Jewish cemetery (Igling/Holzhausen - concentration camp cemetery and memorial)

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The cemetery is located on the right side of the road from Holzhausen to Landsberg at the Dammmoosweg near the Magnus home behind a small bridge.The cemetery was established in connection with the victims of the Landsberg/Kaufering concentration camp complex who died after the end of the war.

Jewish cemetery (Hurlach - concentration camp cemetery and memorial)

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The cemetery is located west of the federal road 17 from Landsberg to Augsburg between Kaufering and Hurlach. It was built over a mass grave with victims of Camp IV of the Landsberg/Kaufering subcamp complex. The camp had been run as a "sick camp" from December 1944. Other victims are the prisoners left behind during the evacuation in April 1945. The design was created in 1950 by the Nuremberg architect Ernst Rücker. The solemn inauguration took place on October 1, 1950.

Jewish cemetery (Hubmersberg (district of Pommelsbrunn) - concentration camp cemetery and memorial)

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The memorial for concentration camp victims from the concentration camp Hersbruck is located to the right of the road from Pommelsbrunn to Hubmersberg about 2 km before Pommelsbrunn in the forest. In the middle of a free, grassy place there is a stylized grave slab with the inscription: "Shall here eternally blazing raise the flame / the lament sees frozen to stone. Mute also speaks the stone. Erected in 1950". To the right of the memorial is a tall block with the inscription, "To the victims of the Hersbruck concentration camp who were cremated on this spot in 1944-45."

Jewish cemetery (Höchstädt a.d.Donau - cemetery gone)

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Presumably in the Middle Ages the deceased from Höchstädt were buried in Augsburg.

In Höchstädt existed from the 16th century until 1741, interrupted by several expulsions in the years 1552/52, 1646 and 1671, a Jewish community, which had a synagogue as well as a cemetery and which were destroyed after the last expulsion in 1741. According to Alemannia Judaica, the location of the cemetery is believed to be on the other side of the country road at the height of the present-day cemetery church of St. Salvator.

Jewish cemetery (Hausen (Lkr. Rhön-Grabfeld) - former cemetery)

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It is highly probable that the Jews living in the community of Hausen (today the district of Rhön-Grabfeld) had their own cemetery, which was probably abandoned towards the end of the 18th century. In the 19th century the Hausen Jews were buried in the cemetery in Neustädtles. In the original cadastre of 1850, the designation "Judenkirchhof" can still be found for the area next to the Reupershof.

Jewish cemetery (Hausen (Lkr. Miltenberg) - former cemetery)

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In Hausen (Lkr. Miltenberg) there is a plot of land which bears the designation "Jewish cemetery". Here in earlier centuries a Jewish burial ground may have been located, of which, however, no written sources show. Also, nothing is preserved in the cemetery that reminds of a former burial place. The cemetery might have been located southeast of the village at the edge of the forest, reachable by the Eichelsbacher Weg, drive this way to the edge of the forest. On the plot "Judenfriedhof" is a rest area of the local history society.

Jewish cemetery (Haselbach - concentration camp cemetery and memorial)

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A memorial plaque in the local cemetery refers to 28 victims of a death march from Flossenbürg concentration camp. The inscription reads: "Here rested 28 unknown victims of National Socialism from the Flossenbürg camp + April 1945. Hounded to death, recovered in peace". The dead, who had initially been buried on the spot, were exhumed on July 15, 1945 and buried in the local cemetery. In 1958, the remains were reburied in the Flossenbürg concentration camp cemetery.