1834 |
1850 |
1858 |
|
| Father | Mother | Spouse | Children | Sources | File Dates |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zalman Chervin | no information |
Mikhlia Fruma Itka Yudova |
with Mikhlia: Leiba Chervin Bunia (Benya) Chervin Lipman (Libman) Chervin Zalman Chervin Leizer (Lazar) Chervin David Chervin Erukhim Chervin Movsha Chervin With Itka Diska Chervin Adopted Aryeh Konoval |
Known from record in the 1858 Revision List for Svir, without the
first three children Geni profile managed by Pavel Bernshtam. |
2005; 2026 |
Biographical information:
Born 1802.
1834 record shows first four children.
1850 record lists only Lipman and Zalman, and has notation: did not appear, and no current age.
Reregistered to Ekaterinoslav (the Jewish agricultural colonies) in 1853 according to 1858 list.
1834:
Name given as Koufman'. Aged 30.
Sons Leiba, Libman, Zalman aged 13, 8, 6. Daughter Bunya aged 10.
Wife's name looks like Miflya Khrumya. Aged 31.
1858:
Went to Ekaterinoslav in 1853 (with 4 sons). Age given as 48 at 9th revision
(presumably, 1850).
Nadezhnaya Colony was one of a number of
Jewish Agricultural Colonies of the southern Ukraine (#13)
created by the Russian government after the annexation (1795) of
a part of Poland. Some of their descendants emigrated to agricultural
colonies supported by the Baron Rothschild in Argentina after 1900.
After a difficult start the colony was successful until the time of
the Russian Civil War, when one third of the colony left
as a result of multiple attacks. It is unclear how much remained by the time
of the German invasion.
The colony was also known as "Der Vilner" (Vilensky, Vilen) as the
initial settlers were from the Vilna area.
Now it is the village of Nadiyne (Zaporizzhia District, Ukraine).