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Jewish Families from Pohořelice (Pohrlitz), Moravia, Czech Republic

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Profiles

  • Chief Rabbi Max Moses Friediger (1884 - 1947)
    Married 10 Jan 1910 - Berlin, Germany, Marriages, 1874-1936: Berlin IX, 1910, 1910 (Zurückgeführtes Erstregister) image 16Rabbi Friediger was interned in Ghetto Terezin, Czechia, during WW2. : Max Frie...
  • Charlotte "Lotte" Jacoby (1913 - 2006)
    Marriage: Denmark, Copenhagen, Civil Marriages, 1739-1964, Index 1877-1964: Lysningsjournaler, #1-3,000, 1028849, 2 Jan-22 Mar 1940 image 233 -
  • Friedrika / Bedřiška Fried (1886 - d.)
    Marriage record: 132 BRNO (o. Brno-město) O 1909-1924 (i) (35/180)
  • Pauline Dukes (1888 - 1942)
    record LEDNICE 971/38----Death record: Born 25. 08. 1888
  • Salomon Dukes (1881 - aft.1942)
    Death record: Born 30. 01. 1881 Last residence before deportation: Brno Address/place of registration in the Protectorate: Brno Transport Ad, no. 944 (23. 03. 1942, Brno -> Terezín) Transp...

This project seeks to list representatives of all of the Jewish families from the Moravian town of Pohořelice (Pohrlitz) in the Czech Republic.

POHORELICE (Czech Pohořelice; Ger. Pohrlitz), village in S. Moravia, Czech Republic. It had one of the most ancient Jewish communities in Moravia, and according to legend, the oldest. Although the earliest known documentary evidence for the existence of a Jewish settlement in Pohorelice dates from 1490, a Jewish community apparently already existed there at the beginning of the tenth century. At the close of the 18th century about 500 Jews lived in Pohorelice. From 1849 (officially from 1862) until the dissolution of the Austrian Empire in 1918, a local Jewish political authority also existed. From 1847 to 1918 the community supported a Jewish elementary school whose language of instruction was German. In 1930 the community numbered 277. The majority perished in the Holocaust. A transit camp for Jewish prisoners from Hungary existed in the town in 1944–45 from where they were sent to Theresienstadt and Bergen-Belsen. A synagogue built in 1854–55 was demolished by the Nazis. The cemetery was likewise destroyed; however, after the war it was restored. The Jewish community was not renewed. Berthold *Feiwel was born in Pohorelice.

BIBLIOGRAPHY:

T. Haas, Die Juden in Maehren (1908); H. Gold (ed.), Die Juden und Judengemeinden Maehrens (1929), index. ADD. BIBLIOGRAPHY: J. Fiedler, Jewish Sights of Bohemia and Moravia (1991), 136–37.