Jewish cemetery Busenberg

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The Jewish cemetery Busenberg was established in 1824 as an association cemetery of four Jewish communities in the Wasgau region, which is formed by the southern part of the Palatinate Forest and the northern part of the Vosges Mountains. In the present day the cemetery houses 286 gravesites on an area of 25.8 ares. The cemetery, which has been devastated several times, has been a cultural monument worthy of protection since 1985.

Jewish cemetery (Carlsberg)

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The Jewish Cemetery Carlsberg is a Jewish cemetery in Carlsberg, a local community in the municipality of Leiningerland in the district of Bad Dürkheim in Rhineland-Palatinate. The 340 m² cemetery, located in a wooded area between Carlsberg and Altleiningen, was occupied from 1861 until the beginning of the 20th century. Only a few gravestones have been preserved. The cemetery is a protected cultural monument.

Jewish cemetery (Dalheim)

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Already in summer 1858 the cemetery was inaugurated, after the political community had handed over the place free of charge to the Jewish community on the basis of a contract in October 1855. There is a short report about the dedication of the cemetery in the Allgemeine Zeitung des Judentums of July 12, 1858. Only members of the own Jewish community were buried in the Jewish cemetery in Dalheim. A last burial was 1918 (Anselm Lyon, who died at the age of 93 and was one of the last Jewish inhabitants of the village).