Jewish cemetery Drove (Kreuzau)

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The Jewish cemetery in Drove was occupied at the latest since the second half of the 19th century. However, it is probably older. In 1852, the Drove synagogue community had the cemetery, which was then located in the so-called "Judendriesch" field, newly enclosed. Jewish citizens who died in Kreuzau and Nideggen were also buried here. The cemetery was last occupied in 1941 (last burial of Gustav Roer on June 4, 1941).  
   

Jewish cemetery (Warburg)

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A first Jewish cemetery in Warburg was established in 1687 in the Mollhauser Graben in front of the northwestern town wall - in the Zwinger area - of Warburg's new town. The land was leased from the town. This cemetery was occupied until about 1828. It had been extended in 1758, 1772 and 1796. In 1828 the town sold the plot after a legal dispute with the Jewish community, which the latter had lost. No gravestones are preserved from this period.  

Jewish cemetery (Bad Ems)

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In Bad Ems there is an old and a new Jewish cemetery, which are located directly next to each other. The old cemetery was established around 1800. Below it lies the new cemetery created since the end of the 19th century. Both parts are today located within the general cemetery in the Emsbach Valley. Unoccupied areas of the Jewish cemetery were integrated into the general cemetery after 1945, which is why in a newer extension of the Jewish cemetery from the 1930s only one row is occupied by graves of Jewish deceased, the ones below are occupied by graves of non-Jewish deceased.

Jewish cemetery (Dalheim)

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Already in summer 1858 the cemetery was inaugurated, after the political community had handed over the place free of charge to the Jewish community on the basis of a contract in October 1855. There is a short report about the dedication of the cemetery in the Allgemeine Zeitung des Judentums of July 12, 1858. Only members of the own Jewish community were buried in the Jewish cemetery in Dalheim. A last burial was 1918 (Anselm Lyon, who died at the age of 93 and was one of the last Jewish inhabitants of the village). 

Jewish cemetery (Grünstadt)

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The Jewish Cemetery Grünstadt is a Jewish cemetery in Grünstadt in the district of Bad Dürkheim in Rhineland-Palatinate, which was established around 1700. In 1881 followed an expansion of 3.5 ar. Since 1989 it is a protected cultural monument. The oldest gravestone dates from 1743.

Jewish cemetery (Hahnheim)

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The Jewish cemetery in Hahnheim was established around 1884. An desecration of the cemetery at the end of 1904 is reported in an article of the Frankfurter Israelitisches Familienblatt  The last burial in the Jewish cemetery in Hahnheim was in September 1938 (Emil Trum). In March 1945 the cemetery was destroyed (cf.

Jewish cemetery (Hassloch)

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The Jewish cemetery in Haßloch, a community in the district of Bad Dürkheim in Rhineland-Palatinate, was established in 1821. The cemetery in the north of the village, between Dr.-Siebenpfeiffer-Strasse, Maximilianstrasse and Ludwigstrasse, is a protected cultural monument. Surrounding communities, including Geinsheim, Böhl as well as Iggelheim, also used it. Its area covers 16.7 ar. 

Jewish cemetery (Dittelsheim-Heßloch)

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The Jewish cemetery in Hessloch was used already in the first half of the 18th century . The files of the municipal archives show that the Jewish community of Hessloch buried their dead here as early as 1719 . Jews from Monzernheim, who belonged to the Jewish community of Hessloch, were also buried there. The cemetery area covers 7.56 ar. 
  

Jewish cemetery (Kirchheimbolanden)

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The cemetery was opened in 1843 (parcel 3070). Other sources mention this date only as an extension of the cemetery already established in the 17th century. The area covers 42.60 ares. A mortuary (Tahara house) was present. It was destroyed during the Nazi period and is only preserved as a ruin. There are still about 200 gravestones in the cemetery today.

A key to visit the cemetery can be obtained at the Kirchheimbolanden town hall. The cemetery is not accessible by car.

Jewish cemetery (Nassau)

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The cemetery might have been established in the 18th century. The area of the cemetery is 13,61 ares. The cemetery consists of an old part, where only a small part of the gravestones are still preserved, and a newer part.    
   
November 1994: In Nassau, young people from the school center set an example and restored the Jewish cemetery on the B 417. The cemetery had been desecrated by unknown perpetrators.