Rakaŭ
Rakaŭ (Belarusian: Ракаў, Rakaŭ; Russian: Раков, Rakov; Polish: Raków, Yiddish: ראקאוויי, Rakavy) is an urban settlement in Valozhyn District, Minsk Region, Belarus.[1] It stands on the river Islach 40 km (25 mi) from Valozhyn and 39 km (24 mi) from Minsk, the capital of Belarus. Population about 2,100 (2006).
Rakaŭ
Ракаў | |
---|---|
City | |
![]() A street in Rakaŭ in 2014. | |
![]() Coat of arms | |
![]() ![]() Rakaŭ | |
Coordinates: 53°58′02″N 27°03′10″E | |
Population (2006) | |
• Total | 2,600 |
History
This place has been inhabited since ancient times. This was proven when the settlement 'Valy' ('Валы') was found here on the river Islach. In the 16th century, these ruins were used as a platform for feudal castle building. The Rakaŭ castle can be found on the map created by Tomash Makovski in 1613. In the 14th century documents, settlements near-contemporary Rakaŭ are mentioned for the first time. Rakaŭ itself is mentioned in 15th-century chronicles. In 1465 Kazimir Yagelon gave Rakaŭ as a gift to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania chancellor Mihail Kyazhgailo. Kyazhgailo's family-owned Rakaŭ for almost 100 years. Only in the middle of the 16th century, Rakaŭ went to the Zavish family as a part of an inheritance. In the 17th century, the village belonged to the Sangushki family. They constructed there a Dominican Catholic cloister in 1686 and a wooden castle, the Basilian Uniat cloister, in 1702.
Some sources state that by the end of the 18th century Rakaŭ belonged to the Ogiński family. This period lasted until the January Uprising, which members of the Ogiński family participated in. To punish the Ogińskis for their treachery, the Russian Empress Catherine the Great seized Rakaŭ and gave it to General Saltykov. In 1793, the same year Rakaŭ became part of the Russian Empire, the first stone castle in the city was constructed. After the January Uprising, it was turned into an Orthodox Church, which still exists to this day.
In 1804, the Zdzehovsky family bought Rakaŭ from Saltykov, and owned it until 1939. This period marked a time of prosperity for Rakaŭ: In 1843, they opened manufacturers to produce agricultural machines. By 1880, about 16 glass manufactures worked in Rakaŭ. The village had Magdeburg rights and privileges. There were two watermills, brick manufacture, and lumber mill, postal telegraph office (its ruins still remain). By the end of the 19th century, the population of Rakaŭ was about 3,600 people, almost 60% of whom were Jews. From 1904 to 1906, the construction of the Mother of God Rosaria and the Holy Spirit Castle was finished. It was done on donations of the local people, and is an example of Neo-Gothic architecture. In 1915 the local citizen Nevah-Girsha Haimov Pozdnyakov organized automobile shipping between Rakaŭ and Zaslavl', a nearby town.
After the Treaty of Riga of 1921 came into effect, Rakaŭ became part of the Second Polish Republic. It was the centre of Wilno voivodeship. Finally, Rakaŭ become part of the Soviet Union and Belarus in 1939 when the Red Army invaded Poland according to the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact. On 21 August 1941, a ghetto was established in Rakaŭ. The ghetto lasted until 4 February 1942, when the ghetto's population was herded into one of the ghetto's four synagogues and burned to death.[2]
Sightseeing
- Glacial conglomerate near the root Minsk - Volozhin
- Ancient settlement
- Jewish Cemetery (1642)
- Our Saviour and Transfiguration Church (1793)
- Catholic St. Ann Chapel (1862)
- Orthodox cemetery brama (19th century)
- Mother of God Rosaria and the Holy Spirit Kostel (1904–1906)
- Crypt-burial vault of Drutskiya-Lubetskiya
- Felix Yanushkevich Ethnographic museum.
Notable residents
- Vyachaslau Ragoisha, translator, author articles about the history of Belarusian literature
- Jazep Januszkiewicz, coauthor of a book about the history of Belarusian literature, writer
- Avraham Kalmanowitz, Rav of Rakov
- Ida Rosenthal, Russian Empire-born American dressmaker and businesswoman who co-founded Maidenform
References
External links
![]() |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rakaŭ. |
- The murder of the Jews of Rakaw during World War II, at Yad Vashem website
- Rakov, Belarus at JewishGen