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CURRENT CZECH NAME: Ostroh OTHER NAMES/SPELLINGS: Ostroh Uherský, Uherský Ostroh, Ungarisch-Ostra, Ungarisch-Ostroh LOCATION:
Ostroh is a small town in Moravia, located at 48.59
longitude and 17.23 latitude, 75 km E of Brno, 9 km
ENE of Bzenec HISTORY:
The earliest known Jewish community in this town
dates from 1592. In 1635 there were 22 Jewish
houses. In 1671 there were 16 Jewish houses
with more than 30 Jewish families, including Isak
Schulklopper, Salamon Lateiner, Israel Isak, Mandl,
Salamon Chaska, Benesch, Friedrich Kojeteiner,
Schmidl, Jekl Fleischhacker, Salamon Mojses,
Rabiner, Mojses Stanjetz, Jakob Gutman, Israel
Strimpfstricker, and Loebl Isak. From
1798-1848 there were 89 Jewish families. In
1848 the community numbered 478 members, but dropped
to 220 after the First World War. The Jewish
population was 70 in 1930. The present town
population is 5,000 - 25,000 with fewer than 10
Jews. GENEALOGICAL
RESOURCES: Birth, Death and Marriage record
books for Ostroh may be located at the Czech State
Archives in Prague, Statni istredni archiv, tr.
Milady Horokove 133, CZ-166 21 Praha 6, Czech
Republic, tel/fax: +42 (2) 333-20274. NOTABLE RESIDENTS
AND DESCENDANTS: SYNAGOGUES: CEMETERIES: There
are two Jewish cemeteries in Ostroh. The older
cemetery location is urban, on flat land, separate
but near other cemeteries, and not identified by any
sign or marker. It is reached by turning
directly off a public road. It is open to
all. The cemetery is surrounded by no wall or
fence and there is no gate. The approximate
size of cemetery before WWII and now is 0.1277
hectares. The cemetery contains no special
memorial monuments. The cemetery contains no known
mass graves. Within the limits of the cemetery there
are no structures. The municipality is the
present owner of the cemetery property, which is now
utilized for recreation (park, playground, sports
field). Adjacent properties are commercial or
industrial. The cemetery boundaries have not
changed since 1939. Private visitors come
rarely to the cemetery. The cemetery was
vandalized during World War II and between 1945 and
1981. No maintenance has been done. Now
there is occasional clearing or cleaning by
authorities. There is a slight threat posed by
pollution and proposed nearby development.
PHOTOS: CONTACTS: Town officials: Magistrate Jiri Chmelar, Mestsky urad Hradistska 305, 687 24 uhersky Ostroh, tel. 0632/91116. Regional officials: PhDr. Jana Spathova, Okresni urad, Referat Kultury, 686 01 Uherske Hradiste, tel. 0632/432. Interested parties: Slovacke muzeum, dir. PhDr. Ivo Frolec, Smetanovy sady, 686 01 Uherske Hradiste, tel. 0632/2262. Other sources: Bohumil Gelbkopf, Rybare 198, 687 24 Uhersky Ostroh, Tel. 0. SOURCES: Gedenkbuch der Untergegangenen Judengemeinden Mährens, Hugo Gold ed. (1974), pp.. 116-117; Die Juden und JudengemeindenMährens in Vergangenheit unde Gegenwart, Hugo Gold ed. (1929), pp: 563-570 (pictures); Jiri Fiedler, Jewish Sights of Bohemia and Moravia (1991), pp. 53-54; International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies Cemetery Project, Czech Republic, Ostroh. Compiled by E.
Randol Schoenberg |
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