Ostryna

compiled from the sources below by Ellen Sadove Renck

Ostryna/Ostrino/Ostrina/Ostrin/Astrina/Austrina/Austryna at 53º44 24º32

and the dependent villages of Bicowce, Brzozowce Male, Brzozowce Wielkie, Krupiczowszczyzna, Lejki, Lojbiszka, Lyczkowo, Miniucowka, Niepracha, Obrab, Oleniszczowka, Pielowce, and Sawicze, Stawrowce, Stodolany, Szarkinie, Szaszkowszczyzna, Szostaki, Trajgi, Wyzgowszczyzna, Zadworzany
and the estates and hamlets: Baranicha, Brzozowce Male, Czaszcze, Dobromil, Dogiele, Kamieniszki, Kobrowce, KobrowceI and II, Kulbaczyn, Lojbiszka, ?yczkowce, Masiewnia, ?yczkowo, Lejki, Marjanpol, Mosciszcze, Niepracha

Astryna (Belorussian spelling--Ostrino (Russian spelling).

The archeologist V.V.Sedov identified Ostrino, situated on Astrynka River, as the ancient town Osteya. The town Ostrina, on the banks of the River Ostrinka, was once bigger and older than Shtutshin. Ostrino is first mentioned in an ancient Lithuanian book dating from 1450 and in the books published by the Great Duke of Lithuanian Principality and the King of Poland Kazimir IV Yagelovchik in 1441-1482. It is older than Shtutshin (Szczuczyn), and was once bigger. In 1487, the town was designated as a mestechko. In the beginning of the sixteenth century, the owners of Ostrino were Gleb Pronski, Fedor Hreptovich, and Semen Skindzer. Its name was first mentioned in connection with the appointment of the deputy Minister of Finance of the Duchy of Lithuania, the Honorable Pidko Bohadanovitch-Hariptovich, in 1508, as Governor of this town. In the fifteenth century to the beginning of the sixteenth century, Ostrino was owned by the King and was a volostj center of in Trokski povet. In 1520, the Duke of the Lithuanian Principality and King of Poland Zhigimont I Stary owed A.I.Hadkevich five hundred golden coins. Instead of paying the debt in gold, he decided to present Hadkevich with Ostrino.

In 1641, Ostrina received municipal status from King Vladislav IV. In sixteenth to eighteenth centuries, Ostrino was the center of the governing administration in Lida povet, Vilno voevodstvo. In 1641, Ostrino obtained the Magdeburg Right. In 1641 or 1666, the Lithuanian Governor of the House of Patz built a luxurious Catholic Cathedral in the town, together with the Nobles of the House of Di-Malgi (who originated in Spain).

In 1771, Ostrina was transferred to Andrei Zinkovich, and was turned into a provincial capital ("Starostvo"). The province included twenty-five villages, with a population 3,366, but the town declined in status, following the War of the Swedes. Close to the Partition of Poland, Ostrina had only 436 households paying head-tax, four hundred of which were Jewish households.In 1793, it became the volostj center. Russian Empire took control of Ostrino in 1795 when it became a mestechko of Lida Povet. In 1859, 970 people, who lived in 170 houses, also had a wooden Orthodox church, a chapel, and weekly fairs. The 1882 population was 1,985 people. According to the 1897 census, Ostrino had 2,410 people.

From 1921 to 1939, Ostrino belonged to Poland. In 1928, Ostrino was designated as a miasteczko (small city) and gmina wiejska (parish town), council office for the surroundings villages, in the Second Uchastok, Lida powiat, Nowogrodskie voevodstvo of Poland. The Justice of the Peace was in Wasiliszki and the Justice Court in Wilno. The 1928 miasteczko population was 1,574. The railway station was twenty-nine kilometers away in Rozanka nad Niemnen. The post office and telephone were in Ostryna and telegraph in Szczuczyn k. Lidy. Ostryna had one Orthodox church, two synagogues, a Merchants Association and tanneries. Markets were on Mondays and Fairs on the first of each month. Birthplace of Harry Austryn Wolfson (1887- ?) Ostryna then was a gmina center Schutchin powiat.

At the end of 1939, the territory became part of the Belorussian Soviet Socialist Republic. Beginning 1940, Ostrino was a little town in Vasilishki region. From June 24, 1941 till July 12, 1944, German troops occupied the region. From 1954, Ostrino is the center of Vasilishki region. From 1960 to 1962, it was in Skidel region.

From 1962 on, it is in Scucyn region, Grodno Oblast, Belarus. Today, Astryna is the center of a collective town "Sovetskaya Belarus", 22 kilometers s from Scucyn, 47 kilometers from Grodno, and 29 kilometers from the railway station in Rozanka on the Mosty-Lida line. Astryna is located at the crossroads of the Grodno-Lina Road and the Mosty-Radun-Vilnius Road. The 1990 population was 2,500 people. The town has a tile production factory, bakery, forestry, a secondary school, youth training center, a cinema, two libraries, two kindergartens, a hospital, a Lenin Monument, a Monument to Belorussian poet Tsetka, and two Monuments to the Victims of Fascism [Nazis].

Sources:
Ksiega Adresowa Handlowa, Warszawa Bydgoszcz 1929
Sachenka, B.I. [editor], Encyclopedia of the History of Belarus. Minsk: 1996. Volume 1, p. 228.
1923/Glowny Urzad Statystyczny Rzechzypospolitej polskiej

Casimir IV, Duke of Lithuania and King of Poland, created Ostrina in the 1400's to exploit the portion of the large, dense forest around Ostrina owned by Prince Drutski Lubetski. Ostrina, then part of the Grodno region, was represented at the Council of the Four Lands (1623-1764) that governed Jewish life of the region. About 1875, a large fire destroyed much of the town.

