Posted: Sun Jan 29, 2012 12:15 pm
Post subject: parishes of austro hungary
Hello
Is anyone able to give me the name of the Protestant Parish in which Radautz would have been located in 1900. This is the Radautz now in Romania.
Also the Protestant Parish for Czernowitz around 1870. Czernowitz now in the Ukraine. Trying to trace birth records of my father and grandfather.
Jane Ann Downie
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Posted: Sun Jan 29, 2012 9:36 pm
Post subject:
Do you have a particular Protestant denomination known? Many people I talk to from present-day Poland consider Orthodox to be Protestant, and there is Orthodoxy in both Ukraine and Romania. We don't consider the Eastern Orthodox Church as Protestant, but your source may.
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Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 10:02 am
Post subject:
Thanks for your reply. My father was Polish and all I can recollect is that he was Protestant. He did marry a Roman Catholic lady and changed his religion at that point. She died in 1939. My father came to Scotland with the Polish Army where he met my mother.
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HenrykPO Top Contributor
Joined: 05 Dec 2008
Replies: 314
Location: London ON, CanadaBack to top |
Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 3:19 pm
Post subject:
From the Geographical Dictionary of Poland:
===Radautz (Ger), Radowce (Pol) had three churches: Roman (Latin) Catholic, Greek Catholic and Greek Orthodox. (There were many Germans, who probably were Evangelical Augsburg).
===Czernowitz (Ger), Czerniowce (Pol), Chernivtsi (Ukr) had two churches: Greek Catholic and Evangelical Augsburg
Last edited by Henryk on Mon Jan 30, 2012 4:03 pm; edited 1 time in total
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Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 3:46 pm
Post subject:
4 of 5 which could be misconstrued as "Protestant" by a Roman Catholic majority. Are you aware of any symbolism? such as a plain, straight cross with the south being longer, or a 4 equal-sided cross? or the fish? Such as jewelry, book inlays, etc.? Evangelicals don't wear crosses as jewelry but maybe the "greek fish" instead. Hope this helps.
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HenrykPO Top Contributor
Joined: 05 Dec 2008
Replies: 314
Location: London ON, CanadaBack to top |
Posted: Tue Jan 31, 2012 1:50 pm
Post subject:
There are LDS records available for both places:
Kirchenbuch, 1835-1939 Evangelische Kirche Radautz (Bukowina)
Kirchenbuchduplikat, 1848-1915 Evangelische Kirche Radautz (Bukowina)
Metrical books, 1900 Orthodox Church. Radautz (Bukowina)
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=Civil registration, 1930-1941 Czernowitz (Bukowina). Civil Registrar (Main Author)
Notes Microreproduction of original manuscripts at the Chernivtsi State Archive.
Civil registration of births, marriages and deaths for Czernowitz, Bukowina, Austria; later Cernăuţi, Cernăuţi, Romania; now Chernivt︠s︡i, Chernivt︠s︡i, Chernivt︠s︡i, Ukraine. Includes religion of person being registered. Text in Romanian.
Chernivtsi State Archive: Record group 1245, series 1, file 949 -- Record group 1245, series 3, files 158-166, 169-172.
=Kirchenbuchduplikat, 1797-1913 Evangelische Kirche Czernowitz (Bukowina)
=Metrical books : Hari︠a︡chs′ka Church, 1801-1925 Orthodox Church. Czernowitz (Bukowina)
=Metrical books : Hospital′s′ka Church, 1919-1924 Orthodox Church. Czernowitz (Bukowina)
=Metrical books : Mykolais'ka Church, 1801-1923 Orthodox Church. Czernowitz (Bukowina)
=Metrical books : Paraskevskai︠a︡ Church, 1802-1929 Orthodox Church. Czernowitz (Bukowina)
=Metrical books : Penitentiary Church, 1856-1926 Orthodox Church. Czernowitz (Bukowina)
=Metrical books : Roshs'ka Church, 1784-1933 Orthodox Church. Czernowitz (Bukowina)
=Metrical books, 1820-1898 Evangelical Lutheran Church. Chernivt︠s︡i (Bukowina)
=Metrical books, 1833-1893 Armenian Apostolic Church. Czernowitz (Bukowina)
=Metrical books, 1920-1931 Orthodox Church. Czernowitz (Bukowina)
Access to microfilm rolls with more recent information might be restricted due to privacy laws.
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