Synagogue (Kirchzarten)

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On the Markenhof estate near Kirchzarten Alexander Moch from Schwanau-Nonnenweier operated a farm since 1919, which also served as a hachshara, i.e. preparation for immigration to Palestine. The Markenhof is considered the "first kibbutz of German Jews" (Ruben Frankenstein). The teaching estate was financed by the Jewish entrepreneur Konrad Goldmann. He also established with his funds a synagogue on the farm, whose windows were designed by Friedrich Adler from Laupheim.

Judenstraße (Stralsund)

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Jews were already resident in Stralsund in the 13th century. Since the beginning of the 15th century there was a Judenstraße in Stralsund. Until the Reichspogromnacht in 1938, there was a synagogue in its immediate vicinity. At that time, Jewish inhabitants lived all over the city center; there was never a ghetto in Stralsund as in other German cities. In 1934, Judenstraße was renamed "Jodestraße". This was initiated by the NSDAP, whose local office had the address Judenstraße. The renaming was justified with the invented Stralsund family Jode.

Jewish cemetery (Krakow am See)

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closed cemetery with grave stock. 37 graves/stones.

edit: 09/21/2019 (on-site research Signe Winter)

58 grave sites, of which

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  • 40 gravestones/stelae (6 graves only in Hebrew / on 33 graves - backs in German)
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  • 29 grave borders, including two large square ones
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  •  8 pedestal fragments
  •  5 stone fragments (grave fragments or pedestals), standing or lying on the fence
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Access via Lutheran cemetery,  located northeast 

Freiburg im Breisgau

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In Freiburg a Jewish community existed first in the Middle Ages. For the first time in 1281 (possibly already in 1230) Jews*Juden in the city are mentioned. The persecution of the Jews during the plague on January 30, 1349 destroyed the community. A few years later, some Jews in the town moved in again, until they were expelled, first in 1401, then again in 1424.

Jewish Cemetery Wandsbek (Hamburg)

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The Jewish cemetery Wandsbeck or also  cemetery Königsreihe in Hamburg was from 1637 to 1884 in use of the Jewish community Wandsbek.

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It is located on the former Lange Reihe (today Königsreihe, corner Litzowstraße) .
The tenant Colonel Bernd von Hagen provided the land on which the cemetery was built in 1634.

Like many Jewish cemeteries, this one was desecrated during the November pogrom of 1938.

Since 1960 the cemetery is under monument protection. Approximately 1,000 gravestones are still preserved, the oldest dating back to 1676.

 

Jüdenstraße (Berlin-Spandau)

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Jüdenstraße is a traffic route in the old town of the Berlin district of Spandau and was in the Middle Ages residential area of the Jews of Spandau. It begins at the Altstädter Ring and crosses there the Mühlengraben, crosses the Moritzstraße as well as the Ritterstraße and meets at its northern end again the Viktoria-Ufer. The street originated in the 14th century. The word "Jüden" is a transliterated variant of the Middle High German word "Juden". This street received its name after the Jews living there at that time. The earliest known record of the name dates back to 1537.

Jewish Hospital (Berlin)

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The Jewish Hospital Berlin-Wedding has been the third hospital of the Jewish Community Berlin. In  1756 the first hospital was founded in Berlin-Mitte, it was located in Oranienburger Straße. The second one was built in Auguststraße in 1861. Due to considerable increase of city residents and living Jews in the city, it was decided to build a new hospital in what was then Schulstraße, this hospital was opened on June 22, 1914 and survived both world wars.