A Brief Town History
            Mattersdorf was one  of the Sheva Kehilloth (Seven Holy Communities) in Esterházy lands that  were renowned for their piety and the eminent rabbis they produced. The others  communities were Eisenstadt, Frauenkirchen, Lackenbach, Kittsee, Kobersdorf,  and Deutschkreuz (Tzehlem in Yiddish). Today, Mattersburg (Mattersdorf) lies in  the midsection of Burgenland, a long, narrow strip of land between the  foothills of the Alps and the lowlands of Hungary. Since 1921, Burgenland has  formed Austria’s easternmost province and is famous for its many castles and  vineyards. However, in the 1700s it was Hungary’s westernmost region and  together with territory that is now Slovakia, was known as Royal Hungary, part  of the Austrian Habsburg Empire. 
            According to tradition, six  brothers named Schischa who fled Spain in the 14th or 15th centuries found a  new home in Hungary and started the Mattersdorf Jewish community. Nonetheless,  Jews may have settled in Mattersdorf as early as 800 CE. The synagogue, which  was destroyed during the Holocaust, reportedly had a wall tablet that marked  the building’s construction date as 1354. By 1569 there were 67 Jews living in Mattersdorf  in 11 houses. The town lay along the route of the Turkish invasion of Vienna  and was looted numerous times by the Turks between 1544 and 1671. In 1622,  Mattersdorf came under the rule of the Esterházy family, Hungarian nobles loyal  to the Austrian Habsburg monarchy. 
            In 1671, the Habsburg emperor,  Leopold I, expelled the Jews from Habsburg territories but they were permitted  to return a few months later. The Mattersdorf Jews found that in their short  absence Christians had claimed their houses and only in 1675 were the Jews  allowed to buy back their own homes. In 1694, Paul Esterházy issued a letter of  protection to the Jews of Mattersdorf, which was confirmed by his heirs and  updated in 1800. 
            In a scene right out of “Fiddler on the Roof” the Jews from the  neighboring community of Neufeld (who were also under the protection of the  Esterházys) were permanently expelled from their homes in 1739, ostensibly to  stop the spread of an epidemic. They were resettled in Mattersdorf and the six  other Jewish communities in the region. Mattersdorf’s Jewish community had to  absorb 186 new residents into its small and already overcrowded Jewish quarter  and assume additional financial burden. By 1744, about 416 persons inhabited 33  houses in Mattersdorf’s Jewish section.[8] The number increased to 897 Jews by 1811, but shrank during the cholera  epidemic from 1830-1832.  
            The  Mattersdorf Jewish community government consisted of an 11-man council lead by  the Rosh Ha-Kahal (head of the community), who was typically one of the  wealthiest men in town and quite learned. Other council members included two  community elders, two city elders, three tzedakah (charity) treasurers, and  three appointees in charge of a special tax collection. Additionally two  trustees solicited funds for Torah study (just on Mondays) and three trustees  collected money for Jews in Palestine. Leadership changed gradually in  Mattersdorf as the men aged, died, or moved away and so tracking changes in the  council has genealogical value. 
            Excerpted with  permission from “Constructing a Town-Wide Genealogy: Jewish Mattersdorf,  Hungary 1698-1939” by Carole Garbuny  Vogel and Yitzchok N. Stroh, Avotaynu: The International Review of  Jewish Genealogy, Vol. XXIII. No. 1, Spring 2007. See: http://www.recognitionscience.com/cgv/research%20mattersdorf.htm 
              
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