Hanover: Cemetery
Places and attractions in the Cemetery category
Categories
- Church
- Museum
- Park
- Cemetery
- Art museum
- Natural attraction
- Nature
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Botanical garden
- Neighbourhood
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Theater
- Historical place
- Arenas and stadiums
- Memorial
- Concerts and shows
- Fountain
Gartenfriedhof
The Gartenfriedhof or Garden Cemetery is a cemetery in Hanover, created in 1741 and located by the Gartenkirche. The cemetery and the church are both named after the garden parish outside the city walls in front of Aegidien gate.
Hanover War Cemetery
The Hanover War Cemetery is a military cemetery owned by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. The cemetery is immediately adjacent to the city of Hannover, and is more precisely located in the city of Seelze.
Judenkirchhof
The Old Jewish Cemetery on the Oberstrasse is a Jewish cemetery in Hanover. Located on a hill in the city's Nordstadt district, it is the oldest extant Jewish cemetery in Northern Germany. The cemetery contains about 700 graves and was in use from circa 1550 until 1864.
Stadtfriedhof Stöcken
Stöcken City Cemetery is a municipal cemetery of the city of Hannover in the Stöcken district. It was opened in 1891 as the second city cemetery and was enlarged in several steps over the next decades.
Jüdischer Friedhof An der Strangriede
The Jewish Cemetery An der Strangriede in Hanover is the second of four Jewish cemeteries in the capital of Lower Saxony. It was opened in 1864 after the closure of the Old Jewish Cemetery on Oberstraße.
Jüdischer Friedhof Bothfeld
The Jewish Cemetery Bothfeld is a Jewish cemetery in Hanover-Bothfeld at Burgwedeler Straße 90. The chapel and grave markers are now protected monuments.
Jüdischer Friedhof Ronnenberg
The Ronnenberg Jewish Cemetery is a Jewish cemetery in the Lower Saxon town of Ronnenberg in the Hannover region. It is a protected cultural monument.
Stadtfriedhof Ahlem
The district cemetery Ahlem in Hanover is a cemetery established at the beginning of the 20th century in the now Hanoverian district of Ahlem, and beyond the outskirts of the capital of Lower Saxony, partly also on the territory of the city ...