Hanna (Anna) Belostotski

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Hanna (Anna) Belostotski (Rubanowitsch)

Also Known As: "Rubanovitsch", "Rubanovitš", "Hana"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Turku, Finland
Death: October 01, 1946 (81-82)
Tartu, Estonia
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Josel Rubanovitsch and Frejga Rubanovitsch
Wife of Leiser / Eliezer Belostotski
Mother of Josef / Jossel Belostotski; Zille Zippe Belostotski; Ljuba / Liebe Belostotski; Samuel Belostotski; Katja Kolovski and 3 others
Sister of Leiser Izhok Rubanovitsch; Mendel Rubanovitsch; Sender Rubanowitsch and Abram* Meische Rubanovitsch

Managed by: Ilan Stephan Solomon
Last Updated:

About Hanna (Anna) Belostotski

  • According to translation from Vyborg 1870 Census he was born in 1864 in Turku, Finland and was already living in Vyborg in 1870: https://www.amitys.com/webtrees/source.php?sid=S159&ged=Gedcom.ged
  • Her father Josel Rubanovich was a soldier in Russian imperial army. Likely he was a cantonist soldier who were recruited from jewish families at the age of 12 and after 6 years education had to serve for 25 years before discharge. He would have entered education in 1842, service in 1848 and discharged in 1873.
  • From 1874 to 1889 her family was living in their own house in Wiborg, Getgatan, house No. 141 St. Petersburg suburb. According to a official inquiry into house provenance in 1912 her father bought the wooden house on a lot of 76 square meters with an adjacent garden lot of 444 square meters from Non-commisioned officer Josef Masalitoff on December 16th, 1873. : Suomalainen Wirallinen Lehti, 25.05.1912, nro 119, s. 6 https://digi.kansalliskirjasto.fi/sanomalehti/binding/1296759?page=6 Kansalliskirjaston digitaaliset aineistot
  • In a city map from 1870s the house was located (141 left to marking VI) close to the garden lot and army barracks. Market booths (marking "m") where the family business was located are on the shoreline right to the strait's castle island marked with "I" on the map (a .pdf file behind the link): https://www.digicarelica.fi/Custom_modules/Lappeenranta/Documents/l...
  • Building plan for new clothes selling booths by fishery pier in 1860: https://astia.narc.fi/uusiastia/viewer/?fileId=6011377198&aineistoI...
  • Official residence file mentioning her father in house n:o 141 in 1873: Viipurin läänin henkikirjat - Vi:117 Henkikirja 1873-1873, jakso 674, sivu 2289: Wiborg: St. Petersburgska Förstaden; Kansallisarkisto: https://astia.narc.fi/uusiastia/viewer/?fileId=5666024814&aineistoI... / Viitattu 27.10.2023
  • Her father Josel died in 1889, the testament lists the following heirs; Widow Frejga, Ilzka (Isak), 32 years, Mendel 26 years, Sender 20 years, Hanke (Hanna), 24 years and Moisei 18 years.: Suomalainen Wirallinen Lehti, 25.05.1912, nro 119, s. 6 https://digi.kansalliskirjasto.fi/sanomalehti/binding/1296759?page=6 Kansalliskirjaston digitaaliset aineistot
  • Widow Frejga obtains a permission from local lower court to sell the house on December 23, 1889 for a sum of 2775 marks, corresponding to 17 000€ in 2022 value : Viipurin raastuvanoikeuden renovoidut tuomiokirjat - RO a:18 Varsinaisten asioiden pöytäkirjat 1889-1889, jakso 123; Kansallisarkisto: https://astia.narc.fi/uusiastia/viewer/?fileId=4932357821&aineistoI... / Viitattu 3.11.2023
  • In 1888 plans were made to purge the Jews in Turku and, above all, in Vyborg. In September 1888, the guardians of Jewish families were summoned to the police station for a detailed investigation: the reasons for the Jews' residence, age, occupation, family relations, family background and former place of residence were checked and recorded. The persons questioned were then awaiting the police statement and the decision of the governor. On 15 October, the heads of the 34 families were again summoned to the police chamber to hear the decision of the governor. From Vyborg, where at that time 208 Jews (52 families) lived, the governor of the province, J.A. Gripenberg, proposed the deportation of 125 persons (34 families) within six months. On 29 March 1889 the Senate published a new Jewish decree: the decree granted certain named families the right to remain in Finland - in the places permitted for the time being: Helsinki, Turku, Hämeenlinna, Tampere, Vyborg (where 32 families were allowed to stay), Hamina, Sortavala, Suistamo or Impilahti parish, Kuopio and Vaasa. From these places, Jews were only allowed to move to Helsinki or Vyborg: https://www.jcviipuri.org/historia
  • Pere Narva linna elanike nimekiri ja 1918/19: https://www.ra.ee/dgs/_purl.php?shc=ERA.35.1.83:19
  • https://www.amitys.com/webtrees/individual.php?pid=I23384&ged=Gedco...
view all 11

Hanna (Anna) Belostotski's Timeline

1864
1864
Turku, Finland
1889
1889
Narva, Ida-Virumaa
1890
1890
Vyborg, Karelia, Finland
1894
January 3, 1894
Narva, Ida-Virumaa
1894
1896
April 30, 1896
1897
May 27, 1897
Narva, Ida-Virumaa
1902
June 12, 1902
1904
1904
1946
October 1, 1946
Age 82
Tartu, Estonia