Via Umberto I, 9, 73100 Lecce +39 0832 247016 Jewish Museum Lecce (museoebraicolecce.com)
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Via Umberto I, 9, 73100 Lecce +39 0832 247016 Jewish Museum Lecce (museoebraicolecce.com)
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Werner-von-Siemens Straße 2-4, Wurzburg
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Railway Station, 97080 Wurzburg
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Klosterhof 5, 91541 Rothenburg 09861 939043 Museum Rothenburg ob der Tauber: Museum Rothenburg ob der Tauber (rothenburgmuseum.de)
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Judengasse 10, Rothenburg
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Schrannenplatz, Rothenburg
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Kapellenplatz 5, Rothenburg
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Am Brixener Hof 2, Regensburg +49 941 / 5 70 93 Startseite
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An Der Holzlande 5, Regensburg
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Untere Bachgasse 3, Regensburg
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Hinter der Grieb 5, Regensburg
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Neupfarrplatz, Regensburg
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Ilandkoppel 68, 22337 Hamburg +49 40 6307964
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Königstraße 10a, Hambourg +49 40 344293
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Poolstrasse, Hamburg
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Allende-Platz, Hamburg
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Sedanstraße 46, 45138 Essen +49 201 959960
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Edmund-Körner-Platz 1, 45127 Essen +49 201 8845218 Maison de l’ancienne synagogue (essen.de)
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Nürnberger Str. 9, Bayreuth Tel : + 49 921 64389 ikgbayreuth@freenet.de
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Münzgasse 2, 95444 Bayreuth Tel : + 49 921 64389 ikgbayreuth@freenet.de
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Trapezitsa, Veliko Tarnovo
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Видинската синагога, ul. “Baba Vida” 29, 3703 g.k. Georgi Benkovski, Vidin
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Excavations undertaken in the city since 2006 to explore an archaeological site led to the discovery in 2019 of the ruins of a probably dating from the 13th century. This is one of the oldest traces of Jewish presence in the country, after the 3rd century synagogue in Plovdiv. One of the elements reinforcing the possibility that it was indeed a synagogue is the presence of an engraved Star ...
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A beautiful was built in Vidin in 1894 by the architect Friedrich Grunanger. A two-storey building with impressive stained-glass windows. At that time, about 1500 Jews lived in Vidin. This number increased on the eve of the Second World War. It was damaged by bombing raids during the war. Although a large part of the compound remains, the roof is no longer present. Only a dozen Jews still ...
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The Jewish community in Canterbury appears to be very old. But the earliest administrative record dates back only to 1760, with the purchase of land for a burial. A synagogue was built at that time in St Dunstan’s. Following the expansion of the railroads in the mid-19th century, the land was requisitioned. A new was inaugurated in 1848, thanks in part to the financial support of Moses ...
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The Jewish presence in Northampton probably dates from the Middle Ages. In the 12th century it was one of the largest communities in the country. During the 13th century they were sometimes welcomed, sometimes persecuted and excluded, depending on the rulers and directives. Jews returned to the city over the centuries. A community was formed in the 19th century with the formation of the in ...
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The Jewish presence in Newcastle probably dates from the Middle Ages. In 1234, Jews were expelled from the city. Some returned or first settled in Newcastle but it was not until the 19th century that an organized Jewish community emerged. By the turn of 1830, about 100 Jews were living there. This was the year in which land for a Jewish cemetery was purchased. Eight years later, a synagogue ...
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Few Jews lived in Leicester in the Middle Ages. It was only in the 19th century that their presence became more important. This was reinforced by the arrival of Jews from Russia at the turn of the 20th century. One of the most important figures in Leicester was Israel Hart, who was mayor from 1884 to 1886 and from 1893 to 1894. He encouraged urban development with a fountain that became ...
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The Jewish presence in Exeter is very old, dating back to at least the 12th century, and at the time of the expulsion of the Jews in 1290, about 40 families lived there. During the gradual return of the Jews a few centuries later, Italian Jews made up a significant part of the community. The dates from 1763. This makes it one of the oldest synagogues still standing in England. Restoration ...
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The Jewish presence in Bradford seems to date back to the 19th century, at least the documents attest to it. Mostly Jews from Germany, attracted by the industrial development of the city’s textile industry. Bradford was one of the wool capitals of the world at the time. Migration from Russia during the pogroms and political upheavals in the country at the turn of the century ...
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