Home

Archival Resources

Shtetlekh Resources
Economic Summaries

 

bullet

Research Resources

bullet  Vsia Rossiia
bullet

Parichi Holocaust List

 

 


 

 

Surnames: LDS Microfilms
Vsiia Rossia


Beta Thalassemia Genetic Research Project


Contact Directory

 

Text Resources

Bibliography
Articles
Travelog

Photo index

Bobruisk City

Bobruisk District Maps

Bobruisk City area

Glusk area

Osipovichi District

Top

Botttom

Parichi

Individual Shtetlach

Chirkovichi
Domanovo II
Glusk
Gorki
Gorodok
Itel
Kazimirovo
Kovchitsy II
Kozlovichi II
Luban
Lubonichi
Lyaskovichi
Novye Doroghi
Osipovichi
Ozarichi
Parichi
Pastovichi
Pobolovo
Porechye
Rechen
Shchedrin
Simonovichi
Slobodka Kostrichskaya
Startsy
Starye Doroghi
Svisloch
Urechye
Vorotyn
Zabolotye
Zakalno

ShtetLinks Home
JewishGen Home

 

 

Bobruisk District Historical Economic Summaries

Provided by
The Minsk Historical Genealogy Group
Oleg Perzashkevich, Director

Village of Kozlovichi

by Oleg Perzashkevich and Sergey Rybchenok

Kozlovichi before 1917

History

Before 1793 - Kozlovichi was a village in Rechitsa District of Minsk Province of Rech Pospolitaya.

1793-1917 - Kozlovichi was a village in Russian Empire.

Since 1801 - Kozlovichi was a village in Bobruisk District of Minsk Empire.

1844 - after the Emperor permitted Jews to live in the rural area and to work in agriculture, Jewish agricultural colony was founded in Kozlovichi as Kozlovichi II.

Vital Statistics

Date Jews Non-Jews Comments % Total Pop.
1844 Jewish population appeared
1858 184 No info Both sexes No info
1898 320 96 Both sexes 76.9 %
1909 451 Total population No info

Jewish Life

In 1844, after they obtained permission to live in rural area and to work on land, some Jewish families from that area mostly rented the land from the State and moved there.

In 1898 there were 301 Jewish peasants in Kozlovichi, who rented for money about 328 hectares of land. 19 local Jews were officially busy in non-agricultural sphere: trade and business. In contrast with the other Jewish agricultural settlements, the work on land was popular among Kozlovichi Jews, majority of them did it for living.

In the end XIX - early XX century there were 2 praying houses in Kozlovichi.

Economic Review

Traditional activities of local population were agriculture, chopping of wood and fishing in the local small influxes of Ptych river. That settlement was on the low importance road from Glusk to Brozha.

During Russian principality the authorities did a lot to develop the region because of military and fiscal reasons mostly. But Kozlovichi itself was a State-owned agricultural settlement, as many other ones in the area, and the authorities saw no reason to change or develop anything new there.

In XIX, because of development of the All-Russian Market, new types of communications appeared in the area in 1873. Construction of the railroad and highways provoked new increase of development of local settlements. But it did not effect seriously the development of Kozlovichi, because it was an agricultural settlement and the railway station was far from it. But local Jews succeeded in agriculture, especially in cattle growing and there were many wealthy Jewish households in Kozlovichi. In non-agricultural sphere timber business was popular as usual in that area.

Since 1873 to 1917 the closest railway station was 36 km afar from the Village in Bobruisk. It seems that there were no significant particular enterprises in Kozlovichi before 1917.

In 1909 there were 69 wooden houses in Kozlovichi II.

General cultural information

At the end XIX - beg. XX century in Kozlovichi there was nothing special.
bullet- closest synagogue was 15 km afar in Glusk;
bullet- closest post office was 15 km afar in Glusk;
bullet- closest big enough settlement was 15 km afar (Glusk).



Copyright 1997-1998 Oleg Perzashkevich and Sergey Rybchenok
Reproduced for the web with permission. All rights reserved. Any use of this material is prohibited without permission from:

Minsk Historical Genealogy Group
Republic of Belarus
Minsk - 07, Zhukovskogo 9-2-190
Phone: 375-17-2240560
e-mail: minskhist@yahoo.com

Copyright © 2002      Nancy Holden    
All Rights Reserved.

Corrections, additions, criticisms and comments please contact Nancy Holden webmaster