They sit with their fathers and grandfathers.
Depends on the synagogue, but at mine the kids sit with their parents and everyone else.
In chairs, just as they do today's synagogues. Women also sit in chairs.
A synagogue is not a place for very young children. Children who are old enough to be able to sit quietly, join their parents and take part in the prayer services according to their abilities (or just watch and learn). Some synagogues have a separate room for the youth to hold their own services.
Usually people sit on chairs. Some Synagogues may have benches to sit on.
The entire synagogue is a worship area, but Jewish people generally sit in the chairs.
On chairs. Interesting, but women do the same. Wow, what a thought.
That depends on the design of the synagogue.
It's a synagogue where men and women sit separately and the bimah is facing the Ark of the Covenant.
Prayers and Torah-reading.
You can tell a Orthodox Synagogue is an Orthodox Synagogue because a Orthodox Synagogue has the seats for men on the floor at the sides and the back, and the womans seats on a balcony up top, and the reading desk and the bimah are in the centre. Other than a Liberal/Reform Synagogue because a Liberal/Reform Synagogue has the men and the women sit together, and the reading desk at the side in-front of the seats for the men and women.
Uncle Podger invites the children to sit in the black balcony.
Yes you do. However, usually a mourner does not go to the synagogue during the shiva, but has a separate service in his home. On Tisha B'Av, since all of Jewry is in mourning, the mourner attends the synagogue service together with everyone else.
no
Schoolwere mainly for Roman children and they were few and far.The other was for the Jews in their synagogue.