Brody (, ; ; ; ) is a city in Zolochiv Raion, Lviv Oblast, western Ukraine. It is located in the valley of the upper Styr, approximately northeast of the oblast capital, Lviv. Brody hosts the administration of Brody urban hromada, one of the of Ukraine. Population:
Brody is the junction of the Druzhba pipeline and Odesa–Brody oil pipelines.
Brody was granted Magdeburg rights by Polish King Stephen Báthory by virtue of a privilege issued in Lublin on 22 August 1584.Sadok Barącz, Wolne miasto handlowe Brody, Lwów, 1865, p. 7 (in Polish) It was named Lubicz after the Lubicz coat of arms of the founder, Stanisław Żółkiewski, one of the most accomplished military commanders in Polish history (not to be confused with Lubech, Lubecz). Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich, Tom I, Warsaw, 1880, p. 372 (in Polish) The king also set up three annual . These privileges were confirmed by King Sigismund III Vasa in 1597 at the Warsaw Sejm.Barącz, Op. cit., p. 9-10 Already in documents from 1598 the city appeared under the name Brody.Barącz, Op. cit., p. 10 It was a private town of the Polish Crown, owned by houses of Żółkiewski, Koniecpolski and Potocki.
From the 17th century until the Holocaust the city was populated not only by Ruthenians and Polish people, but also by a significant number of (70% of the town's population), Armenians, and Greeks. From 1629, the city became the property of Stanisław Koniecpolski, another of the most distinguished military commanders in Polish history,Barącz, Op. cit., p. 11 who ordered the construction of the Brody Castle (1630–1635). The castle, or rather the fortress, was designed by the French military engineer Guillaume Le Vasseur de Beauplan. It was one of the strongest fortresses located on the route of frequent Tatars and Cossacks invasions. King Władysław IV Vasa, wanting to reward and assist Koniecpolski in the construction of the fortress, issued a privilege in 1633 in Kraków, in which he equated fairs in Brody with those in Lublin and Toruń, granted staple right and exempted city residents from taxes for 15 years.Barącz, Op. cit., p. 17-18 Under the patronage of Koniecpolski, the city flourished. In 1637 he founded a school in which he employed lecturers from the Kraków Academy, Poland's leading university.Barącz, Op. cit., p. 21-22 Its first director was Jan Marcinkowski.Barącz, Op. cit., p. 22 In 1643 he founded a silk and wool fabric manufacture in the city, one of the leading manufactories of this type throughout Poland.Barącz, Op. cit., p. 17 Stanisław Koniecpolski died in Brody on 11 March 1646.Barącz, Op. cit., p. 27-28 On 30 June funeral ceremonies took place in Brody.Barącz, Op. cit., p. 28-29
In 1648, during the Cossack uprising, the castle took eight weeks for Bohdan Khmelnytsky to capture. Notably, according to the book History of the Rus, the town's Jewish population was spared after the sack. The Cossacks destroyed and plundered the city. The Jews of Brody were found not to have been engaged in alleged maltreatment of the Orthodox Christian (Rus) population and were only required to pay a "moderate tribute" in kind.: "А по симъ правиламъ и обширный торговый городъ Броды, наполненный почти одними Жидами, оставленъ въ прежней свободѣ и цѣлости, яко признанный отъ Рускихъ жителей полезнымъ для ихъ оборотовъ и заработковъ, а только взята отъ Жидовъ умѣренная контрибуція сукнами, полотнами и кожами для пошитья реестровому войску мундировъ и обуви, да для продовольствія войскъ нѣкоторая провизія."
In 1704, Brody was purchased by Potocki. In 1734, the fortress was destroyed by Russian troops and was later replaced by Stanisław Szczęsny Potocki's palace in the Baroque style.
A crossroads and a Jewish trade center in the 19th century, the city is considered to be one of the . It was particularly famous for the Brodersänger or , who were among the first to publicly perform Yiddish language songs outside of Purim plays and wedding parties.
The promulgation of the May Laws, and the massive exodus of Russian Jews which was its result, took the leaders of Western Jewry completely by surprise. Throughout 1881, hundreds of immigrants kept arriving in Brody daily. Their arrival placed the existing Austrian and German-influenced ethnic Jews in a quandary. The comfortable middle-class Jewish community of Central and Western Europe looked instinctively to the Alliance Israélite Universelle, the world's largest and most respected Jewish philanthropic agency, to bring order out of chaos, to cope with the huge influx of newcomers.Howard M. Sachar
Throughout centuries of Jewish life in Brody until the murderous events of the Holocaust, Jews and Gentiles lived a mostly segregated life, with distinct and separate social as well as religious life.
In September 1942 the Aktion Reinhardt started in Brody, leaving 300 people dead. Two thousand people were deported to Bełżec where they would be murdered in the . In December 1942 the German occupiers forced the Jewish population to resettle in a ghetto inside the town, where 6,000 people lived in January 1943. During 1943, Aktion Reinhardt was continued with thousands being killed in the nearby woods in March and April, the Ghetto being liquidated on 21 May 1943. More than 3,000 inhabitants were deported, presumably to Majdanek, but hundreds had already been killed in the Ghetto. Many houses were set on fire to drive out those who had remained hidden there.
The Brody Museum of History and District Ethnography was founded in 2001.
Until 18 July 2020, Brody was the administrative center of Brody Raion. The raion was abolished in July 2020 as part of the administrative reform of Ukraine, which reduced the number of raions in Lviv Oblast to seven. The area of Brody Raion was merged into Zolochiv Raion.
Austrian Empire
Polish Republic
World War II
The Jews in Brody
Jews in Brody
according to Austrian-Hungarian CensusErgebnisse der Volkszählungen der K. K. Statistischen Central-Kommission u.a., in: Anson Rabinbach: The Migration of Galician Jews to Vienna. Austrian History Yearbook, Volume XI, Berghahn Books/Rice University Press, Houston 1975, S. 46/47 (Table III)80.9% 76.3% n. a. 72.1% 67.5%
Holocaust in Brody
After the war
Geography
Climate
Gallery
Notable people
Nearby towns
See also
Notes
Sources
External links
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