New Jewish Cemetery (Ribnitz)
Memorial site with a small number of gravestones.
Jewish cemetery (Damgarten)
State of preservation unclear. The Ribnitz families Samuel and Müller provided a plot of land next to the old cemetery in the Richtenberger Straße. On June 7, 1940, this cemetery was ultimately incorporated into the municipal cemetery.
Jewish cemetery Braunsbach
Jewish cemetery Hochberg
The Jewish cemetery Hochberg is quite well researched. Because the desquamation of the soft sandstone progressed rapidly, the then municipality of Remseck am Neckar had a photo documentation made as early as 1982. The theologian Ulrike Sill then recorded all 246 gravestones and fragments between 1992 and 1998, recorded the inscriptions and made translations from Hebrew. In particular, she was assisted in this endeavor by Gil Hüttenmeister, a leading Judaist at the University of Tübingen.
Jewish cemetery (Rehna)
No longer present. Later found fragments of two gravestones can be visited today in the German House in Rehna.
Marking on the map requires more accurate adjustment.
Jewish cemetery (Plau am See)
Enclosed cemetery with grave stock. 21 graves/stones.
Jewish cemetery Ziegelkamp (Penzlin)
Enclosed cemetery with grave stock.
New Jewish Cemetery (Parchim)
Memorial site with gravestone stock on the Städtischen Neuen Friedhof. It was implemented by a garden architect from Ludwigslust, with a memorial stone in the center of the area and the remaining gravestones semicircular around it.
Marking on the map requires more precise adjustment.
Medieval Jewish Cemetery (Parchim)
No longer preserved. Cemetery site was located between Plümperwiesen and Flörkestraße, Höhe Flörkestraße 44.