Museum

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placeCat1200
Kategorie
Culture
Solr Facette
Culture
Culture~Museum
Term ID
placeCat1201

Place of remembrance BADEHAUS

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100

In the BADEHAUS of Waldram (formerly Föhrenwald), history can be experienced as if in fast motion: From 1940, the National Socialists built a model settlement for armaments workers in the Wolfratshaus forest. Towards the end of the war, the concentration camp death march passed by here. Then Föhrenwald became a camp for Jewish displaced persons who had survived the Holocaust. From 1956 on, mostly Catholic displaced persons with many children were settled and the place was renamed Waldram. Traces of this unique migration history can still be found here today.

"Jewish Room" in the Museum Altes Schulhaus (Remseck am Neckar)

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90

In the 1830 built building of the old schoolhouse in the Remsecker district Neckarrems a museum is established in 1985.

Following the discovery of the Hochberg Genizah in the attic of the former synagogue in Remseck-Hochberg, the "Jewish Room" is established in the Altes Schulhaus museum in 1992.

In the "Jewish Room" in the Museum Altes Schulhaus in Remseck-Neckarrems, the genizah finds from the former synagogue in Remseck-Hochberg are exhibited. 

Jewish Museum Berlin

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100

The Jewish Museum Berlin opened in 2001, and since then has been one of the outstanding institutions in the European museum landscape. The exhibitions, the publications, the educational work and the diverse program of events are aimed at a broad audience in Germany and around the world. The museum focuses on the history of Jewish life as well as on Jewish everyday culture with contemporary relevance. The museum is located in Kreuzberg, not far from Checkpoint Charlie and the former Berlin Wall.

Museum Judengasse (Frankfurt am Main)

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100

The Museum Judengasse is located in the building complex of the municipal utility center on the . In 1985, Swiss architect Ernst Gisel is commissioned to design a new administrative and service building on the site of the former Jewish ghetto. The result is an architecture whose 140-meter-long arcade front is dominated by a sweeping curved ridge line.

Jewish Museum Frankfurt

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100

The Jewish Museum is housed in the former upper middle-class residence of the Rothschild family and one of the neighboring buildings at Am Untermainkai 14-15. The city architect Johann F. Chr. Hess erected the two buildings in 1820/21 in the classicist style. After Mayer Carl von Rothschild acquired the house in 1846, he had it enlarged by the architect Friedrich Rumpf and furnished with a representative, stately interior. Rumpf coined with his decor "Le goût Rothschild", the Rothschild taste, which still defines part of the premises today.

Jewish Museum Emmendingen

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100

The opening of the Jewish Museum Emmendingen took place on April 13, 1997. The museum was established in the restored mikveh building. In the house was once the apartment of the synagogue servant. In the basement, the listed immersion bath is still preserved (built between 1837 and 1843 and used until around 1900).