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This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (September 2009) An 1880 watercolor of the Roman Ghetto by Ettore Roesler Franz. In the Jewish Diaspora, a Jewish quarter is the area of a city traditionally inhabited by Jews. Jewish quarters, like the Jewish ghettos in Europe, were often the outgrowths of segregated ghettos instituted by the surrounding Christian authorities. A Yiddish term for a Jewish quarter or neighborhood is "Di yiddishe gas" (Yiddish: די ייִדדישע גאַס ), or "The Jewish street". Many European and Middle Eastern cities once had a historical Jewish quarter and some still have it. These include: Contents 1 In Europe 2 In Africa 3 In Asia 4 In South America 5 Other regions In Europe The Josefov of Prague, which was demolished between 1893 and 1913. The Warsaw Ghetto in May 1941. Jewish bakery in the Jewish quarter of Paris. Main article: Jewish ghettos in Europe Austria Vienna — Leopoldstadt Belarus Dziatlava — Zhetel ghetto Belgium Antwerp — Joods Antwerpen (35,000 Jews before 1940, 15,000 nowadays) Czech Republic Prague — Josefov France Bordeaux — Saint-Seurin Lyon — La Juiverie de Fourvière and La Guillotière Marseille — La Carrière-des-Juifs and Mont-Juif or Montjusieu Paris — the Pletzl in Le Marais district Germany This section requires expansion with: a more complete representative list. Frankfurt Speyer Worms Greece Rhodes — La Juderia Hungary Budapest — Erzsébetváros Italy Catania — Judeca Suprana, Judeca Suttana and Piano di Giacobbe Enna — Iudeca (Giudecca) Messina — Tirone and Paraporto Naples — Giudecca Padua — Paduan Ghetto Palermo — Meschita and Guzzetta Reggio Calabria — La Judeca (Giudecca) Rome — Roman Ghetto Syracuse — La Jureca (Giudecca) Venice — Venetian Ghetto Netherlands Amsterdam — Jodenbreestraat Poland Kraków — Kazimierz Warsaw — Warsaw Ghetto Portugal Belmonte — Judiaria Castelo de Vide — Judiaria Lisbon — Alfama and Judiaria Oporto — Judiaria and Bairro de Monchique Romania Bucharest — Văcăreşti/Dudeşti Spain Avila — Judería Barcelona — Judería Besalú — Judería Caceres — Judería Calahorra — Judería Córdoba — Judería Estella Lizarra — Judería Girona — Call Jueu de Girona Hervás — Judería Jaen — Judería León — Judería Monforte de Lemos — Judería Oviedo — Judería Palma de Mallorca — Judería Plasencia — Judería Ribadavia — Judería Segovia — Aljama Sevilla — Judería Tarazona — Aljama Toledo — Aljama Tortosa — Judería Tudela — Judería Valladolid — Aljama Turkey European Istanbul — Balat United Kingdom City of London — Old Jewry Winchester — Jewry Street In Africa El Ghriba, Djerba island, Tunisia. Egypt Cairo — Harat Al-Yahud Al-Qara’In and Harat Al-Yahud Morocco Casablanca Tangier Tunisia Djerba island — El Ghriba Tunis In Asia China Shanghai — Shanghai ghetto, a temporary Jewish refuge during WWII. India — Goa, Cochin, Calcutta, Maharashtra, Manipur, Mizoram, Telgu, Mumbai, New Delhi and (Shimla was temporary till Brittish rule and independence of Indian State) Lebanon Beirut — Wadi Abu Jamil Malaysia Kuala Lumpur Turkey Asian Istanbul — Kuzguncuk Izmir — Karatas In South America Argentina Buenos Aires — Once Brazil São Paulo — Bom Retiro Venezuela Caracas — San Bernardino, Los Chorros, Altamira, Los Caobos and Sebucán Mexico Polanco Other regions In the Americas, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa there are a number of neighborhoods or small towns, generally in large cities or outlying communities of such, which are home to large concentrations of Jewish residents, much in the manner of old-world Jewish quarters or other ethnic enclaves, though without exclusive Jewish population.