• After the June deportations, the Germans ordered the surviving Jews in Tarnow, along with thousands of Jews from neighboring towns, into a ghetto.
    Bulunamadı: nr, 201
  • The Jewish cemetery in Tarnow dates from 1580 and is one of the oldest in Poland.
    Bulunamadı: nr, 201
  • When the Germans bombed Tarnow for the first time on 3 September 1939, many of its Jews fled further east, while a large influx of refugees from elsewhere in...
    Bulunamadı: 201, i
  • His “Recollections,” published under the name The War Began in Tarnów, breezily describe the many relatives and acquaintances who populated his youth...
    Bulunamadı: nr, 201
  • On 8–9 August 1931 years Tarnów was the site of the National Tenth Congress of Polish Legionnaires of the First World War.
  • The process to complete the ghetto in Tarnow took place by February 1942. The Germans established an open ghetto in Tarnow that encompassed the following...
    Bulunamadı: nr, 201
  • ...matzevot – volunteer camp” is to encourage young people to explore the heritage by cataloging the tombstones located in the Jewish cemetery in Tarnów.
    Bulunamadı: nr, 201
  • By the second half of the 19th century Jews took over trade and light industry, and subsequently came to dominate those fields in Tarnów completely.
    Bulunamadı: nr, 201
  • The census of 1765 records 900 Jews in Tarnów and 1,425 living in the villages within its communal jurisdiction.
    Bulunamadı: nr, 201