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Jewish Museum Frankfurt

The Jewish Museum Frankfurt am Main is the oldest independent Jewish Museum in Germany. It was opened by Federal Chancellor Helmut Kohl on 9 November 1988, the 50th anniversary of Kristallnacht.[1]

The Jewish Museum collects, preserves and communicates the nine-hundred-year-old Jewish history and culture of the City of Frankfurt from a European perspective. It has a permanent exhibition at two venues: the Museum Judengasse at Battonstraße 47 focuses on the theme of the history and culture of Jews in Frankfurt during the early modern period; the Jewish Museum in the Rothschildpalais at Untermainkai 14/15 presents Jewish history and culture since 1800. The museum was refurbished and expanded between 2015 and 2020.


The focus of the collection is on the areas ceremonial culture, fine arts and family history. The museum has extensive holdings related to the Rothschild family and the Anne Frank family which will be presented in the new permanent exhibition. The Ludwig Meidner Archive is responsible for the estates of the artists Ludwig Meidner, Jacob Steinhardt, Henry Gowa and others.[2] In addition, the museum has an extensive library as well as a document and photograph collection related to German-Jewish history and culture.

List of museums in Germany

Frankfurter Judengasse

History of the Jews in Germany

Fritz Backhaus / Raphael Gross / Sabine Kößling / Mirjam Wenzel (Ed.): The Judengasse in Frankfurt. Catalog of the permanent exhibition of the Jewish Museum Frankfurt. History, Politics, Culture. C.H. Beck Verlag, Munich 2016,  978-3-406-69097-6.

ISBN

Hoppe, Jens (2001). Jüdische Geschichte und Kultur in Museen: zur nichtjüdischen Museologie des Jüdischen in Deutschland. Volume 393 of Internationale Hochschulschriften (in German). Waxmann.  3-8309-1178-5. Preview at Google Books

ISBN

Home page in English

History of the museum

. Museumsufer Frankfurt. Retrieved 21 December 2022.

"Jüdisches Museum Frankfurt"

Website Museum Judengasse in English