Start My Family Tree Welcome to Geni, home of the world's largest family tree.
Join Geni to explore your genealogy and family history in the World's Largest Family Tree.

Jewish Families from Lipník nad Bečvou (Leipnik), Moravia, Czech Republic

Project Tags

view all

Profiles

  • Cilli Fried (1861 - 1936)
  • Siegfried Schreiber (1873 - 1944)
  • Ludwig Tramer (1896 - aft.1943)
    Státní okresní archiv Přerov, 1921 Census, Lipník nad Bečvou, 28. října No. 20 apt. 2 Born 09. 01. 1896 Last residence before deportation: Lipník nad Bečvou Address/place of registration in th...
  • Gisela Tramer (1900 - aft.1943)
    Státní okresní archiv Přerov, 1921 Census, Lipník nad Bečvou, 28. října No. 20 apt. 2 (parents at apt. 1 )
  • Rosa Kolb (1895 - 1942)
    Born 18. 04. 1895 Last residence before deportation: Kroměříž Address/place of registration in the Protectorate: Lipník nad Bečvou Transport AAg, no. 849 (30. 06. 1942, Olomouc -> Terezín) Tr...

This project seeks to list representatives of all of the Jewish families from the Moravian town of Lipník nad Bečvou (Leipnik) in the Czech Republic.

This video describes the history of the town and its Jewish community.

LIPNIK NAD BECVOU (Czech. Lipník nad Bečvou; Ger. Leipnik), town in N.E. Moravia, Czech Republic. A synagogue is first mentioned there in 1540, though a Jewish settlement existed at least a century before. Most of Lipnik's Jews were engaged in textile production and in the import of livestock from Poland. In 1570 an economically injurious obligation to lend horses to the local gentry was abolished and the Jews' right of residence in perpetuity acknowledged in return for a payment. The community grew to 40 households in 1665. The rabbinate was founded in the late 16th century. Renowned rabbis included Moses Samson *Bacharach (1632–44), who composed a selihah on the sack of the town by Swedish troops in 1643, Isaac *Eulenburg (1652–57), and Isaiah b. Shabbetai Sheftel *Horowitz (1658–73). Under the rabbinates of Baruch *Fraenkel-Teomim (1802–28), Solomon *Quetsch (1832–54), and Moses *Bloch (1856–77), the yeshivah attracted pupils from all Europe. Rabbi F. Hillel (1892–1928) wrote the history of the community. In 1567 a third cemetery was opened (a fourth in 1883). The community was constituted as one of the political communities (see *Politische Gemeinde) in 1850. Its population grew from 975 in 1794 to 1,259 in 1830, and 1,687 in 1857, but declined to 212 in 1921. In 1930 the community numbered 154 (2% of the total population). The community came to an end when its members were deported to the Nazi extermination camps in 1942. After World War II the congregation was renewed for a brief period. The synagogue equipment was sent to the Central Jewish Museum in Prague. The building was used from 1949 by the Hussite church. Lipnik was the birthplace of the industrialists David and Wilhelm *Gutmann, who established an institution for the poor in their mother's house in 1903.

An excellent source (primary and secondary) for Lipnik families is the George Vladar Collection at The Leo Baeck Institute, New York. One can access these documents here: https://archive.org/details/georgevlada_05_reel05 Lipnik families or married to Lipnik families include Schramek, Presser, Barber, Perl. Polak and David.

BIBLIOGRAPHY:

A. Springer, Juedische Kulturbilder (1904), 34–56; F. Hillel, Die Rabbiner und die verdienstvollen Familien der Leipniker Gemeinde (1928); idem, in: H. Gold (ed.), Die Juden und Judengemeinden Maehrens (1929), 301–6; A. Kohut, in: AZDJ, 78 (1914), 499–501. ADD. BIBLIOGRAPHY: J. Fiedler, Jewish Sights of Bohemia and Moravia (1991), 104–5.

Miller, Michael Laurence, Rabbis & Revolution. The Jews of Moravia in the Age of Emancipation, Stanford 2011.