CHRYZANOW

CHRYZANOW
CHRYZANOW (Pol. Chrzanów), town near Cracow, S. Poland. In the 16th century the Jewish community there was subject to the jurisdiction of the Cracow community. From 1682 it came under the jurisdiction of Olkusz. Following a blood libel in Chrzanow in 1779, two of the community's leading members were arrested, and most of the Jews there fled to Olkusz. In 1780 the head of the Olkusz community protested over the case on behalf of Chryzanow Jewry to the permanent council of the kingdom. According to the census of 1765 there were 60 Jewish families (327 persons) in Chryzanow, occupying 65 houses of which 32 were owned by Jews. The community numbered 5,504 in 1900 (54% of the total population) and 6,328 in 1921 (45%), and some 8,000 in 1939. -Holocaust Period The German Army entered on Sept. 4, 1939, and initiated the anti-Jewish terror. In the first months of German occupation, about 300 Jews succeeded in leaving for Soviet-held territory. In January 1940 a ghetto was established, and 3,000 Jews were sent in the first deportation for forced labor at the end of the year. In June 1942 the Germans rounded up about 4,000 Jews for deportation to auschwitz . The ghetto was then transformed into a slave labor camp, which was liquidated on Feb. 18, 1943, when all the remaining Jewish prisoners were deported to Auschwitz and murdered. Only a handful of Chryzanow's Jewish inhabitants survived the war, but the Jewish community in Chryzanow was not rebuilt. (Stefan Krakowski)   -BIBLIOGRAPHY: M. Balaban, Historia żydów Krakowie i na Kazimierzu, 1 (1932), 351; 2 (1936), 254, 520–2, 642; R. Mahler, Yidn in Amolikn Poyln in Likht fun Tsifern (1958), tables 42, 64; M. Bachner (ed.), Sefer Chrzanow (Yid., 1949); Yad Vashem Archives, M–1/Q/72–76, and M–1/E/2219.

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • BACON, HIRSCH LEIB\> — BACON, HIRSCH LEIB (1875–1928), ḥazzan. Hirsch Leib Bacon was born in Kolbuszow into the Bacon family of cantors. He studied in the yeshivah in Tarnow and during the period of his studies sang with Cantor Eliyahu Brandsdorfer. He moved to Nowy… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • BACON, ISRAEL — (1910–1943), ḥazzan. Bacon was born in Chryzanow, to a family of cantors, originating from Kolbuszow in Galicia. He was the son of Hirsch Leib Bacon. At the age of nine he went with his parents to Berlin and sang in his father s choir. At the age …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Liste der Ghettos im Nationalsozialismus — Deutsche Ghettos für Juden in Polen und Osteuropa 1941 1945. In dieser Karte sind viele von den deutschen Besatzern eingerichteten Ghettos in Polen und Osteuropa eingetragen. Diese Liste der Ghettos im Nationalsozialismus umfasst über 500 Ghettos …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Liste der Ghettos in der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus — Deutsche Ghettos für Juden in Polen und Osteuropa 1941 1945. In dieser Karte sind viele von den deutschen Besatzern eingerichteten Ghettos in Polen und Osteuropa eingetragen. Diese Liste der Ghettos im Nationalsozialismus umfasst über 500 Ghetto… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • BACON, SHLOMO REUVEN — (1899–1986), ḥazzan. Shlomo Reuven Bacon was born in Tchekova near Chryzanow into the Bacon family of cantors originating from Kolbuszow in Galicia. From childhood he had a beautiful voice and sang in the choir of father cantor Haim Bacon, who… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • POLAND — POLAND, republic in E. Central Europe; the kingdom of Poland and the grand duchy of Lithuania united formally (Poland Lithuania) in 1569. This article is arranged according to the following outline: the early settlements jewish legal status… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • SCHWARZBART, ISAAC IGNACY — (1888–1961), Zionist leader in Poland. Born in Chryzanow, Galicia, Schwarzbart completed his legal studies at the University of Cracow (1913). He was active in the academic Zionist society, Ha Shaḥar, while still a student and was the chief… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”