Lisbon’s main active Jewish cemetery is located on Rua Afonso III, in the area historically linked to Calçada das Lages. It stands as a key landmark in the reconstitution of Jewish communal life in the city during the 19th century, when small groups of Jews began settling in Portugal again, even before the official abolition of the Inquisition in 1821.
According to the Lisbon Jewish Community’s own records, in 1868 King Luís granted “the Jews of Lisbon permission to establish a cemetery for the burial of their fellow Jews.” This authorization formalized Calçada das Lages (today associated with Afonso III) as the community’s central burial ground, a document of both religious continuity and the gradual public reappearance of Jewish life in Lisbon.
The cemetery’s history is closely linked to communal organization. In 1892, the Civil Government charter ratified the statutes of the Guemilut Hassadim Association, founded by Moses Anahory, responsible for mutual aid and funerals. The association managed burials, oversaw the two cemeteries, and kept the death registers, ensuring that Jewish burial practice and documentation remained organized across generations.
This site also connects to an earlier chapter of modern Jewish Lisbon. A small Jewish plot was obtained in the Estrela cemetery area in 1801, and the first recorded grave there was José Amzalaga, who died on February 26, 1804. That earlier plot served the community until the mid 19th century, when the Calçada das Lages cemetery became the principal active cemetery.
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Article researched and curated by Jew Where.
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