About 1880, the one thousand Jews represented about 50% of Ostrina's total population. Near the center of town on the Ostrinka River sat a windmill and quaint wooden bridge. Near the sandy marketplace and town well, the rural post
office opened three times per week. On one side of the marketplace stood the white church and its stone fence; on the other side stood the wooden synagogue, later replaced by a brick building. The Savitzky (cousin to Wolfson) family's brick, two-story home held a "krom or krama" (store) on the first floor. Offices of the police and lumber companies were nearby. Narrow dirt streets ran in curved lines for about half a mile surrounding the marketplace. The nearby log houses homes with shingle roofs, high windows with frames often painted red and white, built a few yards from each other, housed mainly Jews, merchants and artisans mainly. The independent and friendly peasants of Ostrina, never serfs, lived at the ends of each street in thatched dwelling with a well, pen, and trees. A cordial atmosphere, free of conflict, exists among the total population.
The nearest medical assistance was twenty miles away in Szczuczyn via the daily horse-drawn wagon leaving in the afternoon for Grodno, a thirty-two mile ride. Another wagoneer, transporter of beer and household and farm accessories, offered a one hundred twenty mile ride to Vilna on a weekly basis. The overgrown cemetery and its stones were leveled about 1975 by a
Soviet commissar over the protests of Ostryna residents who then refused to live in the proposed housing. The site now is a grassy field. A man named Rosenberg, the last Jew in Ostrina, died in the 1990's.

Need to convert old Russian units?

Other possible research sources:
EVREISKAYA ENCY.: XII: 146 [7 lines].

YAD VASHEM DOCUMENTS:

Grodno Archives
162-Ostrino Synagogue in Lidski uezd in Ostrino, #290, 12 chronicles 1897-1900
Fond 290 Synagogue in Ostrina, Lida yezd, Vilna Gub, 12 chronicles
1897-1900
1. Metrical Book marriage 1897 #38
2. " 1898 #30
3. " 1899 #30
4. " 1900 #40
5. " divorce 1897 #23
6. " 1898 #20
7. " 1899 #30
8. " 1900 #20
9. " death 1897 #70
10." 1898 #70
11." 1899 #90
12." 1900 #70
290 Fond 12 chronicles 1897-1900 Vilna Guberniya
Inv#1--10 Metrical Book of Death-Synagogue in Ostrino 1898
7 Ostrino Lida yezd, Vilnja Gub
290 Fond 12 chronicles 1897-1900 Vilna Guberniya
Inv#1--6 Metrical Book of Divorce-Synagogue in Ostrino 1898
20 Ostrino Lida yezd, Vilnja Gub
290 Fond 12 chronicles 1897-1900 Vilna Guberniya
Inv#1--8 Metrical Book of Divorce-Synagogue in Ostrino 1900
20 Ostrino Lida yezd, Vilnja Gub
290 Fond 12 chronicles 1897-1900 Vilna Guberniya
Inv#1--2 Metrical Book of marriage-Synagogue in Ostrino 1898
22 Ostrino Lida yezd, Vilnja Gub
290 Fond 12 chronicles 1897-1900 Vilna Guberniya
Inv#1--5 Metrical Book of Divorce-Synagogue in Ostrino 1897
28 Ostrino Lida yezd, Vilnja Gub
290 Fond 12 chronicles 1897-1900 Vilna Guberniya
Inv#1--3 Metrical Book of marriage-Synagogue in Ostrino 1899
30 Ostrino Lida yezd, Vilnja Gub
290 Fond 12 chronicles 1897-1900 Vilna Guberniya
Inv#1--7 Metrical Book of Divorce-Synagogue in Ostrino 1899
30 Ostrino Lida yezd, Vilnja Gub
290 Fond 12 chronicles 1897-1900 Vilna Guberniya
Inv#1--1 Metrical Book of marriage-Synagogue in Ostrino 1897
38 Ostrino Lida yezd, Vilnja Gub
290 Fond 12 chronicles 1897-1900 Vilna Guberniya
Inv#1--4 Metrical Book of marriage-Synagogue in Ostrino 1900
40 Ostrino Lida yezd, Vilnja Gub
290 Fond 12 chronicles 1897-1900 Vilna Guberniya
Inv#1--9 Metrical Book of Death-Synagogue in Ostrino 1897
70 Ostrino Lida yezd, Vilnja Gub
290 Fond 12 chronicles 1897-1900 Vilna Guberniya
Inv#1--12 Metrical Book of Death-Synagogue in Ostrino 1900
70 Ostrino Lida yezd, Vilnja Gub
290 Fond 12 chronicles 1897-1900 Vilna Guberniya
Inv#1--11 Metrical Book of Death-Synagogue in Ostrino 1899
90 Ostrino Lida yezd, Vilnja Gub
290 Fond 12 chronicles 1897-1900 Vilna Guberniya ?
Ostrino Lida yezd, Vilnja Gub
in Fond #165: Ostrino Synagogue in Lidski uezd in Ostrino, #290, 12 chronicles 1897-1900
Fond? lists of donations from the people of Ostrino to those who suffered the flood. very difficult to read and in Polish.

Address: Grodno Region Department, Director: Miss Karina Botrakova, National Belorussian Historical Archives of Grodno
and
National Belorussian Historical Archives, Grodno Region Department,
Director: Miss Karina Brotrakova
Teizengauz Ploschad 2, Grodno 230001Belarus
 

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