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 Bučovice (Butschowitz), South Moravia, Czech Republic

Project Tags

view all

Profiles

BUČOVICE (Cz. Bučovice; Ger. Butschowitz), a small town in southern Moravia, Czech Republic, is located at 49°09' N, 17°00' E', 17 miles ESE of Brno (Brünn); it covers about 12 square miles. Population in 2005 was about 6,500,with fewer than 10 Jews.

The Jewish community in Bučovice, one of the oldest in Moravia, increased in importance when Jews expelled from Brno in 1454 settled in the town. Moravian Jewish community synods were held there in 1709, 1724, and 1748. Bučovice was one of 52 communities officially recognized in 1798. The Jewish community built a synagogue in 1690 and rebuilt it in 1853. The community numbered

  • 9 families in 1673
  • 508 persons in 1798
  • 566 in 1848
  • 256 in 1880
  • 180 in 1900
  • 64 in 1930 (2.07% of the total population), 13 of whom declared their nationality as Jewish.
  • In March / April 1942, Bučovice's Jews were deported to Theresienstadt, and from there to the death camps (Source)

The Czech Jewish Registers provide Birth, Marriage and Death records for Bučovice, as well as the list of Familianten (posted July 2014). (Familianten Gesetz was the German term commonly used for the laws and the related record books which regulated the number of Jewish families in the Czech lands in the 18th and 19th centuries.) In Bučovice, Familianten entries give the individual's father's name and often state whether he was 1st- or 2nd-born son, or even 3rd-born. The entries often include the name of the new Familiant's intended bride, her birthplace, and their "marriage approval" date. See below for information on using the Czech Jewish Registers.

Rabbis in Bučovice

  • Avigdor, son of the "saintly" R. Paltiel (d. 1749),
  • Abraham Hirsch Halberstadt, and
  • Bernard Loewenstein (1857–1863), author of Juedische Klaenge (1862), popular poems which he dedicated to the community.

A small museum exhibition in the town is devoted to the history of the Jewish Quarter -- east of the square, ul.Komenského, Smetana, Zdanicky. From the original 49 houses only the fifth Neo-Romanesque synagogue (r.1853) was demolished, in 1966.

The cemetery (landmark Nr. 3607 S.M.), on Hájecká Street, on an isolated suburban hillside, was founded at least in the 17th century. Its oldest tombstones date from 1767. The last known Conservative Jewish burial took place before 1942. At the cemetery entrance stands an eclectic ceremonial hall built in 1892, temporarily utilized as a garage. There is a sign, in Czech. The encircling brick wall is broken in places due to the hillside terrain; it has seen gradual repairs between 2006-11.

According to Czech Wiki, the Jewish cemetery in Bučovice is one of the three largest cemeteries in the Czech Republic, and is located on the northwestern foot of the castle hill. There are about 2500 graves. The complex had two gates, the first for the public and the second, located slightly above and looks toward the center of town, was for hearses (the old second entrance was lost after WWII). From the first gate, stairs lead to the ceremonial hall, of which only side walls remain. See at cs.wikipedia.org, search the phrase "Židovský hřbitov v Boskovicích".

The cemetery is reached by turning directly off a public road. Access is open to all via the continuous masonry wall, a fence, and a locking gate. Original and current size of the cemetery is 0.507 ha / ​4743m². Gravestones are in their original locations, with 25-50% of them toppled or broken. No stones have been removed. Made of marble, granite and sandstone, they include finely smoothed and inscribed stones and flat stones with carved reliefs. Stones have Hebrew, German and Czech inscriptions, and some show traces of painted decoration. There are no known mass graves. A pre-burial house has wall inscriptions.

The Brno Jewish community owns the cemetery property, which is now used only as a Jewish cemetery. Adjacent properties are residential. The cemetery was vandalized during World War II and between 1945 and 1982. Occasionally, private visitors stop.

In the 1980s, local non-Jewish residents, regional or national authorities and Jewish groups within the country cleared vegetation and repaired the wall. The Brno Jewish community pays a regular caretaker. Weather erosion remains a moderate threat. Drainage and vegetation are seasonal problems; vegetation sometimes makes accessibility difficult. Security, pollution, vandalism, and incompatible existing or proposed development remain "slight" threats to the cemetery.

