Obj. ID: 51998
Jewish Funerary Art Site of the Old Jewish cemetery in Mikołów, Poland
According to ESJF European Jewish Cemeteries Initiative, the Oldest Jewish cemetery is located in the southeast part of town, on the southern side of Krakowska Street. In 1932 the cemetery’s location was described as: “on the right side of today’s road to Tychy, nearby today’s brickworks in Jakubowicz.” There is no information about the founding of the cemetery. Presumably, it was established in the 17th century, as indicated in a record by Marcus Brann on the burial of Moses (most likely Singer) on January 28th. The cemetery was in active use until the first decades of the following century, at which point the Jewish community established a new cemetery on (the contemporary) Stara Droga Street. At the beginning of the 20th century, the cemetery housed a lapidarium comprising two tombstones attached to a brick wall, one of which commemorated Chaja, daughter of Szmuel, who died March 7th ,1722. The plastic form of the second tombstone, the borders of which are unclear, indicated a founding date in the late 17th or the early 18th century.
At the end of the 1960s, the cemetery became a part of Osiedle Słowackie. According to documentation in the Voivodeship Office of Katowice from 1989, the cemetery plot was taken over by Elementary School no. 10, built between 1985-1988. All above ground traces of the cemetery were destroyed. There are no memorials, and the cemetery is not listed in the register of historical landmarks or the register of immovable monuments.
sub-set tree:
Poland | Śląskie Voivodeship | Mikołów (Mikolow)
| 16, Krakowska Street