Swinoujscie Synagogue / Świnoujście
The construction of a synagogue was prepared in 1821 by the Jewish religious community of Swinoujscie. The merchant Isenthal extended the rear building of his home (Große Kirchenstraße, today Grunwaldzka) and made the new premises available to the Jewish community. This space soon became too small. An application made by the Jewish community in 1853 to the state for support in the construction of a synagogue was initially rejected due to the insufficient number of members.
Old Jewish cemetery Swinoujscie / Świnoujście
At the beginning of the 19th century, there were still no Jews living in Swinoujscie. It was not until 1816 that two merchants settled here, who soon founded large and widely ramified families. They were Fürchtegott Isenthal and Jakob Benjamin Ehrlich. Two years later, the third merchant, Joseph Jacob Jacoby, joined them. Later, the Riegel, Kantorowicz and Stargarder families followed. Over the years, most of these families were related by blood or marriage. The number of Jews increased very slowly. In 1925, the town was home to 128 Jewish citizens.
Grain wholesaler - Dreifuss & Danziger
The address book of the city of Munich from 1926 contains the following entry: Dreifuß & Danziger Getreidegroßhandlung Senefelderstr. 6/1, F 58493 u. 57810 ( owner Ferdinand Dreifuß u. Hans Danziger ). -Hans Danziger was one of the 104 Jewish members of FC Bayern Munich and one of the 52 members who managed to emigrate to a safe foreign country, the USA. From the 1920s until his resignation in 1933, he was active in the youth department of FC Bayern Munich.
Synagogue Aussig / Ústí nad Labem
It was only after 1848 that Jews were able to settle in Aussig, as it was a royal city. Jews were not allowed to settle in such a town.
The neoclassical synagogue from the 1880s in the ‚Kleine Wallgasse‘ was financed by donations from members of the community. The official dedication was performed by the Rabbi of Teplice Artur Rosenzweig.
Former Soborten / Sobědruhy synagogue
The Jewish community of Soborten was probably one of the oldest in Böhmen. It comprised parts of the districts of Teplitz, Dux and Karbitz. A first wooden synagogue is said to have been destroyed by fire around 1500, after which the Jewish families are said to have left the village.
The first documentary evidence of the existence of a large Jewish settlement in Soborten dates back to the first half of the 17th century, after which almost 70 Jewish families are said to have lived in the village around 1620.
Former Brüx Synagogue / Synagoga v Mostě
The synagogue in Most, a town in the Ústecký kraj in the Czech Republic, was built in 1872/73. It was located on the northern edge of the old town, on a plot of land on Ringstrasse next to the Protestant church, close to what was then Bahnhofstrasse.
The synagogue was set on fire by the German Nazi occupying forces during the November Pogrom Night of 1938. The remains of the building were demolished after 1940. In its place is an artificial lake, which was created by the flooding of an open-cast lignite mine.
Židovská obec Teplice / Jewish Community Teplice
New Jewish cemetery Lovosice / Lobositz
The New Jewish Cemetery Lovosice was built between 1871 and 1872. It is located in the western part of the town of Lovosice as part of the municipal cemetery in TeplickáStreet. In 1938, it was destroyed by the fascist Henlein movement. The last burial took place in 1978. In the 1980s, the gravestones were removed by local ČSFR bodies. Only 5 gravestones remain in the northern part of the cemetery. The remains of the old 17th-century Jewish cemetery were removed by the communist ČSSR regime in the 1950s.
New Jewish Cemetery Eidlitz / Nový židovský hřbitov Údlice
The New Jüdische Friedhof Údlice is located on the northern edge of the village of Eidlitz/Údlice. It was founded in 1864, not long after the old Jewish cemetery was closed. The cemetery area has a total area of 2,634 square meters. Today, only around 16 gravestones have been preserved.
The Jewish cemetery was destroyed in 1938 under the Henlein movement and during the Second World War under the German Nazi regime. Some of the cemetery's gravestones were cut up and used as paving stones in Prague (ul. Na príkopě).
Třebívlice Jewish Cemetery - Židovský hřbitov Třebívlice
The Jewish cemetery in Třebívlicích was established around 1867. Covering a total area of 665 square meters, there are around one hundred gravestones, most of which are damaged. It was occupied until the 1930s, although the local Jewish community founded in 1857 was dissolved in 1924 due to a sharp decline in membership. The last burial is said to have taken place in 1941 (although this information is not entirely certain).