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History |
HOLOCAUST |
PICTURES |
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Sobrance,
Slovakia Szobr‡ncz
[Hun], Szobr‡nc [Hun], Sobranz [Ger] Lat:
48ˇ 45' N, Long: 22ˇ 11 E' |
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Szobrancz, now Sobrance, Slovakia, was about 15 kilometers
(just over 2 miles) west of Ungvar (now Uzhorod, Ukr.), the main city in Ung
megye (county). Szobrancz was a
post stop and place to change horses on the road between Ungvar, the county
seat to the east, and Nagymihaly, in Zemplen megye to the west. By the late
19th century it was also well known for its thermal springs and spa (the
Kupele Sobrance Furdo shown below), which are mentioned in the 1911 Baedeker
Guide to Austria-Hungary.
Landed nobility including Buttler, Szemere, Viczmandy, and Feket all
owned estates in the area. |
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Jews may
have settled in Szobrancz as early as the late 17th century. The first
reference to Jewish residents appears in the May 15, 1739 Jewish Conscription
of Ung County which recorded only one Jewish family. The head of household
was Marko Joseffovics (Marko the son of Josef), a distiller of whisky
(palinka, slivovitz or vodka). By July 1746 there were two Jewish families--
Marko Joseffovics and Hersko Abrahamovics (Hersko the son of Abraham). The
Chevra Kadisha or burial society was founded in about 1780, a time when the
Jewish population of northeastern Hungary began to grow due to migrations
from Galicia. The synagogue, which was still standing in 1929, was built in
about 1800. By 1828
Szobrancz had 106 Jewish residents. A geography book published in 1851
reported that there were 119 Jews living in Szobrancz in 1840 along with 241
Greek Catholics and 172 Roman Catholics. (Fenyes Elek, Magyarorszag
geographiai szotara. Vol. I-IV). By 1877, the Jewish population of the town
had increased to 349, about a third of the total population, and Szobrancz
had become seat of the regional rabbinate with 34 surrounding settlements and
a total Jewish population of 2,091 under its jurisdiction. Other communities
in the district with large Jewish populations included Poruba (127), Felso
Ribnyicze (120), and Prikopa (115). At the
end of the 19th century about half of the large leaseholders in the Szobrancz
district were Jews including Aron Herskovics, Samuel Jozepovits, Mosko
Grunvald, Hermann Propper, Jozef Moskovits, Jakab Rosenbluth, Lipot
Rosenbluth, Abraham Roth, Salamon Herskovics, Fulop Akkermann, Henrik Weisz,
Mihaly Guttman, Jakab Juszkovits, Izsak Lipkovits, Ignacz Vider, Mihaly
Vidder, Bernat Schwarcz, Emanuel Schwarcz and my great-grandfathers Miksa
Neumann and Markus Moskovits. At the end of the 19th century about half of the large
leaseholders in the Szobrancz district were Jews including Aron Herskovics,
Samuel Jozepovits, Mosko Grunvald, Hermann Propper, Jozef Moskovits, Jakab
Rosenbluth, Lipot Rosenbluth, Abraham Roth, Salamon Herskovics, Fulop
Akkermann, Henrik Weisz, Mihaly Guttman, Jakab Juszkovits, Izsak Lipkovits,
Ignacz Vider, Mihaly Vidder, Bernat Schwarcz, Emanuel Schwarcz and my
great-grandfathers Miksa Neumann and Markus Moskovits. Juda Eisenstadter, David
Eisenstadter, Herman Weisz and Simon Friedmann were the first rabbis of
Szobrancz. Rabbi Moshe Simcha Friedman, a descendant of the Teitelbaum family
who served from 1891 to 1940, was one of the best known. The parnasim were
Eisik Lebovits landowner, Elias Moskovits forest owner, and tradesmen Wolf
Moskovits and Simon M. Friedmann. By 1929 there were 52 villages in the Szobrancz district.
Szobrancz, with 270 Jewish residents in 65 households had the largest
population. The 54 community tax payers included 2 wholesalers, 1 in
agriculture, 1 teacher, 18 retailers, 2 lawyers, 4 public servants, 4
workers, 1 manufacturer, 1 engineer, 3 living from capital and 10 others. Jewish public figures included bank
directors Armin Herschkovits and Lipot M. Rosenfeld, both of whom were active
in the Ung County Jewish party. Mayer Schwab owned a brick factory. The
leaders of the Jewish community were Lazar Lebovits, president; Hermann
Wiesner vice-president; Ignac Weinberger Sr., Samuel Salamon, and Ignac
Weinberger Jr. parnasim; and Mor Fried dayan (associate rabbi). There was also a Talmud Torah with two teachers. The map of
Sobrance in the inter-war years below shows the synagogue on Hlavna ulica and
the Jewish cemetery, northwest of the town center. |
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Denisa Vinanska, a secondary school history teacher in
Sobrance, has been documenting the history of the townŐs Jewish community and
working with her students to restore the cemetery. She writes that the Jews of Szobrancz were primarily
involved in crafts and trade but there were also some in various
professions. ŇIn the interwar period there were four doctors, two of
them - Dr. Herškovič and Dr. Milder were Jews. Among the four local
lawyers were three members of the Jewish community to three - Dr. Roth, Dr.
Feher. And Dr. Preus. Tailoring included Mr. Grunwald, Mr. Jakubovič and
Mr. Gerstl, a Jewish barber was Mr. Weisberger, inns and pubs were operated
by Messrs. Gutmann, Milder, Goldberger, Winkler and Swartz. The
afore-mentioned Mr. Swartz also had a beer warehouse. Shops were owned by
Jewish merchants - Rosner (textile trade), Šouli (for soda water),
Jakubovič (before the war owned tailoring, he and his wife survived the
Holocaust), Moše (buying into villages agricultural products), Jukel
(bought old textiles), Salomon (he was a shoemaker and owned a shoe store),
Goldberger (owned food store), Strulovič (owned convenience store),
Berkovic (he and his wife owned a haberdashery), Neumann (had a haberdashery
shop), Weismann (custom cabinetry), Grunfeld (owned food). Dentist Dr. Geiger
also served the city.Ó Dr. Bernath Herskovics and pharmacist Jeno Ilkovics are
among the few Sobrance residents listed in the 1943 Hungarian telephone
directory. |
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This
site is hosted at no cost by JewishGen, Inc., the Home of Jewish Genealogy.
If you have been aided in your research by this site and wish to further our
mission of preserving our history for future generations, your JewishGen-erosity is greatly
appreciated. |
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Created and compiled by Vivian Kahn With
assistance from Denisa Vinanska, Slovakia Updated
February 2014 |
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Copyright
© Vivian Kahn, 2014. All rights reserved |
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