Glinki
Sources:
- Jewish encyclopedia of Brockhaus & Efron;
- The All South-Western Territory: reference and address book of the Kyiv, Podolsk and Volyn provinces. Printing house L.M. Fish and P.E. Wolfson, 1913;
- The volost's and the most important settlements of European Russia. Edition of the Central Statistical Committee. The provinces of Little Russia and Southwest. St. Petersburg, 1885.
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Glinki in the 1913 reference book |
The village was founded in 1855 as a Jewish agricultural colony in the Rivne volost, Rivne district, Volyn province.
In 1919-39 - in the Volyn Voivodeship as part of Poland, in 1939-91 - as part of the Ukrainian SSR.
In 1855, 12 Jewish families lived in Glinki,
in 1897 - 346 Jews (38%),
In 1921 - 317 Jews (28%).
The colony was founded by 12 families, of which 8 soon gone due to oppression by the authorities and the frequent use of bodily punishment.
At the end of the 19th century, 138 Jews cultivated 64 acres of land.
In the reference book of 1885, Glinki is listed as a former state village in which the Orthodox Church, a Jewish prayer house, a school, an inn acted.
In 1913, the Jews Shteynberg and Pereltsvayg owned a mill.
In 1919, a pogrom occurred in the colony arranged by the troops of the directory; several Jews were killed, houses were plundered.
In 1942, the Jews of Glinki were sent to the ghetto Rivne.
Rivne district, Rivne region