Alternate names: Schwäbisch Hall [Ger], SCHWAEBISCH HALL), Hall. 49°06' N, 09°44' E, 23 miles E of Heilbronn, in NE Baden-Württemberg. Jewish population: 263 (in 1880), 115 (in 1933). Schwäbisch Hall (or Hall for short) is a town and capital of the district of Schwäbisch Hall. The town is located in the valley of the river Kocher in NE Baden-Württemberg. The first part of the name, "Schwäbisch", refers to the name of the region, Swabia (in English; "Schwaben" in German). The most probable origin of the second part of the name "Hall" is a west Germanic word family that means "drying something by heating it", likely referring to the salt production method of heating salty groundwater. The salt mine closed in 1925. During Kristallnacht on 9 November 1938, local Nazis burned the synagogue located in Steinbach and devastated shops and houses of Jewish citizens. Approximately 40 Jewish citizens of Schwäbisch Hall fell victim to the Holocaust in extermination camps in Eastern Europe. In 1944 a concentration camp was established next to the train station Hall-Hessental. The train station at Hall was targeted by an American air raid on February 23, 1945, but the devastation was mostly limited to the suburbs of St. Katharina and Unterlimpurg. The town was occupied by US Army troops on April 17, 1945 without serious resistance. Although several buildings were destroyed or damaged, the historical old town suffered comparatively little. Wikiepdia. town website. synagogue and Jewish community history website. [Mar 2013]
- Encyclopedia of Jewish Life (2001), p. 1152: "Schwaebisch Hall".
- Pinkas HaKehilot, Germany, Vol. 2 (1986), p. 138: "Schw„bisch Hall"
- JewishGen GerSIG
- Schwäbisch Hall (SHA) ...Betsaal / synagogue. in: Joachim Hahn and Jürgen Krüger: Synagogues in Baden-Wuerttemberg . Volume 2: Joachim Hahn: places and institutions . Theiss, Stuttgart 2007, ISBN 978-3-8062-1843-5 ( Memorial Book of the synagogues in Germany . Volume 4), pp. 424f. The synagogue in Schwäbisch Hall , Alemannia Judaica
- houses lexicon Schwäbisch Hall
- Description of the findings on www.bauforschung-bw.de
- Purim in the branches . 8th Jewish community newspaper IRGW January / February 2013, pp.
JEWISH CEMETERY:
Jewish dead of Steinbach initially were buried in Schopfloch (Ansbach),and since 1747 in Braunsbach . Since 1809, a separate cemetery was at the Steinbacher Road. The cemetery was completely destroyed in the Nazi era, only some of the gravestones could be reerected. 1947 memorial commemorate the victims of the Hessental concentration camp and the victims of persecution Schwäbisch Hall. (cemeteries 35.03 a; Lgb.-Nr. 418/1, 419/2 and 431) history and photos and articles. [Mar 2013]
Website of the Central Archives Heidelberg: the Jewish cemetery Steinbach | |
Photos of the Jewish cemetery in Steinbach at the site of Matthias Lauterer |
Henry Kohring : The Jewish Cemetery in Schwäbisch Hall Steinbach. Introduction, Hebrew, translations, photos and register. Schwäbisch Hall 1996th ISBN 3-927374-16-4. | |
Eva Maria Kraiss / Marion Reuter : Bet hahayim. House of Life. Jewish cemeteries in Württembergisch francs. Künzelsau 2003rd . ISBN 3-89929-009-7
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74523 Baden-Württemberg (Gerz, Peters)
LOCATION OF CEMETERY: Steinbacher Strasse (Detail).
IN USE: From around 1809 until 1948.
NUMBER OF GRAVESTONES: 121.
DOCUMENTATION:
- 1985 photographs of all gravestones with listing and mapping of graves, including some translations of gravestone inscriptions by Eva-Maria Kraiss.
- 1986-1993 photographs of gravestones, copies and translations of all gravestone inscriptions and cemetery layout by Schwäbisch Hall.
- 1990 cemetery documentation by Landesdenkmalamt based on manuscript by Heinrich Kohring.
- 1991 photographs of all gravestones and mapping of graves by Zentralarchiv.
- Numerous photographs of individual gravestones and general cemetery views in Alemannia Judaica.
- Photographs of two gravestones in Württemberg 1932, page 80.
- Full cemetery documentation in Steinbach 1985. Juedische Gotteshaeuser und Friedhoefe in Wuerttemberg pub.by Oberrat der Israelitischen Religionsgemeinschaft Württembergs. Stuttgart 1932 (Deutsche Nationalbibliothek).
- Gerhard Taddey: Kein kleines Jerusalem: Geschichte der Juden im Landkreis Schwaebisch Hall pub. 1992 pages 304, 311-312.(LBI).
- Heinrich Kohring: Der juedische Friedhof in Schwaebisch-Hall Steinbach pub.1996 (LBI).
- Eva Maria Kraiss and Marion Reuter: Bet Hachajim - Haus des Lebens : juedische Friedhoefe in Wuerttembergisch Franken publ. 2003 by order of Foerderkreises Haellisch-Fraenkisches Museum e.V. ISBN 3-89929-009-7 (LBI).
- Prior to establishing their own cemetery in 1809, this Jewish community used the Schopfloch cemetery in Bavaria (in the district of Ansbach). From 1747 onwards the Braunsbach cemetery was also used.
- During the Nazi era the cemetery was destroyed. From the original estimated 260-270 gravestones only 112 have remained to be re-erected after 1945.
- The cemetery was desecrated in 1992, when 6 gravestones were toppled and 2 besmirched with swastikas.
- There are several memorial plaques for the Jewish victims from Schwäbisch Hall and Steinbach who were murdered in the Hessental concentration camp, also for the Jews from the Staszów and other concentration camps.