A Torah scroll created in Bučovice in 1825 is on long-term loan to Temple B'nai Israel in Kalamazoo, Michigan. The three surviving Torahs of Bučovice's Jewish community were removed to Prague and preserved by a devoted group of Prague Jews. Temple B'nai Israel received this scroll in 1968 and rededicated it in a special ceremony in 2010.

Noteworthy Bučovice individuals included Rabbi Bernhard Loewenstein (1821-1888) and Josef Fischhof, musician / composer (1804-1857 [d. Wien]).

A memoir of the life of a young Jewish girl who lived in/around Brno in the 1860s records that "Butschowitz was a dusty market town in a pleasant wooded district, a lordly castle with an orangerie was its pièce de résistance. It was not on the railway, so a grimy carriage took visitors along a bumpy road that passed between rocks. One then reached the long village street. The doors of all the houses were opened and the inhabitants of the houses rushed out, inquisitive and excited to see who the visitors were. Then one arrived at the large, roughly-plastered square, surrounded by small houses amongst which the two-storied Grand Hotel towered majestically."

According to a Bachelor's thesis written in Czechoslovakia on the history of Bučovice (Christine Sromova, Masaryk University, 2011) "a plan exists of Bučovice, dating from 1727. It is drawn in ink and on the back appears the note "Ex Decanatu Kutscheroviensi. Butschowitz. Henricus Ern. Al. Halama Eques de Gicžin Parochus Butschoviensis." The plan, which measures 38.4 ×39.7 cm is extremely valuable for the history Bučovice as it contains a detailed drawing of the other buildings around the Jewish quarter. These include the original chapel of St. Trojice, a Baroque church, its cemetery with gates, and several civil and patrimonial domů. The plan shows that the Jewish quarter at that time consisted of 29 houses, laid out in approximately the shape of an L with Jewish homes surrounding three sides of the northeastern half of the village square area, with a well. In the eastern part of the square stands the synagogue. Two connecting streets lead to the northwest (present-day streets Jiráskova and Smetana). The lane leading to the northeast connects to main urban streets (today's Legionnaire Street). In the mid-18th century there were 54 Jews devoted to a particular povolání. In 1815 house No. 185 was bought by Jewish Familiant Joseph Fischhof. The house is located on the square. Other houses gradually were bought by Jewish entrepreneurs such as Rudolf Stiassny (No. 97), Adolf Popper, (No. 98), Selig Wiltschek (No. 99), Rudolf Strakosch (No. 129), Joseph Strakosch (No. 130), Lazar Stiassny (No. 132), Herrmann Stiassny (No. 139)."

The following are representative GENI profiles for Jewish families in Bučovice:

  1. Joseph Fischhof (1766-1826)
  2. Leopold Friess (1784-1870)
  3. Josua Schüller (1773-1853)
  4. David Spitzer (1811-1895)
  5. Salomon Strakosch (1795-1867)
  6. Rudolf Stiassny / Stiassni (~1815-?)
  7. Markus Strakosch (1798-1866)
  8. Juda Wiltschek (1769)

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Birth, Death and Marriage records for the region are online at two Badatelna websites: Badatelna/Fond/1073 (the original set of "Czech Registers") and Badatelna/Fond/241, with newly available records for localities in the Czech lands. In both cases, go to the INVENTAR tab to start a search.

To read these early records, you’ll need to take a hard look at the old German script, Kurrent (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurrent). Not everyone who made entries in Birth, Marriage or Death records wrote Kurrent very clearly.

In the Czech Jewish Registers

  • N = Births (narození)
  • O = Marriages (ohlášky, or banns)
  • Z = Deaths (zesnulý, or deceased)

To take a screen shot:

  • on a Mac, use command-shift-4.
  • on a PC, use Ctrl-PrtSc. It’s convenient to drop the saved image into PAINT (an Accessory in Windows) and from there, save it as a .jpg for further cropping and enhancement. (Note that hitting Ctrl-PrtSc will immediately cause the image on your screen to zoom out.)

Note: taking screenshots is more effective than the .pdf's that result from the "print" process the website describes.

As you track Bučovice families, remember to take a look at the records of Brno, only 17 miles away. Many early Bučovice families had moved there by the middle of the 1800s, and many births, marriages and deaths are double-entered, or are entered only in Brno.