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Kremenets

 
 
Kremenets (krĕmĭnyĕts'), Pol. Krzemieniec, city, in Ukraine. Founded in the 11th cent., Kremenets was part of the Kievan duchy and in the 13th cent. became a fortified city of Halych-Volhynia. After the Polish-Lithuanian union in 1569, it served as a royal residence. The city passed to Russia during the third partition of Poland in 1795. It was again under Polish rule from 1919 to 1945, when it was seized by the USSR.


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Kremenets (Ukrainian: Кременець, translit. Kremenets, Polish: Krzemieniec) is a city in the Ternopil Oblast (province) of western Ukraine. It is the administrative center of the Kremenetsky Raion (district), and rests 18 km north-east of the great Pochayiv Monastery. The city is situated in the historic region of Volhynia.

Contents

History

According to some sources Kremenets fortress was built in VIII-IX century, and later was a part of Kievan Rus’. The first documented references to the fortress are given in Polish encyclopedic dictionary of year 1064. The first reference in Old Slavic literature is dated by year 1226 when the city ruler, Mstislav the Bold smashed Hungarian army of King Andrew II near the city. During the Mongol invasion of Rus in 1240-41 Kremenets was one of few cities that Batu Khan failed to capture. In 1382, after death of Louis I of Hungary, Lithuanian duke Liubartas captured Kremenets from the Kingdom of Hungary.

The city obtained Magdeburg rights in 1431.

In the fall of 1648 Cossack colnel Maxym Kryvonis surrounded the Kremenets fortress. In October, after six weeks of fight the Polish garrison surrendered, and the fortress was left severely damaged. The fortress has never been rebuilt since that time.

In 1795 Kremenets was annexed by the Russian Empire thorough the Third Partition of Poland. It remained a part of the empire until World War I.

The Jews of Kremenets

See also: History of the Jews in Lithuania

Jews are known to have settled in the Kremenets area as early as 1438[1], when the Grand Duke of Lithuania gave them a charter. However, in 1495 Lithuania expelled its Jews until 1503. A Polish Yeshiva however operated in Kremenets during the 15th and 16th centuries[2].

The Jewish community expanded and prospered through the 16th century. Around the middle of the century, rabbinical representatives of the Kahals of Poland began gathering at the great Fairs to conduct the business of the Jewish communities. These conferences became known as the Council of the Four Lands. Volhynian representatives were from Ostrog and Kremenets[3].

Khmelnitsky’s Cossack rebellion against the Polish land owners from 1648 through 1651, followed by the Russian-Swedish wars against Poland-Lithuania from 1654-1656, devastated the Jewish population of western Ukraine. Many Jews were murdered, while others fled. Jews were not allowed to rebuild their destroyed homes. Kremenets never again regained its former importance. All that was left as the Russians took control in 1793 was “an impoverished community of petty traders and craftsmen.”[4]

Jewish life gradually revived and Kremenets became a secondary center of Haskalah (enlightenment) in Eastern Europe in the period 1772 through 1781[5]. By the end of the 19th century, Jews once again were active in the economic life of the town, primarily in the paper industry and as cobblers and carpenters. They exported their goods to other towns in Russia and Poland[6]. Under Polish rule, in the early 1930s, two Yiddish periodicals were published. They merged in 1933 into a single weekly newspaper, Kremenitser Lebn (Kremenets Life)[6].

The Holocaust Period

The Nazis destroyed the Jewish community of Kremenets. Except for those who left Kremenets before the war and 14 survivors, all 15,000 people who lived in Kremenets in 1941 were murdered.

The Soviet authorities annexed the town on September 22, 1939. In the spring of 1940 the refugees from western Poland were obliged to register with the authorities and to declare whether they wished to take up Soviet citizenship or return to their former homes, now under German occupation. Jewish communal life was forbidden, and Zionist leaders were forced to move to other cities to keep their past activities from the knowledge of the authorities. By 1941 the Jewish population had increased to over 15,000 including over 4,000 refugees[7].

In June 1941, the German Einsatzgruppe “C” carried out a mass slaughter of Jews in the Generalbezirk Wolhynien-Podolien District, which was part of Reichskommissariat Ukraine. The District included all of Volhynia.

“A few days after the German-Soviet war broke out (June 22, 1941) the Germans reached the area. Hundreds of young Jews managed to flee to the Soviet Union. A pogrom broke out in early July 1941, where 800 men, women and children were killed. In August 1941 the Gestapo ordered all Jews with academic status to report for registration. All those who did so were murdered, and the Jewish community's leadership was destroyed. That month the Germans set fire to the main synagogue and exacted a fine of 11 kg. of gold from the community.

A Judenrat was imposed. The head, Benjamin Katz was murdered for his refusal to collaborate with the Nazis. At the end of January 1942 a ghetto was established and on March 1 was closed off from the rest of the city. The inmates endured great hardship and there was a serious shortage of water[8].

In the summer of 1942 the Germans began the systematic liquidation of the ghettos in the provincial towns. In some of them revolts broke out, the ghetto inmates resisting their deportation, setting the ghetto houses on fire and making mass attempts to escape to the forests. Nesvizh, Mir, Lachva, Kletsk, and Kremenets were some of the places where ghetto revolts occurred.[9]

On July 22, 1942, there was armed resistance by the Jews of the Kremenets ghetto against the Germans, who were trying to exterminate them[10]. The Kremenets ghetto's lasted for two weeks, and 19,000 Jews were murdered[11].

On August 10, 1942, the Germans initiated a two-week long Aktion to annihilate the inmates, setting the ghetto ablaze to drive out those in hiding. Fifteen hundred able-bodied persons were dispatched as slave laborers to Bialokrynica, where they later met their death. The vast majority of the ghetto inhabitants rounded up in the Aktion were taken in groups and murdered over trenches dug near the railway station, near a former army camp. The local Zionist leader Benjamin Landsberg committed suicide. Only 14 of the Kremenets community survived the Holocaust. Societies of former residents of Kremenets function in Israel, the U.S. and Argentina[7].“

Although the Jewish presence in Kremenets was physically destroyed, the memory of Jewish Kremenetsers lived on. In the postwar years, those who successfully emigrated before the onset of hostilities, survivors of the Holocaust, and their descendants published two Yizkor Books and a series of memorial Bulletins.

Today

Today its industry is mostly reliant on Orthodox pilgrims who come to the Pochayiv Lavra.

Famous people

References

  1. ^ (Simon Wiesenthal)
  2. ^ (Barnavi, p. 143).
  3. ^ (Dubnow, vol. I, pp. 109–110).
  4. ^ (Simon Wiesenthal, Encyclopedia Judaica)
  5. ^ (Barnavi, p. 177).
  6. ^ a b (Encyclopedia Judaica)
  7. ^ a b (Encyclopedia Judaica).
  8. ^ (Encyclopedia Judaica)
  9. ^ Heritage Films “
  10. ^ (JewishGen: Holocaust)
  11. ^ (Heritage Films, Poland)

Coordinates: 50°07′11″N 25°43′00″E / 50.11972°N 25.7166667°E / 50.11972; 25.7166667


 
 
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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
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