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 Ostrov nad Ohří (Schlackenwerth), Bohemia, Czech Republic

Project Tags

view all

Profiles

  • Karl Vogl (1897 - d.)
  • Klara Schablin (1884 - c.1942)
    Klara SCHABLIN, née VOGL: b. 24 Dec 1884, Ostrov - d. circa Nov 1942, Auschwitz, HOLOCAUSTDetails of deportation and subsequent death courtesy of the following website:www.doew.at Vorname: Klara Nachna...
  • Eugenie Vogl (1876 - 1897)
    Birth record: KARLOVY VARY (o. Karlovy Vary), book 759, N 1868-1890, reproduction 50 (out of 141)Death record: Hroznětín Z 1839-1937 (i), 1943, 1948 kn 540 p.103
  • Emil Vogl (1870 - 1921)
    Hroznětín 534 N 1839-1905 (i), 1909 p.94
  • Leopold Löbl Löw Rosenfeld (1810 - d.)
    Birth record: HROZNĚTÍN (o. Karlovy Vary) 532 N 1788-1834 (11/47) Marriage record: HROZNĚTÍN (o. Karlovy Vary) 537 O 1840-1933 (i) (18/52)

This project seeks to list representatives of all of the Jewish families from the Bohemia town of Ostrov nad Ohří (Schlackenwerth) in the Czech Republic (county/okres/Bezirk Karlovy Vary, region Karlovarský kraj).

OVERVIEW

The town is located in the Czech Republic in the Karlovy Vary Region at a foothill of the Ore Mountains about 10 kilometres (6 miles) northeast of Karlovy Vary and has a population of 16,999 (September, 2009).

The origin of the settlement named Zlaukowerde (Slávek's Island) at the confluence of Bystřice and Jáchymovský Creeks traces back to the beginning of the 13th century. The town charter for Ostrov was issued by Bohemian king John the Blind in 1331.

The town of Karlove Vary is a spa town situated in western Bohemia approximately 130 km (81 miles) west of Prague (Praha) and is the most visited spa town in the Czech Republic.

During World War II the castle served as nazi concentration camp. The population of Ostrov multiplied after World War II with a boom of uranium mining in nearby Jáchymov. The extensive housing blocks from the 1950s forming the new part of Ostrov are considered one of the best examples of socialist realism architecture in the Czech Republic. The town was known for production of Škoda trolleybuses for many decades, but this ended in 2004.