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Jewish Families from Barilov, Ukraine

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Profiles

This project seeks to collect all of the Jewish families from the town of Barilov, Ukraine.

JewishGen-Barilov

Alternate names: Barilov [Rus], Baryłów [Pol], Baryluv, Baryliv, Barylov

Region: Tarnopol

The village of Baryliv / Barilov is situated in the north of Lviv region (Lviv Oblast ), near the borders of Volyn Oblast. It is105 kilometres from the regional center of Lviv and 77 kilometres (48 mi) from the administrative center of Volyn Oblast – Lutsk.

History

The oldest record of the village refers to 1448. Although the official founding date of the village dates back to 1575 year.

From 1919 to 1939 village Baryliv together with the Radekhiv Raion was annexed to the Lwów Voivodeship, Second Polish Republic. After the war territory was passed to the Soviet Union. Since 1991 it has been part of independent Ukraine.

Cult constructions and religion

In the village has an old wooden church, which is registered in the Catalog Wooden Churches of Ukraine. It is the Church of St. Simeon 1885 (wooden).

Birth, Marriage, and Death Records from Barilov

Miriam Weiner's Routes to Roots Foundation Database may have a partial listing of known Jewish records from Barilov. Not all records have survived from all years. Make sure to also search for the general area the town was in (the district, raion, county, etc.), not just the town name itself, as some regional records survived where town records did not. Partial listing of Jewish Records

Famous people

Myron Tarnavsky (1869 – 1938) – a supreme commander of the Ukrainian Galician Army, the military of the West Ukrainian People's Republic. He was born into a family of priests in the village Baryliv, Lviv region.

Books about Barilov - Yizkor books

There is at least one known Yizkor book about Barilov: "Memorial book of Radikhov, Lopatyn, Witkow Nowy, Cholojow, Toporow, Stanislawcyzk, Stremiltsh, Shtruvits, and the villages Ubin, Barylow, Wolica-Wygoda, Strilow (i.e. Stnilow?), Zawidcze…" ("Sefer zikaron le-kehilot Radikhov, Lopatyn, Witkow Nowy, Cholojow, Toporow, Stanislawcyzk, Stremiltsh, Shtruvits, ve-ha-kefarim Ubin, Barylow, Wolica-Wygoda, Strilow, Zawidcze, Mikolajow, Dmytrow") , published in 1976 in Tel Aviv.

The JewishGen website has an English translation of this book available online. You can read the original book online at the New York Public Library website, or you can find a copy in a library near you through the free library search website WorldCat.

There may also be other Yizkor books published that cover , or larger nearby towns, or the region in which it was located; check JewishGen's Yizkor Books database for the latest details.

References

Jump up ^ Barylivska village council
Jump up ^ Барилів с - Прадідівська слава (Ukrainian) Jump up ^ Baryliv village: street map