Jewish Cemetery (Marktleuthen - concentration camp cemetery and memorial)

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The monument is located in the East Cemetery in the city center with the entrance from Humbold Street. One enters the cemetery through the left side of the cemetery building. At the first intersection of the cemetery paths turn left and go straight until you reach a large cross, where you turn right. Here lies the mass grave with 17 victims of a death march from Buchenwald concentration camp to Flossenbürg in April 1945. Among the victims were most likely Jews. In the middle of the grave is a monument with the inscription: "To the victims of fascism".

Jewish cemetery (Lindau - concentration camp cemetery and memorial)

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To the memorial on the municipal cemetery in the Ludwig-Kick-Straße 49 one reaches by the main entrance; one goes on the right past the chapel and along the half-right large way up to the hedge. Behind it there is a wide cross path, behind which the urn graves are located. Two side paths before the wide cross path, turn left into the penultimate side path and follow it to the end. Here you come across the mass grave, above which a small obelisk rises in the midst of planting. Under a cross are the names of the Nazi victims, among them obviously Jews (e.g. IDCAK).

Jewish cemetery (Langenzenn - deserted cemetery)

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The Jewish community of Langenzenn also owned a cemetery (locally called "Judenfredhuf"), the approximate location of which is still known. The cemetery was located northeast of Langenzenn on the southern slope of the Alitzberg, where there is a small, clearly visible birch forest. Nevertheless there are no gravestones, nor any enclosure left in this area. It is not known how long this cemetery existed.

Jewish cemetery (Landshut)

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The Jewish community in Landshut buried their deceased in the cemetery in Regensburg in the 13th and 14th centuries. Because of the great distance of about 60km, but probably also as an expression of a self-confident establishment, the Jewish families established their own cemetery outside the Landshut city walls in 1380. The plot on the Hofberg, near the pilgrimage church "Maria Bründl", belonged to the direct property of the Lower Bavarian dukes. An old road passing by, mentioned in sources, is today the Englbergweg.

Jewish Cemetery (Landsberg am Lech / Kaufering European Holocaust Memorial)

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From June 1944, the Kaufering concentration camp complex with eleven subcamps of the Dachau concentration camp was built in the greater Landsberg am Lech district. Exploiting the labor of predominantly Jewish forced laborers, three semi-subterranean bomb-proof bunkers for German aircraft production were to be built here under the overall construction management of the Organisation Todt (code name Ringeltaube).

Jewish cemetery (Kraiburg a. Inn - concentration camp cemetery and memorial)

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There is probably a mass grave in the village cemetery in Jettenbacher Street in the rear left section. The monument bears the inscription: "+ 242 Innocent victims of National Socialism in eternal memory + April 1945 / humiliated by hatred / ennobled by suffering".

Jewish Cemetery (Kaufering/South - concentration camp cemetery and memorial)

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The cemetery Kaufering-Süd is located between Landsberg and Kaufering east of the B 17 in the Lechauen near the Lech dam and the concentration camp cemetery Kaufering Nord in the protected area Hurlacher Heide. The cemetery was built after the end of the war for the victims of camps III and IV of the Landsberg/Kaufering subcamp complex.

Jewish Cemetery (Kaufering/North - concentration camp cemetery and memorial)

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The cemetery is located east of the B 17 from Kaufering in the direction of Augsburg in the Lechauen near the Lech dam. The cemetery was established immediately after the end of the war in connection with the victims of camps IV and III of the Landsberg/Kaufering subcamp complex.