Jewish cemetery (Ermreuth)
The Jewish cemetery in Ermreuth in the Upper Franconian district of Forchheim is a Jewish burial site that was occupied from 1711 to 1937.
location
The 2,640 m² burial site is about 1.5 km northwest of the village of Ermreuth between orchards and forests on the slope of the Heinbühl , above the previous cattle drive . The plot in the form of an irregular triangle is bordered in the north by a stone wall with two gates, the other sides bordered by a wire fence and a hedge.
history
First of all, the Ermreuth Jews buried their deceased in the Jewish cemetery in Baiersdorf . 1711 acquired the Jewish community in Ermreuth from the manorial a barren piece of land and put its own burial ground there. The growing number of parishioners led to major expansions of the cemetery in 1797 and 1862.
Almost all members of the Jewish community in Ermreuth were buried in the cemetery. For Jews who did not belong to the Ermreuther community, a double funeral fee had to be paid first. Around 215 of the former 500 tombstones have been preserved. The oldest tomb dates from 1730, the youngest from 1932. Most of the existing graves were dug in the 19th century. After the maximum number of Jewish inhabitants had been reached in the village in 1822 with 194 people, the number then fell rapidly due to emigration to the cities. In 1933 there were only five Jewish households in Ermreuth, in which a total of 21 people lived.
The cemetery was desecrated during the National Socialist era . 19 tombstones were knocked over in 1936 and the complex also underwent significant changes in the period that followed. The last two deceased, buried in 1936 and 1937, no longer received any gravestones. During the November pogroms of 1938 , the furnishings and rituals of the synagogue built in 1922 in Ermreuth were smashed. At least 38 Jews born or resident in Ermreuth fell victim to the Holocaust .
In 1993, stabilization measures were carried out on many gravestones that had fallen over and threatened to topple over, some of which turned out to be unfavorable. Irreparable damage was done to several gravestone slabs.
literature
- Israel Schwierz: Stone evidence of Jewish life in Bavaria. A documentation . Ed. from the Bavarian State Center for Political Education . Munich 1988, pp. 203f., ISBN 3-87052-393-X
- Michael Brocke, Christiane E. Müller: House of Life. Jewish cemeteries in Germany . Leipzig 2001, p. 128, ISBN 3-379-00777-3
Individual evidence
- ↑ juden-in-bamberg.de : The Jewish cemetery of Ermreuth . As of July 17, 2011.
- ↑ Alemannia Judaica : Ermreuth - Jewish history / synagogue . As of July 17, 2011.
- ^ Commemorative Book - Victims of Persecution of the Jews under the National Socialist Tyranny 1933–1945 . As of May 19, 2011.
- ^ Alemannia Judaica : Ermreuth - Jewish cemetery . As of July 17, 2011.
Web links
- House of Bavarian History : Jewish cemeteries in Bavaria - Ermreuth
- Michael Trüger: The Jewish cemetery in Ermreuth . In: The National Association of Israelites. Religious communities in Bavaria. No. 62 (9th year). June 1994. p. 14.
Coordinates: 49 ° 38 '58.6 " N , 11 ° 10' 58.4" E