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Ancient Jewish cemetery of Metz
Avenue de Blida, 57000 Metz
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Synagogue of Metz
39 rue du Rabbin Elie Bloch, 57000 Metz Tel : 03 87 75 04 44 https://cimetz.org/wp/
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Verdun
The presence of Jews in Verdun was fleeting in the Middle Ages, often banned from settling there. Despite this, some Tossafist scholars of Verdun are references like Samuel Ben Hayim and Samuel Ben Yosef. Even in the 18th century attempts to settle Jews in the city for a long time met with little success and led to expulsions. The Jewish community was perpetuated at the time of the French ...
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Metz
Metz is surprising for many reasons. Firstly, the richness of its medieval architecture and that of subsequent centuries, influenced by numerous conquests and reconquests. With its palaces, symbols of authority, protective fortifications and bridges to other shores and cultures that blend harmoniously. Metz is anything but a city with a museum-like central district. It’s a city whose ...
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Lorraine
The presence of Jews in Lorraine dates at least from the Carolingian period. In the Middle Ages, the main administrative documents found relating this presence were mainly linked to expulsions. In the cities of Metz, Verdun, Toul, Nancy, Lunéville, Sarreguemines … The first great Jewish figure being Gershom Ben Yehouda, who was born in Metz in 960. In the centuries that followed before ...
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Ancient synagogue of Ptuj
9 Jadranska ulica, Ptuj
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Jewish cemetery of Lendava
Glavna ulica, 9220 Lendava
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Ptuj
This charming little town situated above the Drava river was an important Roman military site which developed the town of Poetovium there. It was destroyed by the Huns in the 5th century and then rebuilt by the Slavs who settled there. The Jewish presence in the town of Ptuj, best known today for its vineyards, probably dates from the end of the 13th century. The Provincial Museum also ...
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Ancient Street of the Jews
Triglavska ulica, Koper
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Kidiricevo
Like Stanjel, Kidriveco, located a few kilometers from Ptuj, has a military cemetery accommodating soldiers who fell at the front during the First World War. Abandoned, only a handful of graves remain visible in this . Among them, that of the Jew Isidor Lowi, who died in 1916.
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Stanjel
Like Kidricevo, this small Slovenian village has an Austrian cemetery with graves of soldiers who died in the First World War. Formerly a very large , abandoned, only part of its massive art deco entrance and a few graves remain visible. Among them, those of two Jewish soldiers.
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Koper
A very pretty little marina near the Italian border, Koper was ruled by Venice from 1278 to 1797. The imprint of this presence is still very visible architecturally on buildings in the city and its cathedral. The Jewish presence probably dates from the Venetian era. Dating back, it seems, to the end of the 14th century. A ghetto was established there at the beginning of the 16th century. The ...
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Charles Liché Synagogue
14 Place des Vosges, 75004 Paris Tel : + 33 1 48 87 79 45 https://www.synadesvosges.com/
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Jewish cemetery of Nova Gorica
Vipavska cesta, 5000 Rožna Dolina
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Landesmuseum Burgenland
Museumgasse 1-5, A-7000 Eisenstadt +43 2682719 4000 https://landesmuseum-burgenland.at/
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Jewish Square Quarter
Trubarjeva ulica 27, 6330 Piran
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Jewish cemetery of Zale
1000 Ljubljana
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Site of the ancient synagogue
4 Zidovska steza, Ljubljana
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Jewish Cultural Center of Ljubljana
Križevniška 3, SI-1000 Ljubljana +386 (0)1 425 60 60 https://www.jkc.si/
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ACIT Synagogue and Talmud Thora
1 rue Suzanne, Toulon Tel : +33 4 94 92 05 36 https://communauteisraeliteduvar.org/
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Synagogue CCTIV and Community Center
184 avenue Lazare Carnot, Toulon 04 94 92 61 05
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Toulon
The Jewish presence in Toulon dates back to at least the 13th century, but little written material from the period has been found on the subject. A general assembly of citizens took place in 1285, which included the names of eleven Jews. As the Jewish population was small at the time, the city’s few Jews were not encouraged to live in a neighborhood and mostly lived in the central part ...
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Tourism office of Tarascon
Le Panoramique, Avenue de la République, 13150 Tarascon +33 (0) 4 90 91 03 52 http://www.tarascon.fr/
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Rue du Docteur Fanton
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Rue des Juifs
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Synagogue of Aix-en-Provence
3 Bis Rue Jérusalem, 13100 Aix-en-Provence Tel : 04 42 26 69 39
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Synagogue of Perpignan
7 rue de la Cloche d’Or, 66000 Perpignan
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Synagogue of Narbonne
67 Rue Droite, 11100 Narbonne +33 4 68 65 06 11 acin11.fr – Synagogue consistoriale de Narbonne
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Perpignan
Founded in 1243 by King Jacques I, the Jewish quarter of Perpignan, nicknamed the Call, developed between the Place du Puig, the Saint-Jacques church and the Dominican convent, as indicated in the sepcial edition of the Midi Libre newspaper devoted to the Jews of Occitania. This recognition allowed the Jews settled in the city since at least the 12th century allowed a fairly free life. There ...
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