Kategorie
Jewish Community
Solr Facette
Jewish Community
Term ID
placeCat100

Jewish community Iphofen

Complete profile
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The Jewish community of Iphofen was an Israelite religious community in the present-day town of Iphofen in the Lower Franconian district of Kitzingen. The community existed since the 13th century with interruptions until the year 1683. The Jewish population of Iphofen was subject to frequent expulsions and persecutions. It was not until the second half of the 19th century that Jews again settled in the town, but did not form their own community.

Jewish Community Kempten (Allgäu)

Complete profile
80
A first Jewish community or settlement of Jews in Kempten can be documented for the 14th century. In 1875 the Kempten community merged with the one from Memmingen at the insistence of the Swabian government. This wish on the part of the government had been expressed since 1872.[1] After the persecution of Jews during the National Socialist era, a small number of Jews founded a new Jewish community, which, however, became extinct again shortly thereafter.

Jewish Community Munich and Upper Bavaria

Complete profile
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The Jewish Community of Munich and Upper Bavaria (IKG) is with about 9500 members the second largest Jewish community in Germany in the legal form of a corporation under public law. Like the communities of Cologne, Frankfurt, Hamburg and Berlin, it forms an independent state association within the Central Council of Jews in Germany and is one of the two state associations in Bavaria.

Jewish life in Berlin

Complete profile
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The history of the Jews in Berlin begins shortly after the city was founded. Until the beginning of modern times, Jews were expelled from Berlin and resettled several times. Since 1671 there has been a permanent Jewish population in Berlin, which grew in the 19th and early 20th centuries to 173,000 people in 1925. The Jewish population played an important and formative role in Berlin during this period.