Wikipedia:WikiProject Stolpersteine/Stolpersteine in the Prešov Region
Stolpersteine is the German name for stumbling blocks collocated all over Europe by German artist Gunter Demnig. They remember the fate of the victims of Nazi Germany being murdered, deported, exiled or driven to suicide. The Stolpersteine in the Prešovský kraj (pronounced [ˈpreʃowskiː ˈkraj]), the Prešov Region of present-day Slovakia (formerly Czechoslovakia), were collocated in 2013.
Generally, the stumbling blocks are posed in front of the building where the victims had their last self chosen residence. The name of the Stolpersteine in Slovak is: pamätných kameňov, memorial stones.
The list is sortable; the basic order follows the alphabet according to the last name of the victim.
Stone | Inscription | Location | Life and death |
---|---|---|---|
HERE LIVED
ANDREJ (BANDI) GELLÉRT BORN 1908 DEPORTED 1942 TO AUSCHWITZ DIED OF TYPHUS THERE 28.7.1942 |
Hlavná ulica 50 – Čierny orol. 48°59′47″N 21°14′30″E / 48.99643°N 21.24167°E |
Andrej Gellért | |
HERE LIVED
EMANUEL GELLÉRT BORN 1868 DEPORTED 24.7.1942 TO POLAND DIED ON TRANSPORT DUE TO DENIAL OF INSULIN |
Hlavná ulica 50 – Čierny orol. 48°59′47″N 21°14′30″E / 48.99643°N 21.24167°E |
Emanuel Gellért | |
HERE LIVED
HERMINE GELLÉRT NÉE WALDMANN BORN 1875 DEPORTED 1942 TO POLAND MURDERED |
Hlavná ulica 50 – Čierny orol. 48°59′47″N 21°14′30″E / 48.99643°N 21.24167°E |
Hermine Gellért | |
HERE LIVED
IMRE (BIMBI) GELLÉRT BORN 1904 DEPORTED 12.4.1942 TO POLAND MURDERED |
Hlavná ulica 50 – Čierny orol. 48°59′47″N 21°14′30″E / 48.99643°N 21.24167°E |
Imre Gellért | |
HERE LIVED
MARGIT GELLÉRT BORN 1898 DEPORTED 24.7.1942 TO POLAND MURDERED |
Hlavná ulica 50 – Čierny orol. 48°59′47″N 21°14′30″E / 48.99643°N 21.24167°E |
Lublin on 12 May 1942. Margit Gellért and her husband were murdered by the Nazi regime.[11] | Margit Gellért née Meitner was born on 1 April 1898 in Prešov. She was married to Imre Gellért, with whom she lived in Prešov. According to the inscription on the stone, she was deported on 24 July 1942. According to Yad Vashem, she was deported to|
HERE LIVED
MIKULÁŠ (MIKLÓS) GELLÉRT BORN 1900 DEPORTED 4.4.1942 TO POLAND MURDERED |
Hlavná ulica 50 – Čierny orol. 48°59′47″N 21°14′30″E / 48.99643°N 21.24167°E |
Žilina transit camp to Lublin on 31 March 1942, according to the inscription on the stone, the deportation took place on 4 April 1942. Mikuláš Gellért did not survive the Shoah.[12]
His father, Emanuel, was deported at a later date and died during the transport to Sobibor. His mother, his sister Eta, the brothers Andrej and Imre as well as his sister-in-law Margit were all murdered by the Nazi regime. Brother Alexander and Sister Edith could survive. | Mikulás Gellért, also Miklós, was born in 1900 in Prešov. His parents were Emanuel Gellért and Hermine née Waldmann (both above). He had five siblings, three brothers and two sisters. He was married to Aranka. The Gellért family owned a hotel where Mikuláš worked as a clerk. Mikuláš was the first of his family to be deported. According to Yad Vashem, he was deported from the |
HERE LIVED
HELEN PREISZ NÉE ROTMAN BORN 1890 DEPORTED 12.10.1942 TO AUSCHWITZ MURDERED 1944 |
Sabinovská ulica č.15 49°00′17″N 21°14′18″E / 49.00473°N 21.23844°E |
