Ghettos in the sense of districts where Jews were required to reside by law date from the Middle Ages. The Lateran Council of 1215 introduced a number of anti-Jewish measures and recommendations. Compulsory residence in ghettos was one of the latter.
Obviously, minorities have often tended to live in the same district, and this goes back much further, but it is not the same thing as being required by law to live in a specificied district.
They are called 'Jewish ghettos', they were used to house Jews (and gypsies).
to keep track of where they was at
ghettos that are not closed, they were ghettos that did not restrict access, to either Jew or gentile.
it was one excuse used to put Jews into ghettos.
The Nazis started to move Jews into ghettos in Poland in November 1939.
They are called 'Jewish ghettos', they were used to house Jews (and gypsies).
to keep track of where they was at
There was no symbol for them.
It began in Nazi-occupied Poland in October/November 1939, but most of the ghettos were esatblished in the first half of 1940.
The simple answer is no.
ghettos were used to contain Jews and other stereotypical "dirty people", deemed by Hitler and his soilders. Ghettos kept the "clean people" away from the "dirty" people.
In occupied Poland in October 1939.
do you mean the areas in Germany used for housing the Polish workers? there were no ghettos for gentile Poles in Poland, only Jewish ghettos.
ghettos that are not closed, they were ghettos that did not restrict access, to either Jew or gentile.
it was one excuse used to put Jews into ghettos.
there were no Jewish ghettos in Germany during the Holocaust.
Ghettos preceded concentration camps. Concentration camps appeared during the Nazi era in Germany. Ghettos were present in the largest cities in Germany (and other large urban areas in other countries) well before that.