Jewish cemetery Heidingsfeld (Wuerzburg)

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The Jewish cemetery in Heidingsfeld was established and first occupied in 1811. Until 1881 Würzburg Jews were also buried there. The last burials were in Heidingsfeld in 1942. The cemetery area covers 56.60 ar. The cemetery is divided into a large old and a newer part and is surrounded by a massive stone wall.  The last gravestones (1930-1942) are located on the wall opposite the entrance. From the present entrance gate, the terrain rises steeply. A small tahara hut stands to the left of the entrance.

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Berlin-Weißensee

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Weißensee is a district in the Pankow district of Berlin, originating from a street village east of the Weißen See founded in the 13th century, which was a knight's estate from 1540 to 1880. From the incorporation to Greater Berlin in 1920 until the administrative reform in 2001, there was an independent district of Weißensee, into which various neighboring villages were incorporated.

Berlin-Köpenick

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Köpenick (until 1931 officially: Cöpenick) is a district in the district of Treptow-Köpenick in the southeast of Berlin, located at the confluence of the Spree and Dahme rivers in wooded and lake-rich surroundings.

Jewish cemetery (Beelitz)

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The Jewish Cemetery Beelitz is a Jewish cemetery in the town of Beelitz in the district of Potsdam-Mittelmark in Brandenburg. It belonged to the synagogue district of Beelitz and is a protected monument since 1985. The 925 m² cemetery at Straße des Aufbaus 8 (near Clara-Zetkin-Straße) contains 48 gravestones in six recognizable rows. The oldest legible, a double gravestone, bears the dates 1752 and 1764. The youngest stone dates from 1925.