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Cemetery
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placeCat502

Jewish cemetery Klein Freden (Leine)

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100

The Jüdische cemetery Klein Freden is a Jüdische private cemetery in the municipality of Freden (Leine) in the Lower Saxon district of Hildesheim. He is a protected cultural monument and is located on the Winzenburger Straße oppositeüudeanlage with the house number 55

The 218 square meters large;e private burial place was acquired by Seligmann Meyer Heilbrunn for the burial of his family members and created in 1859. The year of the creation can be found on the right pillar of the entrance gate to the cemetery.

Jewish cemetery Lamspringe

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100

The seat of the synagogue community of the villages of Bockenem, Lamspringe and Sottrum was in Groß Rhüden (district of Seesen), which was moved to Lamspringe around 1907 after a steady migration of the community members. The Jewish cemetery in Lamspringe was established in 1901 at the end of the Waldstra&szlig - at the edge of the forest of the Hopfenberg.

On the 875 square meters large burial area are four graves of the Brandt and Rosenblatt families, two tombstones of the Brand family are preserved. Year 1964 it was restored.

 

New Jewish Cemetery Aschersleben

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60

The New Jewish cemetery Aschersleben was established around 1877 and occupied until the Nazi era, sporadically even after 1945. It is surrounded by a brick wall. A beech avenue runs through the grounds. A cemetery hall built in 1928 was destroyed in 1938. The cemetery area is 2750 square meters. There are about 73 gravestones preserved, additionally about 30 gravestones from the old cemetery.

Jewish cemetery Güsten

Complete profile
70

In Güsten (today belonging to the municipality of Wipperaue/Salzlandkreis) are said to have lived several Jewish families from the middle of the 18th century; the älteste Schutzbrief für einen Juden in Güsten dates from 1709. In the course of the first half of the 19th century, the number of families continued to increase. A Jewish community was not formed until the end of the 1850s, when it adopted a constitution. The deceased were first buried in the cemetery in Neundorf, which was established in the 18th century.

Jewish cemetery Salzhemmendorf

Complete profile
90

The cemetery was occupied from 1816 to 1932. On November 9, 1938 it was destroyed, only 19 gravestones remained. The cemetery, reconstructed after 1945, was reopened in 1955. The oldest existing gravestone dates from 1902, the youngest from 1930. 

The Jüdische Friedhof im niedersächsischen Flecken Salzhemmendorf im Landkreis Hameln-Pyrmont ist ein Kulturdenkmal.