Jewish cemetery (Lehe)
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The Lehe Jewish Cemetery is a Jewish cemetery in Lehe, a district in the North borough of the municipality of Bremerhaven in the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen. There are 253 gravestones in the cemetery, which has been occupied since 1768.
Jewish cemetery Altona
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The Altona Jewish Cemetery, also known as the Königstraße Jewish Cemetery or, referring to the Sephardic part of the cemetery, the Portuguese Cemetery on Königstraße, was established in 1611 and closed in 1877. It is considered one of the most important Jewish burial grounds in the world because of its size of 1.9 hectares, its age and the large number of preserved gravestones (about 7600 out of 8474 counted when the cemetery was closed in 1869).
Jewish cemetery Bahrenfeld
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The Jewish Cemetery Bahrenfeld is a Jewish burial ground in the Hamburg district of Bahrenfeld.
Bergedorf Jewish Cemetery
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The Bergedorf Jewish Cemetery was a private cemetery in Hamburg-Bergedorf that no longer exists.
Jewish cemetery Langenfelde
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The Jewish Cemetery Langenfelde is a Jewish burial ground in Langenfelde in the Hamburg district of Stellingen.
Jewish cemetery Neuer Steinweg
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The Jewish Cemetery Neuer Steinweg is a former Jewish burial ground in the Neustadt district of Hamburg. It was destroyed during World War II and cleared in 1954.
Jewish cemetery Kohlhöfen
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The Jewish cemetery Kohlhöfen (also cemetery Markusplatz, Portuguese Betahaim de Dentro (Binnenfriedhof)) was a burial ground in Hamburg's Neustadt, used by the Sephardic-Portuguese community from 1627 to 1653.
Jewish cemetery Ohlsdorf
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The Jewish Cemetery Ohlsdorf, also Jewish Cemetery Ilandkoppel is a burial ground in the Hamburg district of Ohlsdorf. It is currently the largest of the two Jewish burial grounds in Hamburg where burials still take place. The burial ground of the Liberal Jewish Community of Hamburg is located in the Ohlsdorf cemetery.
Ottensen Jewish Cemetery
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The Jewish Cemetery Ottensen is a former Jewish burial ground in today's Hamburg district Ottensen, which was established from 1663 on an area between today's Ottenser Hauptstraße and Große Rainstraße. The last burial took place in 1934 - this was followed by repeated overbuilding, as had already happened in part in the 19th century.
Jewish cemetery at Grindel (Hamburg)
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The Jewish cemetery at Grindel is named after its Hamburg neighborhood Grindel, which is located in the district of Rotherbaum. The cemetery was laid out as early as 1712 on the outskirts of the city and initially served as a burial place for the poor and servants. It was not until 1835 that the cemetery became the main cemetery of the High German Jewish Community and the Portuguese Community in Hamburg, located in the Grindelviertel. Only a few years later in 1909 the last burial took place and due to full occupancy the cemetery was closed.