List of cities by country that have Stolpersteine
This list for articles about the roughly 530 cities and towns that have stolpersteine. It is organized in alphabetical order and by country. Where the number of stolpersteine is known or can be approximated, that information has been included, along with the first installation date, if known. Where the number of people deported by the Nazis is known, that information is included for comparison to the number of stolperstein memorials in that city. As of June 14, 2011, there are over 30,000 stolpersteine placed in the European countries listed below.[1][2] The first stolpersteine in Denmark were scheduled to be laid in 2010. Memorials are also planned for France.[3][4][5]
Austria
Belgium
- Brussels: first pavés de mémoire (French for "stolpersteine") installed on May 13, 2009, the first stolpersteine in Belgium[10][11]
- Liege
Czech Republic
Germany
- Aachen
- Ahaus[22][23]
- Altenbeken
- Apolda: 28 stolpersteine; first memorials laid in May 2008[24]
- Arnstadt
- Aschaffenburg[25]
- Aschersleben
- Aßlar
- Attendorn
- Aub[25]
- Bad Bentheim
- Bad Hersfeld
- Bad Kissingen: stolpersteine as of June 19, 2009[26]
- Bad Laasphe
- Bad Langensalza
- Bad Saarow
- Bad Vilbel
- Bad Wildungen
- Bad Wimpfen
- Bad Zwesten
- Badenweiler
- Bamberg[25]
- Barsinghausen
- Bargteheide : one stolperstein laid as of November 26, 2009
- Bautzen
- Beckum
- Bergisch-Gladbach
- Berlin: over 2,800 stolpersteine, as of July 8, 2010; 55,000 people deported;[27][28] more have since been laid and the number of stolpersteine is now 2,950; see also Berlin Stolpersteine on Wikimedia Commons
- Beverungen
- Bielefeld
- Bingen
- Bocholt[29]
- Bochum: 134 stolpersteine in 68 locations[30]
- Bodenheim
- Bonn: over 100 stolpersteine[31]
- Bornheim
- Bottrop[32]
- Braunschweig
- Bremen[25]
- Bremerhaven[25]
- Bretten (near Karlsruhe)
- Bückeburg
- Bünde
- Burgdorf
- Burgkunstadt[25]
- Burgsteinfurt
- Butzbach
- Celle
- Chemnitz
- Coburg[25]
- Cologne: 1,400 stolpersteine, first memorials laid in 2005
- Dachau: 6 stolpersteine laid in November 2005[33]
- Darmstadt
- Delitzsch
- Dietzenbach
- Dinkelsbühl[25]
- Dirmstein: 10 stolpersteine laid in March 2009,[34] one for a British airman murdered by a local official
- Döbeln 5 stolpersteine laid in May 2007[35]
- Dormagen
- Dortmund: 147 stolpersteine, as of June 2, 2009[36][37]
- Dreieich
- Dresden: 5 stolpersteine, as of November 4, 2009[38]
- Duderstadt
- Duisburg: 225 stolpersteine, as of 2009[39]
- Düren: stolpersteine as of June 26, 2005
- Düsseldorf
- Eberswalde
- Edermünde (Besse)
- Eichstetten[25]
- Eisenach
- Eislingen[25]
- Erftstadt
- Erkrath
- Erlangen[25]
- Eschwege
- Essen: over 170 stolpersteine, first memorials laid in 2004[40]
- Esslingen
- Estenfeld[25]
- Flensburg
- Frankenthal
- Frankfurt am Main: over 500 stolpersteine;[41] over 12,000 Jews deported from Frankfurt [42]
- Frankfurt (Oder): first 7 stolpersteine placed on May 8, 2006[43]
- Frechen: currently 31 stolpersteine placed on April 3, 2009 and December 14, 2009. Placement of another 19 stolpersteine planned for December 20, 2010.[44]
- Freiburg im Breisgau: 270 stolpersteine as of 2002[45]
- Freising
- Friedrichsdorf
- Gaggenau[25]
- Gaukönigshofen
- Gelnhausen
- Gelsenkirchen: first stolpersteine placed on July 13, 2009[46]
- Gera
- Gerlingen[25]
- Giessen: stolpersteine as of February 2009
- Gladbeck
- Göppingen: 31 stolpersteine[47][48]
- Gotha
- Griesheim
- Grimma
- Großschweidnitz
- Gudensberg
- Gütersloh
- Haan
- Hagen
- Halle (Saale): 130 stolpersteine, as of August 25, 2009[49][50]
- Hamburg: over 2,600 stolpersteine, as of April 15, 2009; 10,000 Jews deported between 1941 and 1945[51][52][53]
- Hamm
- Hanover: stolpersteine as of December 6, 2007
- Harburg[54]
- Haselünne
- Hattingen
- Havixbeck
- Heide[55]
- Heidenheim an der Brenz
- Heilbronn
- Hemsbach[25]
- Herdecke
- Hermaringen[25]
- Herzlake: 5 stolpersteine laid for the Meyer family on August 25, 2011
- Herzogenrath
- Hildburghausen
- Hilden
- Hildesheim
