The 1928 population was 2,382
Before the Holocaust, in 1933, the Jewish population in Europe was approximately 9.5 million. By the end of World War II in 1945, it is estimated that around 6 million Jews were murdered in the Holocaust, resulting in a significant decline in the Jewish population. Post-war, the Jewish population in Europe was roughly 3.5 million, reflecting the devastating impact of the Holocaust on Jewish communities.
Although the population has not been determined in Ukraine for Jewish residents before the Holocaust, there are some shocking numbers. It is estimated that nearly 900,000 Jews were killed in Ukraine.
They became jewish
yes
The "Georgian" era was before the Holocaust and this the answer is - these wasn't one.
Not really because it would have to be broken down according to country/locationzperiodz Many countries lost as much as 80% of the Jewish population while others much less. It is possible to have a total of all populations in Europe at the start of the Holocaust and at the end of it.
All over the world
They were blamed for bringing the plague*
Yes, but in time they had to surrender them.
In the 1920s Berlin had a Jewish population (in the sense of religious Jews) of about 140,000 which was about a quarter of Germany's Jews. Obviously, if you include people of Jewish origin you get a higher figure.The German-speaking city with the largest Jewish population was, however, Vienna (the capital of Austria).
about 16 million globally before and about 9-10 million after