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GemeindeView:Breclav
CURRENT CZECH NAME:
Breclav
OTHER NAMES/SPELLINGS: Lundenburg
LOCATION: Breclav is a small
town in Moravia, located at 48.45 longitude and 16.50 latitude, 50 km SE
of Brno, 7 km SSE of Podivin
MAP:
HISTORY: The earliest
record of the Jewish community of Breclav dates from 1414, although the community
may have existed since the founding of the town in 1030. In the 16th
century the community was large enough to have a temple. In 1572 Yehuda
ben Bezalel Löw-Liva was chairman of the synod of Moravian rabbis in
Breclav. As in other Moravian cities, in 1574 the Jews of Breclav suffered
a brutal pogrom until Kaiser Maximillian II took them under his protection.
The war years of 1605, 1619-1622 and 1643 hit the Jews of Breclav particularly
hard because the town itself became a battleground. On 28 June 1605
the troops of the Hungarian Prince Bocskay plundered the town. At
the beginning of the 30-years war the castle and the town were burned to
the ground by the Kaiser's troops. The town was afflicted by the Turks
and the Tatars. In 1638 the town had just 20 Jewish inhabitants in 6
houses. The invasion by the Swedes on 3 May 1643 and the following
plague caused many deaths. The temple and cemetery were destroyed
and the community practically annihilated.
In 1651 a second group of Jewish inhabitants came to the town from Feldsberg,
Austria (now Valtice, Moravia) with the permission of Prince Karl Eusebius
Liechtenstein and his wife Johanna Beatrix. The temple was rebuilt
in 1672. In 1697, as the men assembled outside the synagogue in the
bitter cold for the evening prayers and waited for the temple servant who
was late bringing the key, the roof fell in. To commemorate the miracle,
the day 11 Tebet became a holiday and fast day in Breclav.
In 1702, 30 Jewish families lived in 12 houses in Breclav. Around
1723, the Prince was engaged in a fierce chess match in Vienna with a visiting
Marquis from France. Seeing no way out of his position, and fearing
the loss of his princely wager, the Prince asked the Marquis to postpone
the match so that he could call on one of his tenants in Breclav, who he
was convinced could win the match. The pieces were put under glass
and the game was postponed while the Prince sent for the Jew Juda Löb.
Juda looked over the position and said that although it looked bad for the
Prince, the game was not yet lost. He took over the game and ultimately
prevailed against the angry Marquis. In thanks, the Prince sent Juda
home in his own wagon and allowed him to build a house on the Prince's land
in Unter-Themenau where Juda's descendants, the Kuffner family, lived from
1723 to 1871.
By decree of 24 October 1726,
the number of Jewish families was limited to 66. During the war of
succession between Empress Maria Theresia and the Prussian King Friedrich
II, on 25 March 1742 the town burned to the ground as a result of a smoking
accident by a careless Hussar soldier.
In 1787 the Jews of Breclav were required to take family names. A
document dated 29 September 1787 shows the old and new names of 61 families.
It is reproduced in Hugo Gold's 1929 book. The names taken include:
Sternfeld, Kuffner, Schwitzer, Stern, Brum, Fischer, Neubach, Singer, Mai,
Altbach, Volk, Weiss, Neumann, Rosenbaum, Klinger, Ditz, Bohrer, Grünbaum,
Reich, Künstler, Fränk, Sulzer, Stein, Heiliger, Mallowan, Hoffmann,
Haas, Zechner, Reiner, Gröger, Glück, Zeilinger, Petersel, Bittner,
Schwoner, Lang, Goldschmidt, Blau, Weinberger, Goldreich, Morgenstern, Stöhr,
Weiss, Nascher and Schlesinger.
In 1797 there were 325 Jews
in Breclav; 363 in 1830; 434 in 1848; 457 in 1857; 532 in 1869; 649 in 1879;
740 in 1890; 759 in 1900; and 589 in 1930 (4.3% of the total population).
On 21 November 1805 French troops occupied the town before the battle of
Austerlitz. The town remained occupied until 3 January 1806.
On 24 March 1812 a fire broke out at the Jewish butcher's and destroyed all
the Jewish houses. 16 Jews died in the cholera epidemic of 1831, and
10 Jews during the epidemic of 1866. 16 Jews from Breclav died in World
War I, while the community cared for thousands of refugees from Galicia and
Bukovina. In 1942, all the remaining Jews were deported and none survived.
GENEALOGICAL RESOURCES:
Birth, Death and Marriage record books for Breclav dating from 1784 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. Search JewishGen/Internet resources
for Breclav.
NOTABLE RESIDENTS AND DESCENDANTS:
Breclav is the native town of the opera singer Julius Lieban (b. 1857 Breclav,
d. 1940 Berlin). The factory owner Ignac Kuffner and Rabbi Dr. Heinrich
Schwenger are buried in the cemetery.
The rabbis of Breclav were: Salomo Schmol b. Chajim Meisterl (lived
1606 in Israel); Simson; Meir from Feldseberg; Petachja b. Mosche from Eisenstadt;
Elieser b. Jizchak Halewi (1697, also went to Israel); Nata Katz; Efraim Katz
Hakadosch (martyred); Eljokim Götzl b. Zewi Halewi; Kalonymos (Kalman)
Hakohen; Josef Morgenstern (1760); Jechiel b. Nesanel Schemuel (d. 1786);
Mordechai Banet (1787-1789, later Mikulov); Juda Löb Glück (1789-1809);
Abraham Bäck (1809-1819); Salomo Fried (1819-1830); Israel Chaim Schrötter
(1833-1839); Abraham Rabel b. Mosche from Austerlitz (d. 1841 age 29); Wolf
Mühlrad (1841-1862); Dr. Nathan Müller (1862-1872); Dr. Siegmund
Gross (1872-1911); Dr. Heinrich Schwenger (1907-1911).
