose ceiling featured an ancient fresco of flowers - Photo source: DR/Publico.pt

3 of 3 -The mikvahs were enclosed in a room whose ceiling featured an ancient fresco of flowers – Photo source: DR/Publico.pt

The mikvahs were enclosed in a room whose ceiling featured an ancient fresco of flowers, Publico reported. The fresco was likely painted in the 16th century, before the Portuguese Inquisition sent hundreds of thousands of Spanish Jewish refugees and local Jews into exile or forced them to convert to Christianity.

 

 

View original JTA publication at: http://www.jta.org/2013/12/27/news-opinion/world/portuguese-plumbers-discover-ancient-mikvahs

View photograph source from the Publico daily.