The Haus der Bayrischen Geschichte

Jewish cemetery (Bad Wörishofen - concentration camp gravesite)

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There is a Jewish burial ground with a monument in the municipal cemetery in Bad Wörishofen, St. Anna Straße. The cemetery was established after the end of the war. Victims from the Landsberg/Kaufering concentration camp complex who died in the DP hospital in Bad Wörishofen after the end of the war were buried here.

Jewish cemetery (Bad Staffelstein - departed cemetery)

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In Staffelstein there was a Jewish community in the 15th century. In the course of their expulsion in 1506, it was stated in the description of a Jewish residence that to it belonged "the courtyard, on which ettlich Iüden have been buried". The existence of a Jewish cemetery in the city is therefore considered certain.

Jewish cemetery (Abensberg - departed cemetery)

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In Abensberg existed since 1398 a Jewish community with its own synagogue and a cemetery, which is documented for the first time in 1440 as "Judenpühel" ("Judenbühel"). One year later, in 1450, the town expelled the Jews from Abensberg. The cemetery was located outside the town on the road to Offenstetten. The area still bears the name "Judenbuckel" today. Remains are no longer present due to overbuilding, the gravestones were either destroyed or found use as building material.

Jewish cemetery Reckendorf

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The Jewish cemetery Reckendorf is located in a community in the Upper Franconian district of Bamberg and was built in 1798. It is located west of Reckendorf on a forest slope and can be reached via the chapel path branching off from the Lourdes Chapel on the main road.