The cemetery in Bedburg
There was an old cemetery In den Gärten" from 1839. Although it was designated as a cemetery, it was not used. The municipality had to sell it in 1938.
The new cemetery Am Sandberg was occupied from 1832 to 1940. There are 53 gravestones here today.
Jewish cemetery Görlitz
The cemetery is located in the Südstadt at the end of Biesnitzer Stra;e, at the height of the streetcar stop „Büchtemannstraße“.
The cemetery is geöffnet: Sunday to Thursday: 7-18 clock, Friday 7-14 clock.
Cemetery Drensteinfurt
The cemetery was established in 1826, on a site that had long been used as a place of execution.
The oldest surviving gravestone dates from 1853.An expansion of the der burial ground took place in 1891.... The last burial took place 1929. In 1936 and 1937 the cemetery was desecrated by National Socialist vandalism.
In the mid-1950s, the Jewish cemetery was repaired, and some gravestones were also restored. Today there are 26 tombstones on the burial ground, it is assumed that about 37 tombstones are missing
.Anklam cemetery
The first cemetery of Anklam was established in 1817 in front of the stone gate. He was moved a few years später to the current place "Min Hüsung".
On the cemetery after the war rubble was deposited, today there are still 30 tombstones.
.The cemetery Neukloster Forst
The Jewish cemetery of Neukloster is located in the forest area Forst. The cemetery were occupied from 1832 to 1929. Today there are still 34 gravestones. Nähere information is not available.
The cemetery in Moringen
The cemetery on the Hagenberg outside the city has existed since 1770. Attempts by the community to get a cemetery closer to the city failed.
Cemetery Stade
After 1770, the Jews of Stade were assigned to cemetery near the old garrison cemetery.
Regular burials can be traced only from 1827. In 1940 the cemetery was cleared. The gravestones were stored at the building yard and some of them were documented. Then they disappeared.[nbsp] Today three gravestones are still preserved in the cemetery.
The cemetery of Basel
The first Jewish cemetery of Basel was established at the beginning of the 13th century. The cemetery was located in front of the city. The graves were found during construction work in the forties and moved to the new cemetery.
The second Jewish cemetery was located in the city, but was used only briefly, as the Jews were expelled from the city in e1397.
When a new Jewish community was founded in 1805, the dead were first buried in Hegenheim in France.
The cemetery of Ballenstedt
Location:
Coming from the direction of Hoym, one reaches a small driveway to the right immediately before the place name sign "Ballenstedt". About it one reaches the entrance of the cemetery.
.The large area, enclosed by a wall, is empty except for a memorial stone erected in its center. The preserved about 15 gravestones were placed along the right outer wall (seen from the gate). Four memorial plaques are placed at its near-gate end.
The gate is locked, a plaque placed there indicates that a key is available at the town hall, room 11.
The cemetery in Neustadt an der Saale
The cemetery is located in the western outskirts of Bad Neustadt at the lower end of Mozartstraße. One approaches him from the south, where also the entrance is. From the gate a small chestnut avenue measures through the area, which rises steeply to the north. The graves in the almost square field are oriented to the east. Only the western part is occupied, the eastern half has remained empty. The side with the entrance gate is protected by a wall, on the other three sides there is wire mesh fence.