Lwów pogrom (1914)
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You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Ukrainian. Click [show] for important translation instructions. Content in this edit is translated from the existing Ukrainian Wikipedia article at [[:uk:Погром у Львові (1914)]]; see its history for attribution. {{Translated|uk|Погром у Львові (1914)}} to the talk page. |
Lwów pogrom | |
---|---|
Location | Lwów, Austria-Hungary (Austrian Poland, now Ukraine) |
Date | September 27, 1914 |
Deaths | 38-49 |
Injured | over 443 |
Victims | Jews |
Perpetrators | Cossacks |
The Lwów pogrom (Polish: pogrom lwowski, German: Lemberger Pogrom) was a pogrom of the Jewish population of the city of Lwów (since 1945, Lviv, Ukraine) that took place on September 27, 1914, during World War I. Following a reported robbery, or shots, involving the Imperial Russian Army in the Lviv's Jewish quarter, Russian Cossacks assaulted nearby Jewish civilians, resulting in about 40 civilian fatalities and a number of injuries. In the aftermath, no Cossacks were court-martialed, but several Jews were arrested and released shortly afterward.[1]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Christopher Mick (2016). Lemberg, Lwow, and Lviv 1914-1947: Violence and Ethnicity in a Contested City. Purdue University Press. p. 41. ISBN 978-1-55753-671-6.
Categories:
- Anti-Jewish pogroms in the Russian Empire
- September 1914 events
- 1914 in the Russian Empire
- 1914 in Ukraine
- 1914 riots
- Jewish Russian and Soviet history
- Jewish Ukrainian history
- Jews and Judaism in Lviv
- Lviv in World War I
- History of the Cossacks
- World War I massacres
- World War I crimes by the Russian Empire
- Massacres in 1914
- 1914 murders in the Russian Empire
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- 1914 in Judaism