List of stumbling blocks in Karlovarský kraj

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Stumbling blocks in Chodov

The list of stumbling blocks in Karlovarský kraj contains the stumbling blocks in the Czech region of Karlovarský kraj (German: Karlsbader Region ), which recall the fate of those people from this region who were murdered, deported, expelled or driven to suicide by the National Socialists . The stumbling blocks were laid by Gunter Demnig .

The stumbling blocks are to Czech stumbling blocks called alternatively kameny zmizelých (stones of the disappeared).

Chodov

The following stumbling blocks have been laid in Chodov , Karlovarský kraj region :

image inscription Location Life
Staroměstská 18
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Alice Bergmann ,
Staroměstská 18
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Franziska Bergmann , née Kronberger,
Staroměstská 18
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Vera Bergmann ,
Stumbling block for Bedrich Kettner.jpg Comenskeho 1077
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Bedřich Kettner , born in 1889, studied medicine and married Mariana Picková. The couple had a son, Jiří, born in 1930. The historian Miloš Bělohlávek from Chodov researched that Kettner tried several times to leave the country after the Czechoslovak border areas were occupied by the Nazi regime in 1938. He wanted to bring himself and his family to safety in Switzerland. However, the escape did not succeed. He was arrested in 1941 and murdered in Mauthausen concentration camp in 1942 . His wife and son were killed in Auschwitz concentration camp in 1943 .
Stumbling block for Jiri Kettner.jpg Comenskeho 1077
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Bedřich Kettner , born on March 14, 1930, was the son of Bedřich and Mariana Kettner. He and his mother were deported from Prague to Theresienstadt on July 27, 1942 , and to Auschwitz on December 15, 1943 . There he and his mother were murdered by the Nazi regime.
Stumbling block for Mariana Kettnerova.jpg Comenskeho 1077
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Mariana Kettnerová b. Picková was born on November 11, 1901. She married the doctor Bedřich Antonín Kettner. The couple had a son, Jiří, born in March 1930. After the family's plans to escape failed, the husband was abducted in 1941. Mariana Kettnerová had to leave Chodov with her son and came to Prague, where the last address given is Chocholouškova 7 in Prague VIII. On July 27, 1942, mother and son were deported from Prague to Theresienstadt on Transport AAu, No. 102 and 103 . On December 15, 1943, the two were transferred to Auschwitz with Transport Dr, No. 1012 and 1013 . There both were murdered by the Nazi regime.
Stumbling block for Anna Kronberger.jpg Staroměstská 18
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Anna Kronberger born Löwenhein was born in 1906. She was deported and murdered by the Nazi regime in Auschwitz in 1943 .
Stumbling block for Eduard Kronberger.jpg Staroměstská 18
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Eduard Kronberger was born in Soběslav on July 30, 1865 , as one of ten children of the married couple Seligmann Kronberger (1830–1886) and Franziska geb. Cattle (around 1835 in Přehořov - 1887 in Soběslav). He went to Chodov, became a merchant and married Jenny Löwy (born February 10, 1875). The couple had five children: the sons Walter (born 1896) and Oskar (born 1899) and the daughters Franziska (born March 20, 1898 in Chodov), Erna (born 1903) and Frieda. The sons and Erna Kronberger were murdered by the Nazi regime. Eduard Kronberger's wife Jenny died on March 25, 1929 in Chodov. He himself was deported to Waldheim prison by the National Socialists and murdered on October 30, 1940. Two of his grandchildren, Ruth and Kurt Kronberger, who were brought to Great Britain on the so-called Winton trains, survived the Holocaust .
Stumbling block for Ida Kronberger.jpg Staroměstská 18
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Ida Kronberger b. Preuss was born on January 19, 1897. She married Walter Kronberger. The couple had two children, Adolf and Ruth. Ida Kronberger was deported by the Nazi regime with Transport Ba on August 10, 1942, No. 1145, from Prague to Theresienstadt . On October 6, 1944, she was transferred to Auschwitz with Transport Eo, No. 200, and murdered there. Her husband was killed in Dachau concentration camp in February 1945 . The daughter Ruth was brought to safety in Great Britain on the so-called Winton trains in good time.
Stumbling block for Oscar Kronberger.jpg Staroměstská 18
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Oscar Kronberger also Oskar, was born on December 12, 1899. He was the second son of the married couple Eduard and Jenny Kronberger. He was deported to Theresienstadt in 1943 and murdered by the Nazi regime in Auschwitz that same year .
Stumbling block for Walter Kronberger.jpg Staroměstská 18
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Walter Kronberger , also Valtr, was born on July 14, 1896 in Chodov. He was the eldest son of the married couple Eduard and Jenny Kronberger. Walter Kronberger married Ida Kronberger geb. Preuss. The couple had two children, Adolf and Ruth. Before being deported to a camp, the National Socialists forced most of the Czech Jews to leave their home community and move to a collective flat in Prague. The last address given before his deportation was Prague XII, V Horní Stromovce 7. On March 9, 1943, Walter Kronberger was transferred to Theresienstadt on Transport Cw, No. 57, where his wife had been since August 10, 1942. On September 29, 1944, the deportation took place with Transport El, No. 224, from Theresienstadt to Auschwitz . On February 6, 1945, he was murdered by the Nazi regime in Dachau concentration camp.
Stumbling block for Erna Stern.jpg Staroměstská 18
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Erna Stern born Kronberger was born on March 5, 1903 in Chodov as the daughter of the married couple Eduard and Jenny Kronberger. She married Julius Stern. Her husband's fate is unknown. She and her sister-in-law Ida Kronberger were deported from Prague to Theresienstadt on August 10, 1942 using Transport Ba, No. 1146 . From there she was deported to Riga on August 20, 1942 with Transport Bb, No. 950, and murdered.

Laying data

  • August 2, 2015: Chodov, Staroměstská 18 (G. Demnig)
  • August 1, 2016: Chodov, Komenského 1077
  • September 17, 2017: Chodov, Staroměstská 18

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Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Radio Praha : Stolpersteine ​​in Chodov remind of Holocaust victims , August 2, 2016, accessed on December 1, 2016.
  2. a b c Martina Schneibergová: Stumbling blocks in Chodov remind of Holocaust victims , August 2, 2016, accessed on December 1, 2016.
  3. a b holocaust.cz: JIŘÍ KETTNER , entry in the victim database, accessed on December 1, 2016.
  4. holocaust.cz: MARIANA KETTNEROVÁ , entry in the victim database, accessed on December 1, 2016.
  5. holocaust.cz: Ida Kronbergerová , accessed on December 9, 2016
  6. a b holocaust.cz: Valtr Kronberger , accessed on December 9, 2016
  7. holocaust.cz: Erna Kronbergerová , accessed on December 9, 2016
  8. Kameny zmizelých v dlažbě před domem připomínají tragický osud rodiny , report of the online newspaper iDNES.cz of August 3, 2015, online at: idnes.cz / ...

See also