Jewish cemetery (Darmstadt)
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The Jewish cemetery of the Hessian city of Darmstadt was established around 1680 in the Bessung area. The Jewish cemetery, which was not destroyed during the National Socialist era, is considered one of the most important preserved sites of its kind in Germany.[1]
Jewish community Borken
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The Jewish community of Borken existed from the 17th/18th century[1][2] until September 7, 1942, when its last members were deported[3]
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Jewish cemetery (Dieburg)
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The Jewish Cemetery Dieburg is a Jewish cemetery in Dieburg, a town in the district of Darmstadt-Dieburg (Hesse). The cemetery is a protected cultural monument and is located at the exit of the city in the direction of Frankfurt am Main or Hanau (Bundesstraße 45) to the left of the road in a commercial area (street Am Bauhof).
Jewish cemetery (Egelsbach)
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The Jewish cemetery in Egelsbach, a community in the district of Offenbach in southern Hesse, was established in 1892. The Jewish cemetery, right next to the municipal cemetery on Friedenstraße, is a protected cultural monument.
Jewish cemetery (Ellar)
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The Jewish Cemetery Ellar is a Jewish cemetery in Ellar, a district of the municipality Waldbrunn in the county Limburg-Weilburg in Central Hesse. The cemetery is a protected cultural monument and is located on the street Am Oberholz/Lahrer Weg.
Jewish cemetery (Eltville am Rhein)
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The Jewish Cemetery Eltville is a Jewish cemetery in Eltville am Rhein in the Rheingau-Taunus district in Hesse. It is located in Schwalbacher Straße in the middle of the municipal cemetery.