The judges of Breclav were: Alexander Süsskind (1734), Isak Hirsch
Schwoner (1787); Samuel Goldreich (1801); Wolf Kuffner (1803-1806); Jakob
Sternfeld (1810); Jakob Schück (1819, 1832); David Kuffner (1827-1829,
1831); Markus Rosenbaum (1830); Simon Schwitzer (1833-1835); Markus Goldschmidt
(1836); Markus Bittner (1840-1845); Jakob Rosenbaum (1846) and Jakob Kuffner
(1847-1848). The Jewish mayors and community leaders were Markus Goldschmidt
(1849); Jakob Rosenbaum (1850-1856); Hermann Kuffner (1857-1860, 1867); Markus
Bittner (1860-1866); Gabriel Stein (1866-1867, 1872-1876); David Kuffner
(1868-1871); Leoipold Stein (1871-1872); Jakob Hoffmann (1876-1879); Samuel
Goldschmidt (1879-1882); Samuel Glück (1882-1887); Jakob Fischer (1887-1902);
Moritz Holländer (1902-1918); Hermann Stern (1883-1886); Adolf Schreiber
(1886-1904); Josef Holländer (1904-1919); Karl Frank (1919-1922); and
William Gold (from 1922).
The ggg-grandson of Moriz Hoffmann (b. Breclav), E. Randol Schoenberg, is a moderator
of Jewishgen's Austria-Czech
SIG and the submitter of this page.
SYNAGOGUES:
CEMETERIES:
The cemetery location is suburban, on flat land, and isolated with no sign
but with inscriptions on the pre-burial house. The cemetery is reached
by turning directly off a public road. Access to the cemetery is open.
The cemetery is surrounded by a continuous masonry wall with a gate that
locks. The size of cemetery is 0.8534 hectares, unchanged since before
WWII. Most of the 500-1,000 gravestones in the cemetery are in their original
location, with 20-100 not in their original locations and 50-75% of the surviving
stones toppled or broken. The oldest known gravestone is 1709.
Tombstones in the cemetery are datable from the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries.
Tombstones and memorial markers made of marble, granite, limestone, and sandstone.
Tombstones are flat shaped stones, finely smoothed and inscribed stones, flat
stones with carved relief decoration, double tombstones, multi-stone monuments,
and obelisks, some with traces of painting on their surfaces, iron decorations
or lettering, bronze decorations or lettering, and/or metal fences around
graves. Inscriptions are in Hebrew, German, and/or Czech. The
cemetery contains no known mass graves. The present owner of the cemetery
property is the municipality. The property is now used for Jewish cemetery
purposes and recreational use (park, playground, sports field.) Properties
adjacent to the cemetery are residential. Private individuals visit the cemetery
occasionally. The cemetery is known to have been vandalized during
World War II, and repeatedly since then. Care of the cemetery consists
of re-erection of stones and clearing of vegetation by local non-Jewish residents,
local or municipal authorities, regional or national authorities, and Jewish
groups within the country. Restoration work was carried out in the
1980s. Care now consists of occasional clearing or cleaning authorized
by local/regional authorities and performed by a caretaker paid by a local
contribution. A pre-burial house with wall inscriptions and a custodian's
house are located within the boundaries of the cemetery. Security (uncontrolled
access), weather erosion, pollution, vandalism, and vegetation are moderate
threats. Incompatible nearby development (existing, planned or proposed)
is a serious threat. The vegetation overgrowth in the cemetery is a
constant problem, disturbing stones. Water drainage at the cemetery
is a seasonal problem. The cemetery survey was conducted on 8 March
1992 by: ing. Arch. Jaroslav Kelovsky, Zebetinska 13, 623 00 Brno.
WEB REFERENCES:
PHOTOS:
CONTACTS: Town officials:
magistrate ing. Jan Stejskal, Mestsky urad, Masarykovo nam. 1, 690 02 Breclav,
tel. 0627/22935. Regional political authorities: ing. Arch. Lydie Filipova,
Okresni urad -referat kultury, address as above, tel. 0627/414. Also
interested in the site: 1. Regionalni muzeum, dir. Dr. Dobromila Brichtova,
zamek, 692 01 Mikulov, tel. 0625/2255; and 2. Ing. Jaroslav Zika, Postorenske
ul., 690 02 Breclav, tel. 0; and 3. Otto Pisk, Sovadinova 5, 690 02 Breclav,
tel. 0627/23144. The key to the cemetery is held by the caretaker:
Metsky urad Brechlav, ing. Kostrhun.
SOURCES: Gedenkbuch
der Untergegangenen Judengemeinden Mährens, Hugo Gold ed. (1974), pp.
79-80; Die Juden und JudengemeindenMährens in Vergangenheit unde Gegenwart,
Hugo Gold ed. (1929), pp: 321-329 (pictures); Jiri Fiedler, Jewish Sights
of Bohemia and Moravia (1991), p. 136; International Association of Jewish
Genealogical Societies Cemetery Project, Czech Republic, Breclav.
SUBMITTER: E.
Randol Schoenberg, 3436 Mandeville Canyon Road, Los Angeles, California 90049-1020
USA. Tel: 1-310-472-3122 (h), 1-213-473-2045 (w). Fax: 1-213-473-2222.
Email: randols@schoenberglaw.com.
Web Page: http://www.schoenberglaw.com
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