List of Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein
The list of Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein gives an overview of existing Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein .
Place, cemetery | image | founding | Tombstones | size | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ahrensburg , Jewish cemetery Location: ⊙ |
1822 | 23 | 840 m² | Not open to the public. During the Reichspogromnacht in 1938 , the chapel was set on fire and the graves desecrated. | |
Bad Segeberg , Old Jewish Cemetery Location: ⊙ |
1792 | 55 | The cemetery was desecrated several times during the National Socialist era . It is no longer used. | ||
Bad Segeberg , New Jewish Cemetery Location: ⊙ |
2002 | The cemetery is in the immediate vicinity of the municipal Ihlwald cemetery. | |||
Castle on Fehmarn , Jewish cemetery Location: ⊙ |
1800 | 0, 1 memorial stone | The last burial took place in 1879. | ||
Elmshorn , Old Jewish Cemetery Location: ⊙ |
1685 | 130 | 1,740 m² | Extensively restored in 2018. Is no longer occupied. | |
Elmshorn , Neuer Jüdischer Friedhof Location: ⊙ |
2000s | The cemetery is directly adjacent to the municipal cemetery in Kölln-Reisiek. | |||
Eutin , Jewish cemetery Location: ⊙ |
1886 | 12 | Burial place of the Eutin Jews. However, there was no local church. | ||
Flensburg , Jewish cemetery Location: ⊙ |
around 2005 | Established around 2005 together with a Muslim cemetery in the Friedenshügel cemetery. | |||
Friedrichstadt , Old Jewish Cemetery Location: ⊙ |
1677 | 17th | In 1936 the cemetery was completely destroyed by the National Socialists with hammer and axes. Remnants of the tombstones still found were placed in a circle after the Second World War and the cemetery was prepared as a memorial. | ||
Frederick City , New Jewish Cemetery Location: ⊙ |
1887/88 | Located in the immediate vicinity of the old cemetery. The last burial took place in 1940. | |||
Glückstadt , Jewish cemetery Location: ⊙ |
1622 | about 100 | 1,531 m² | In 1941, the NS mayor of Glückstadt, Wilhelm Vogt, had all the tombstones cleared and the site leveled. After 1945 the cemetery was restored as far as possible. | |
Kiel , Old Jewish Cemetery Location: ⊙ |
1852 | approx. 230 historical tombstones have been preserved | 2,010 m² | During the Second World War, the cemetery and the mourning hall were devastated by bombs. In 1947 returned Jews restored the cemetery and had the morgue rebuilt. | |
Kiel , cemetery of the Orthodox Jewish community Location: ⊙ |
2012/13 | 500 m² | Located right next to the cemetery of the liberal Jewish community in Kiel on the urn cemetery on Eichhofstrasse. | ||
Kiel , cemetery of the liberal Jewish community Location: ⊙ |
2012/13 | 250 m² | Located right next to the cemetery of the Orthodox Jewish community in Kiel on the urn cemetery on Eichhofstrasse. | ||
Kropp , Jüdischer Friedhof Location: ⊙ |
1932 | 2 received | 30 m² | Partial area in the cemetery of the Protestant Diakoniewerk in Kropp. | |
Lübeck , Jüdischer Friedhof Schönböckener Straße Location: ⊙ |
1810 | approx. 120 | 471 m² | In 1935/36 there were 37 graves in the cemetery. After 1936 the cemetery was closed and leveled. Individual tombstones were brought to the Moisling cemetery. | |
Lübeck , Moisling Jewish Cemetery Location: ⊙ |
17th century | 7,500 m² | Fully booked since 2012. | ||
Lübeck , Neuer Jüdischer Friedhof Location: ⊙ |
2012 | 5,000 m² | Purchased in 2012 by the Lübeck Jewish Community as part of the Vorwerker Friedhof. | ||
Neustadt in Holstein , Jewish cemetery Location: ⊙ |
1945 | 100 | approx. 300 m² | There are around 100 tombs of the victims of the Cap Arcona disaster of May 3, 1945, of former concentration camp inmates and of those who died in the nearby Displaced Persons Camp (DP camp) in Neustadt. | |
Westerrönfeld , Jewish cemetery Location: ⊙ |
1695 | 140 | Located outside of Rendsburg. There the Rendsburg community was able to create a burial place with a musket shot away from the fortress walls . | ||
Stockelsdorf , Jewish cemetery Location: ⊙ |
First mentioned in 1799 | 36 | approx. 450 m² | The last burial took place on August 19, 1919. |
Individual evidence
- ↑ Ranzenbüttel. In: Overview of all projects for the documentation of Jewish grave inscriptions in the area of the Federal Republic of Germany. Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein.
- ↑ a b Bad Segeberg. In: Overview of all projects for the documentation of Jewish grave inscriptions in the area of the Federal Republic of Germany. Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein.
- ^ Castle on Fehmarn. In: Overview of all projects for the documentation of Jewish grave inscriptions in the area of the Federal Republic of Germany. Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein.
- ↑ a b Elmshorn. In: Overview of all projects for the documentation of Jewish grave inscriptions in the area of the Federal Republic of Germany. Elmshorn (Pinneberg district) Jewish cemeteries.
- ↑ Eurin. In: Overview of all projects for the documentation of Jewish grave inscriptions in the area of the Federal Republic of Germany. Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein.
- ↑ Flensburg. In: Overview of all projects for the documentation of Jewish grave inscriptions in the area of the Federal Republic of Germany. Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein.
- ^ Friedrichstadt (district of North Friesland / Schleswig-Holstein). Old Jewish cemetery (Am Treenefeld). In: Overview of all projects for the documentation of Jewish grave inscriptions in the area of the Federal Republic of Germany. Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein.
- ^ Friedrichstadt (district of North Friesland / Schleswig-Holstein). New Jewish cemetery (Schleswiger Strasse). In: Overview of all projects for the documentation of Jewish grave inscriptions in the area of the Federal Republic of Germany. Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein.
- ↑ Glückstadt (Steinburg district). Jewish Cemetery. In: Overview of all projects for the documentation of Jewish grave inscriptions in the area of the Federal Republic of Germany. Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein.
- ↑ Kiel. In: Overview of all projects for the documentation of Jewish grave inscriptions in the area of the Federal Republic of Germany. Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstei.
- ^ A b Christian Hiersemenzel New cemetery for Jewish communities. In: Kieler Nachrichten of December 16, 2012
- ↑ Dieter Peters: Jewish graves in the cemetery of the Protestant Diakoniewerk in Kropp. In: Alemannia Judaica. 2006, accessed February 12, 2020 .
- ↑ Lübeck. In: Overview of all projects for the documentation of Jewish grave inscriptions in the area of the Federal Republic of Germany. Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein.
- ↑ Lübeck. In: Overview of all projects for the documentation of Jewish grave inscriptions in the area of the Federal Republic of Germany. Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein.
- ↑ Kai Dordowsky New cemetery for Jewish Community In: Lubeck News from February 25, 2012
- ^ Neustadt in Holstein. In: Overview of all projects for the documentation of Jewish grave inscriptions in the area of the Federal Republic of Germany. Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein.
- ^ The Jewish cemetery in Rendsburg (Rendsburg-Eckernförde district). In: Overview of all projects for the documentation of Jewish grave inscriptions in the area of the Federal Republic of Germany. Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein.
- ↑ Stockelsdorf. In: Overview of all projects for the documentation of Jewish grave inscriptions in the area of the Federal Republic of Germany. Jewish cemeteries in Schleswig-Holstein.