- Hochheim
- Hofheim
- Homberg
- Höxter
- Hoya: 18 stolpersteine; first 3 memorials placed in 2007
- Huenfeld
- Ilmenau
- Ingelheim
- Iserlohn
- Itzehoe
- Jena
- Joachimsthal, Brandenburg: 2 stolpersteine, as of July 18, 2007
- Kamen
- Kappeln
- Karlsruhe: over 140 stolpersteine; first memorials placed on March 18, 2005 (Map of Karlsruhe showing stolperstein locations)
- Karlstadt[25]
- Kenzingen[25]
- Kiel
- Kippenheim[25]
- Kirchheim unter Teck[25]
- Kitzingen[25]
- Kleinblittersdorf
- Klingenmünster
- Koblenz: 67 stolpersteine, as of May 25, 2010 [56]
- Köln
- Königswinter (Oberdollendorf)
- Konstanz: 3 stolpersteine, as of September 2006
- Krefeld[57]
- Kronberg im Taunus
- Kronshagen
- Künzelsau[25]
- Kusel
- Ladenburg[25]
- Lahr[25]
- Lechenich (Ward of Erftstadt): 3 stolpersteine
- Leichlingen
- Leipzig[58]
- Lennestadt
- Leverkusen
- Lindenberg im Allgäu[25]
- Lübeck
- Luckenwalde
- Ludwigsburg: over 12 stolpersteine; first 12 as of 2008
- Ludwigshafen
- Lüneburg
- Magdeburg: over 70 stolpersteine; first 13 Stolpersteine installed on March 13, 2007[59]
- Mainbernheim[25]
- Maintal
- Mainz
- Mannheim: 44 stolpersteine, as of May 5, 2009[60]
- Marburg
- Marktbreit[2]
- Markkleeberg
- Meiningen
- Melsungen
- Meppen
- Michelstadt: 21 stolpersteine laid on March 13, 2010; some 40 more are planned for autumn 2010 and spring 2011[61]
- Minden
- Mönchengladbach
- Mühlacker
- Mühlhausen
- Mülheim an der Ruhr[62]
- Müllheim[25]
- Munich: 18 stolpersteine, as of May 17, 2009[63]
- Munster[64]
- Nabburg[25]
- Naumburg
- Neu-Isenburg
- Neumünster
- Neuruppin: 16 stolpersteine; there were about 1000 local euthanasia victims[65]
- Neustadt an der Weinstraße
- Neuss
- Neuwied
- Norden
- Nordhausen
- Nordhorn
- Nördlingen[25]
- Nuremberg[25]
- Oberhausen
- Ochtrup
- Offenbach am Main: 68 stolpersteine.[66][67]
- Offenburg[25]
- Oranienburg: 24 stolpersteine, as of June 28, 2008; first memorials laid in 2005[68][69]
- Osnabrück[70]
- Ostheim vor der Rhön[25]
- Papenburg
- Pasewalk
- Pattensen
- Peine
- Petershagen (Eggersdorf)
- Pforzheim[25]
- Plauen
- Potsdam: 13 stolpersteine, first memorials laid in 2008;[71] more to be laid on July 2, 2010[72]
- Pfullendorf
- Radebeul
- Ratingen
- Ravensburg[25]
- Regensburg
- Reinbek
- Remscheid
- Rendsburg
- Rödelsee
- Rotenburg an der Fulda
- Rudolstadt
- Rostock
- Salzkotten
- Sassnitz
- Schierling
- Schleswig
- Schöneiche
- Schorndorf[25]
- Schwäbisch Gmünd[25]
- Schwäbisch Hall[25]
- Schwerin
- Schwerte
- Segnitz
- Soest
- Sollingen
- Stralsund
- Stegen[25]
- Stendal
- Steinfurt
- Stockach[25]
- Stuttgart: over 500 stolpersteine in the city and outlying suburbs[73]
- Süßen[25]
- Teupitz
- Treuenbrietzen
- Trier[74]
- Troisdorf[75]
- Überlingen[25]
- Unna: 3 stolpersteine, as of July 14, 2009[76]
- Vechta
- Viersen
- Vilshofen an der Donau
- Vlotho
- Waiblingen
- Walldorf
- Weeze: 6 stolpersteine [77]
- Weimar (Lahn)
- Weingarten[25]
- Weinheim[25]
- Werne
- Wertheim
- Weisenheim am Berg
- Weißenfels
- Wernigerode
- Wetzlar
- Wiesbaden: 12 stolpersteine[78]
- Wiltingen
- Wissen
- Worms
- Wuppertal
- Würselen
- Würzburg: 269 stolpersteine, as of May 15, 2010[2]
- Xanten
- Zehdenick
- Zittau[79]
- Zons
- Zossen
Hungary
Italy
The Netherlands
Norway
- Oslo: 43 stolpersteine. The first ones were installed in August 2010.[88] 771 Jews were taken in Norway and sent to Germany. 34 of them survived.[89]
Poland
Ukraine
- Pereiaslav: 4 stolpersteine were laid on July 3, 2009, the first ones installed in the country[91]
See also
- Gunter Demnig - the German artist who conceived of the Stolperstein Project ("Projekt Stolpersteine") and has installed each memorial plaque
References
- ^ "Man stolpert mit dem Kopf und mit dem Herzen" Stadtteilschule Eppendorf. Retrieved October 11, 2011 (German)
- ^ a b c Livia Rüger, "Stolpern über Stolpersteine" Main Post (May 15, 2010) Retrieved June 15, 2010 (German)
- ^ Stolperstein Project schedule of past and future installations Stolperstein Project official website. (German)
