Jewish cemetery (Bad Rappenau)
Until 1881 the dead of the Jewish community of Rappenau were buried in Heinsheim . Since then, there was a separate cemetery on Siegelsbacher Straße, 150 m behind the current municipal cemetery. The first person buried in the cemetery was Thekla Herbst (b. 1868, d. May 29, 1881; below tombstone no. 12)
Three Polish prisoners of war and two children of Christian Russian forced laborers were also buried in the cemetery in 1944/45. The area of the cemetery is 4.79 a.
Jewish cemetery (Bad Wimpfen)
Jewish cemetery (Baisingen)
Jewish cemetery (Berlichingen)
Jewish cemetery (Berwangen)
Jewish cemetery (Binau)
Mikvah Königstraße 89 (Fürth)
Mikvah (Griedel)
The mikvah in Griedel, a district of Butzbach in the Wetterau district of Hesse, was discovered in 1984. The mikvah at Bruderstraße 15, in the backyard of a larger residential building, is a protected cultural monument.
It is believed that the mikvah was created in the 19th century, when the property became Jewish property. The installation of the ritual immersion bath represents an independent structure made of basalt quarry stones and is not integrated into an existing building. The appearance is very similar to a vaulted cellar.
Humberghaus (mikvah in Hamminkeln)
The Humberghaus at Hohe Straße 1 in Hamminkeln-Dingden is an old residential and commercial building that is now used as a museum. It commemorates the Jewish family Humberg, who ran a butcher store and a manufactured goods store here and lived in Dingden until 1941. During the restoration starting in 2001 by members of the Heimatverein Dingden e. V., numerous traces of the life of this family were discovered and preserved in the house. Among other things, there is a private mikveh in the house, which is a rarity. The house, which was initially only rented, was purchased in 2008.[1]
Mikvah (Herborn)
The mikvah is located in the basement vault of the house Kornmarkt 22, a building that was used by the Jewish community in the town of Herborn (today: Lahn-Dill district, in Hesse) from 1677 to 1875. Here were also the synagogue and the schoolroom of the Jewish community.