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placeCat500
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Cemetery
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Cemetery
Cemetery~Cemetery
Term ID
placeCat502

Jewish cemetery (Fellheim)

Complete profile
90

The Jewish cemetery is located in the community of Fellheim behind the building Memminger Straße 17. It has a size of 963 square meters with a massive stone wall around the cemetery. It was established in 1786. The small plot was assigned to the Jews by the Baron von Reichlin. There are three cemeteries with a total of about 200 gravestones. In the 19th century, the community leaders Liebermann Heilbronner and Josef Bacharach complained, among other things, that a burial fee continued to be demanded "although the Jews had appropriated their own burial place by purchase."

Jewish cemetery (Feldafing - cemetery and concentration camp memorial)

Complete profile
80

The Jewish cemetery is located in the north of Feldafing, directly next to the general cemetery: at the end of the Friedensweg. In Feldafing existed from May 1945 to March 1953 in the "Jewish DP Camp Feldafing" a Jewish religious community, (UNRRA or IRO community). There are 112 people buried in the cemetery who died in the DP camp Feldafing in the period from May 1945 to June 1949.

Jewish cemetery (Erpfting (district of Landsberg a. L.) - concentration camp cemetery and memorial)

Complete profile
90

The cemetery is located on the right side of the road from the OT Erpfting in the direction of Landsberg; the way is partly signposted. The cemetery with nine mass graves was built in connection with Camp VII of the Landsberg/Kaufering subcamp complex. The design began in October 1945 and was completed between 1948 and 1950 by the Landsberg Municipal Construction Office. The cemetery was inaugurated together with other concentration camp cemeteries in 1950.

Jewish cemetery (Eibelstadt - deserted cemetery)

Complete profile
50

Till 1654 Jews lived in Eibelstadt. Their cemetery was located at the Altenberg ("Judenwäldchen", "Im Judenleichenhof"). Its area is estimated at 270 square meters; a gate symbolically "closes" the otherwise open area, on which there is no longer a single gravestone. Only an inscription reminds of the former burial place.

Jewish cemetery (Donauwörth - deserted cemetery)

Complete profile
50

Here existed from about 1350 until the expulsion in 1517/1518 a Jewish community, which buried their deceased first in Nördlingen. When Nördlingen expelled its Jews in 1506, it was possible to establish a cemetery in Donauwörth. Nothing is known about its location. A location outside the city east of the city wall is assumed. However, it was destroyed after the expulsion in 1517/1518.

Jewish cemetery (Dettelbach - deserted cemetery)

Complete profile
50

The cemetery was located northwest of the city on a slope with the field name "Judenfriedhof". According to the corridor relics it had a ground area of 770 square meters (18 x 43 m) It was probably established around 1600. It is assumed that it was abandoned around 1800. Gravestone remains are no longer present.

Jewish cemetery (Deggendorf)

Complete profile
90

The cemetery is located in the city as part of the municipal cemetery on Pandurenweg. The Jewish section (section III) is located next to the mortuary. The area is separated from the rest of the cemetery by hedge. It was established in 1945. From 1945 until about 1949 there was a Jewish community of "Displaced Persons" (DP's) in Deggendorf, survivors from concentration camps and especially from the Theresienstadt ghetto, which initially numbered about 1500 members.