Liebermann Villa at Wannsee
The Liebermann Villa is a privately run museum since 2006 in the former summer residence of the German-Jewish painter Max Liebermann. The house and the garden tell about the life story of the famous Berlin artist.
Cemetery Wesel Ostglacis
In 1880, the cemetery on the East Glacis was purchased. Burials took place from 1881 to 1983.
The cemetery is surrounded by a wall, today there are still about 170 stones on the area. This cemetery was considerably devastated between 1933 and 1945 and gradually restored in recent decades.
In contrast to the "old" cemetery at the Esplanade, the gravestones look rather uniform, almost unadorned and unprosaic. There are many lying gravestones.
Mirror glass factory - Emil Marx
Livestock shop and butchery - Eduard Einstein
Wesel
Documents about Jewish life in Wesel are found for the first time for the year 1266. Through the persecutions in the context of the Crusades to the plague pogroms around 1350, only individual Jewish families in Wesel can be traced.
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A modest Jewish community had emerged toward the end of the 16th century, and a century later a significant and successful community had developed. Around the year 1900, the maximum number of Jewish citizens was 300 people. They played a significant role in the economic life.
Lawyer - Albert Levy
Horse and goods shop - S. Luchs
Hotel Ehrenreich
Heinz Kollek
College for the Science of Judaism
The Berlin-based Hochschule für die Wissenschaft des Judentums (HWJ) existed as an academic research and study institution from 1872 to 1942. Its purpose was to enable students of all faiths to conduct impartial research on Judaism.
For the summer semester 1930/31, 109 regular students were counted and the library comprised about 55,000, later even 60,000 books. Rabbi Nathan Peter Levinson was one of the last students (along with Leo Trepp and Leo Baeck). In an obituary for one of his teachers, he writes: