Merchant - Emanuel Löwenberg
The cemetery of Adorf
The cemetery at the Dansenberg was occupied for the first time in 1809. Today it has 50 gravestones.
Jews in Adorf
Adorf is a small community in the north of Hesse in the Waldeck region.
Jews settled in Adorf since the late 18th century. In 1872 the community counted 75 members, in 1933 still 20. Some Jews were able to emigrate, 8 became victims of persecution.
In 1830 a synagogue and a school were built in the center of the village near St. John's Church. The synagogue was sold and demolished in 1937. The interior was destroyed in November 1938.
The community had a school with a teacher and a mikvah.
Hardware store - A.Rosenberger
Peddling ban of the city of Nördlingen for Jews
Notification.-In order to put a stop to the generally forbidden peddling by Jews in Nördlingen, which is becoming more and more prevalent and is affecting ordinary trade, the Royal Police Commissariat, by order of the Royal General Commissariat, sees itself compelled to renew the earlier decree of the former General Commissariat of the Swabian Province of August 24, 1903, by issuing the following notice: 1.Jews are forbidden to peddle goods of any kind in the city of Nördlingen.
Alder, Jewish cemetery
The cemetery is located at the corner of Schermbecker Straße / Westerholten.
From 1842 the members of the Cahn family were buried here. As the eleventh and last were buried here in 1933 Levi Cahn.
The cemetery was not desecrated during the Nazi period. In 1961, the cemetery was accidentally rediscovered during an inventory. The municipality bought the plot from the heirs of the Cahn family in 1963 and has maintained the cemetery ever since.
You can see four gravesites, all without stone. In the center, a plaque commemorates the Cahn family.
Alder, Jews in the village
Erle is a village in the southwestern Münsterland.
Only one Jewish family lived in Erle, named Herz, later Cahn. They moved to the village in 1824 and later ran a textile and haberdashery store in the center of the village.
The residence of the Cahn family is preserved and is located opposite the church.
In 1842, the Cahn family acquired a plot of land on Schermbecker Straße and built a cemetery there. A total of 11 members of the family were buried there.
There was no synagogue. The family probably belonged to the Jewish community of Schermbeck.
Music publisher - Anton J. Benjamin
Krudenburg, Jewish life
In the middle of the 19th century in Krudenburg, a place on the
right bank of the Lippe, about 18 km upstream from the Lippemündung near
Wesel, Jewish families can be traced. On a historical map can be found
the house of a family Aron Wolf in the village center. As residents are
the members of this family certainly in 1865 verifiable,
möglicherweise, however, the family has already lived länger in Krudenburg.
Anyway, the establishment of a cemetery indicates several families.