- ^ "Stolpersteine ..... The Brass Plaques of Germany" Retrieved July 9, 2010 (German)
- ^ "Arbeitskreis Stolpersteine Gelsenkirchen" Retrieved July 9, 2010 (German)
- ^ a b c d e f g "Stolperstein im Bezirk Braunau am Inn" Maplinks to locations of stolpersteine. Retrieved July 15, 2010 (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in the district of Braunau am Inn (German)
- ^ Reconciliation in the municipality of Mödling (German)
- ^ Stones of commemoration in Vienna (German)
- ^ "Pavés de Mémoire: Discours de Yael Zimmerman" Comité de Coordination des Organisations Juives de Belgique, official website. (May 13, 2009) Retrieved June 20, 2010 (French)
- ^ Maurice Orcher Resistant et Martyr (1919 - 1944) Blog in memory of Belgian Resistance member executed by the Nazis. Retrieved June 20, 2010 (French)
- ^ List of stolpersteine in Neratovice Stolpersteine in CR. Retrieved May 25, 2011
- ^ List of stolpersteine in Olomouc Stolpersteine in CR. Retrieved May 25, 2011
- ^ List of stolpersteine in Teplice Stolpersteine in CR. Retrieved May 25, 2011
- ^ List of stolpersteine in Třeboň Stolpersteine in CR. Retrieved May 25, 2011
- ^ a b c d "Planung Juni 2010" Stolperstein Project, official website. Schedule of installations, past and future. Retrieved July 15, 2010 (German)
- ^ List of stolpersteine in Brno Stolpersteine in CR. Retrieved May 25, 2011
- ^ List of stolpersteine in Kolin Stolpersteine in CR. Retrieved May 25, 2011
- ^ List of stolpersteine in Ostrava Stolpersteine in CR. Retrieved May 25, 2011
- ^ "Holocaust victims remembered by new ‘Stones of the Vanished’ project" Radio Praha (Radio Prague) official website. Retrieved June 20, 2010
- ^ List of stolpersteine in Prague Stolpersteine in CR. Retrieved May 25, 2011
- ^ Tourist brochure (PDF) Retrieved June 16, 2010 (German)
- ^ "Stolpersteine" school project Realschule im Vestert, official website. Retrieved June 16, 2010 (German)
- ^ "Prager-Haus Apolda" Retrieved June 12, 2010 (German)
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq List of 415 cities and towns in Germany with stolpersteine (as of January 2010) Projekt Stolpersteine, official website (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Bad Kissingen Retrieved June 14, 2010 (German)
- ^ Kirsten Grieshaber, "German Artist Gunter Demnig Revives Names of Holocaust Victims" Associated Press article. Retrieved July 15, 2010
- ^ List of stolpersteine in Berlin, as of 2003 (PDF) (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Bocholt (German)
- ^ "An die Geschichte erinnern", Ruhr Nachrichten (October 5, 2010) Page BOLO3, Nr. 232 (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Bonn (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Bottrop (German)
- ^ "Stumble Stones" City of Dachau, official website. Retrieved June 16, 2010
- ^ Date of stolperstein laying in Dirmstein
- ^ Date stolpersteine were laid in Döbeln
- ^ "Stolpersteine sind Gedächnissteine für Opfer des Nationalsozialismus" With map showing locations of the 147 stolpersteine in Dortmund (as of June 2, 2009) Retrieved June 18, 2010 (German)
- ^ "Stolpersteine" Retrieved June 18, 2010 (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Dresden (German)
- ^ Jenny Bünnig and Kurt Walter, "Stolpersteine in Duisburg“ Band II" (PDF) Evangelischer Kirschenkreis Duisburg, Evangelisches Familienbildungswerk (2009) Retrieved June 21, 2010 (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Essen (German)
- ^ Map showing locations of stolpersteine in Frankfurt Retrieved October 3, 2010 (German)
- ^ Website about the initiative Retrieved October 3, 2010. (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Frankfurt/Oder and Slubice (German)
- ^ Frechener Geschichtsverein e.V., initiator of the Stolpersteine project in Frechen (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Freiburg
- ^ Stolpersteine in Gelsenkirchen (German)
- ^ Stolperstein Initiative Göppingen: Gegen das Vergessen Göppingen Stolperstein initiative, official website. Retrieved June 16, 2010 (German)
