Print

50°19′N 14°37′E. Alternate names: 17th century in Liblice; perhaps mid-19th century in Bysice, Byšice

website in Czech with photo: "The unlandmarked cemetery is located 100 meters N of the square between family houses. Established in 1607 when a local Jew, David, bought for pennies a burial plot for himself and members of his family. Expanded in 1725 and 1791. Probably the oldest preserved tombstone (1723) is Miri, daughter of Leib, situated in the southern slope of the cemetery. Hebrew tombstones prevail (about half), followed by tombstones with Hebrew inscriptions-German and German, a smaller part of tombs with Czech inscriptions. 240 gravestones are arranged into seven series, most of them with the inscription on the west face. The cemetery was damaged during WWII. By the mid 1990s, the cemetery was very overgrown, served as a dump, and the cemetery wall almost demolished. In the early 1990s on two sides enclosing the cemetery wall a school was built, separating the cemetery from the street, the area of ​​the cemetery was cleaned and tombstones righted [?]. At the same time an entrance gate decorated with Star of David motif was forged. Currently, the cemetery has ongoing maintenance. In the future, the position of ruined wall on one side of the cemetery and historical restoration of the damaged gravestones from the 18th and 19 century should be done." [September 2011]

US Commission No. CZCE000218:

Bysice-Liblice is located in Bohemia, Melnik at 50º19 14º37, 10 km SE of Melnik and 27 km NE of Prague. Cemetery: 150 meters N of the chateau in Bysice. Present town population [1997] is 1,000-5,000 with no Jews.

Parent Category: EASTERN EUROPE