Maps
- The JewishGen Communities Database - Not sure where your shtetl is located? The Communities Database will find your town using the Daitch-Mokotoff Soundex system and map it using MapQuest.
- The Baltic Republics of Russia: portions of a 1915 map by G. Peltier, contributed by Michael Steinore. Most of Belarus is in lower right quadrant. Give or take, it covers the following gubernias: Grodno, Kovno, Lomza, Lublin (in part), Minsk (except Rechitsa uezd), Piotrkow (in part), Plock, Radom (in part), Suwalki, Svedlitz, Vilna, Vitebsk (west of city of Vitebsk), Volhynia (upper third), Warsaw. I’d estimate the map shows about 2000 towns.
- 1805 Lyakhovichi map contributed by Gary Palgon.
- Brest Region map - The Brest region is situated in the south-west of the Republic of Belarus.
- MultiMap.com - A clickable map of Belarus.
- Map of Belarus (image) - From the US Dept. of Commerce, Technology Administration, National Techical Information Service, contributed by Dave Fox.
- Map showing Gubernias (image) - Partial map scanned from a 1916 Atlas by Hilary Henkin.
- Belarus at the end of the 19th Century (in Russian) - Part of the Virtual Guide to Belarus - a collaborative project of Belarusian scientists abroad.
- Guberniya District Maps - from the 1899 edition of Vsia Rossiia, by Michael Steinore. Link for Mogilev Gubernia is at the bottom of this page.
- A 1845 map of Grodno published by Charles Knight & Co. in London - Maps provided by Generations Press Books & Maps.
- A 1845 map of Minsk published by Charles Knight & Co. in London - Maps provided by Generations Press Books & Maps.
- A 1845 map of Mogilev published Charles Knight & Co. in London - Maps provided by Generations Press Books & Maps.
- A 1845 map of Vitebsk published Charles Knight & Co. in London - Maps provided by Generations Press Books & Maps.
- A map showing Poland between 1921 and 1939 (image) - shows where parts Belarus were during this time.