- ^ "Göppinger Stolpersteine" Schwäbische Alb tourist information. Walking tour of downtown Göppingen to view Stolperstein memorials. Retrieved June 16, 2010 (German)
- ^ "Elf Quader für elf Schicksale" From Mitteldeutsche Zeitung Halle (August 25, 2009) Retrieved June 27, 2010 (German)
- ^ "Stolpersteine in Halle" Overview page with thumbnail photos of all the buildings where stolpersteine have been laid in Halle. Retrieved June 27, 2010 (German)
- ^ Stolpersteinverlegung in Hamburg/photos (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in districts of Hamburg (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine for homosexual victims in Hamburg (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Hamburg Harburg (German)
- ^ “Aktion Stolpersteine” in Heide (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Koblenz (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Krefeld (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Leipzig (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Magdeburg (German)
- ^ "Stolpersteine in Mannheim: Gedenken an Menschen aller Opfergruppen" Mannheim VVN-BdA, official website. (May 5, 2009) Retrieved June 21, 2010 (German)
- ^ "Morgen wird erster Stolperstein gelegt" Echo Online (March 12, 2010) Retrieved June 16, 2010 (German)
- ^ "Neue "Stolpersteine" erinnern an Opfer des NS-Regimes" City of Mülheim an der Ruhr. (December 8, 2008). Retrieved October 11, 2011 (German)
- ^ Verlegte Steine Initiative Stolpersteine Munich. Retrieved April 4, 2011 (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Münster (German)
- ^ Rainer Fellenberg, "Stolpersteine in Neuruppin" Bündnis 90/Die Grünen, Ostprignitz-Ruppin (April 5, 2008) Retrieved May 8, 2010 (German)
- ^ [1] (German)
- ^ Street map showing locations of stolpersteine (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Oranienburg Retrieved June 16, 2010 (German)
- ^ "Das Projekt Stolpersteine Oranienburg" Stolpersteine Oranienburg, official website. Contains photo of page from Oranienburg 1939-1940 address book, showing Jewish residents listed separately in an appendix. Retrieved June 16, 2010 (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Osnabrück (German)
- ^ "Stolpersteine in Potsdam" Retrieved June 14, 2010 (German)
- ^ Chronik: July 2010 Stolpersteine, official website. Retrieved June 14, 2010 (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Stuttgart (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Trier
- ^ Stolpersteine in Troisdorf (German)
- ^ Marie Lisa Schulz, "Vergessen verboten: Stolpersteine mahnen" Der Westen, official website. (July 14, 2009) (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Weeze (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Würzburg (German)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Zittau (German)
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Stolpersteine in Hungary Retrieved July 15, 2010 (Hungarian)
- ^ Stolpersteine in Budapest (Hungarian)
- ^ Ingrid Scheffer, "Do Tread on Me!" Translated by Eric Rosencrantz. Goethe Institute - Kanada, official website. Retrieved June 16, 2010
- ^ "Stolperstein: pietre d'inciampo al Pigneto" Retrieved June 12, 2010 (Italian)
- ^ a b c d e f g "Struikelstenen in Nederland" Retrieved June 12, 2010 (Dutch)
- ^ "Struikelstenen" Retrieved June 12, 2010 (Dutch)
- ^ "Herinneringsstenen: Stolpersteine herdenken Holtense joden" (March 30, 2010) Retrieved June 14, 2010 (Dutch)
- ^ "April 7, 2010 Stolpersteine in Tiel" Retrieved December 6, 2010 (Dutch)
- ^ Nye snublesteiner til Oslo Jødisk Museum i Oslo, official website. Retrieved October 16, 2011. (Norwegian)
- ^ Deportasjonen av de norske jødene HL-Senteret, official website. Retrieved October 16, 2011. (Norwegian)
- ^ "Pamięci ofiar nazizmu" (November 9, 2009) Retrieved June 20, 2010 (Polish)
- ^ "„Stolpersteine“ in der Ukraine" Botschaft der Bundesrepublik Deutschland – Kiew (German Embassy in Kiev) (June 26, 2009) Retrieved June 21, 2010 (German)
External links