New Jewish cemetery (Zeltingen)
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The new Jewish cemetery Zeltingen is located in Zeltingen-Rachtig, a local community in the district of Bernkastel-Wittlich in Rhineland-Palatinate. The Jewish cemetery in a small piece of forest "Im oberen Kuhkordel" is a protected cultural monument.
Jewish cemetery (Sötern)
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The Jewish Cemetery Sötern is a Jewish cemetery in the district Sötern of the municipality Nohfelden in the district of St. Wendel (Saarland). It is a protected monument.[1]
Jewish cemetery (St. Wendel)
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The Jewish cemetery in St. Wendel was established just a few years after the settlement of the first Jewish families (1862) in 1871 outside the city in Urweiler. The city of St. Wendel took over the costs for the enclosure. About 50 burials were made in the cemetery until 1940.
Judenkever Buckau
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The Judenkever is a former Jewish cemetery in the Buckau district belonging to the city of Magdeburg in Saxony-Anhalt.
Jewish cemetery (Hoym)
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The Jewish Cemetery Hoym is a cemetery in the town of Hoym, a district of the city of Seeland in the Salzlandkreis in Saxony-Anhalt. It is a protected cultural monument.
Jewish cemetery (Eutin)
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The Jewish cemetery of Eutin was used from 1886[1] to 1945. It is located on the north shore of the Small Eutin Lake.[2]
Jewish cemetery (Gehaus)
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The Jewish Cemetery Gehaus is a Jewish cemetery in the district Gehaus of the city Stadtlengsfeld in the Wartburgkreis in Thuringia.
Jewish cemetery Bödigheim
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The Jewish cemetery in Bödigheim, a district of Buchen in the Neckar-Odenwald district in northern Baden-Württemberg, was probably established in the late 15th or early 16th century. The Jewish cemetery is a protected cultural monument.
Jewish cemetery (Affaltrach)
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The Jewish Cemetery in Affaltrach, a district of the municipality of Obersulm in the district of Heilbronn in northern Baden-Württemberg, served as a burial ground for Jews from Affaltrach and other surrounding Jewish communities from about 1670 until 1942.