Uzhhorod. She was married to Ludovít Preisz (see below). The couple had at least two daughters – Kornelia, later married as Gellért, and Katarina. The family owned a Villa in Prešov. Helen Preisz and her husband were both arrested in Bratislava. On 12 October 1944 they were deported to Auschwitz concentration camp. Both were murdered by the Nazi regime in the course of the Shoah.[13]
The two daughters could survive. | Helen Preisz née Rotman was born on 10 May 1890 or on 8 August 1891 in |
HERE LIVED
L'UDOVÍT PREISZ BORN 1885 DEPORTED 12.10.1942 TO AUSCHWITZ MURDERED 1944 |
Sabinovská ulica č.15 49°00′17″N 21°14′18″E / 49.00473°N 21.23844°E |
Auschwitz concentration camp. Both were murdered by the Nazi regime in the course of the Shoah.[14][15]
The two daughters could survive. | Ludovít Preisz, auch Lajos, was born on 29 August 1885 in Prešov. He was married to Helen née Rotman (see above). The couple had at least two daughters – Kornelia, later married as Gellért, and Katarina. The family owned a Villa in Prešov and ran a company, Ludovít Preisz and sons , in which rum and liqueurs were produced. In 1941 this company was compulsorily liquidated. Ludovít Preisz and her husband were both arrested in Bratislava. On 12 October 1944 they were deported to |
HERE LIVED
ETA SILBERSTEIN NÉE GELLÉRT BORN 1893 DEPORTED 1942 TO POLAND MURDERED |
Hlavná ulica 50 – Čierny orol. 48°59′47″N 21°14′30″E / 48.99643°N 21.24167°E |
Betlanovce. On 28 May 28, 1942, she was deported to the Izbica Ghetto together with her husband of Spišská Nová Ves. Eta Silberstein and her husband Arnold did not survived the Shoah.[16][17]
Also her parents and three of her brothers, Andrej, Mikuláš and Imre, were deported and murdered by the Nazi regime. Only Alexander and Edith could survive. | Eta Silberstein née Gellért, also Ethel, was born in 1893 in Prešov. Her parents were Emanuel Gellért and Hermine née Waldmann. She had five siblings. She was married to Arnold Silberstein. The couple lived in
Dates of collocations
[edit]The Stolpersteine in this region were posed by Gunter Demnig himself on 23 July 2013.[18]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Works by or about WikiProject Stolpersteine/Stolpersteine in the Prešov Region in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
- ^ https://archive.org/details/AndrejGellert-RozmarinRuzaLalijarosemaryRoseLilac
- ^ Andrej Gellért in der Zentralen Datenbank der Namen der Holocaustopfer der Gedenkstätte Yad Vashem
- ^ Staatliches Museum Auschwitz-Birkenau (Hrsg.) (1995), Sterbebücher von Auschwitz, Band 2: Namensverzeichnis A-L (Nachdruck 2012) (in German), Berlin/Boston: De Gruyter, p. 342, ISBN 978-3-11-097409-6
- ^ "REGIÓN MILANA ORSZÁGHA: Nezabúdať a pripomínať". www.slovenskyrozhlad.sk (in German). Retrieved 2016-05-06.
- ^ Patrik Derfiňák (2010). "CEMJATA – Z HISTÓRIE PREŠOVSKÝCH PRÍMESTSKÝCH KÚPEĽOV" (PDF). Annales historici Presovienses (9): 191. ISSN 1336-7528.
- ^ Emanuel Gellert in der Zentralen Datenbank der Namen der Holocaustopfer der Gedenkstätte Yad Vashem
- ^ Hermine Gellert in der Zentralen Datenbank der Namen der Holocaustopfer der Gedenkstätte Yad Vashem
- ^ The Central Database of Shoah Victim's Names: HERMINE GELLÉRT, Yad Vashem, retrieved on 24 August 2017
- ^ The Central Database of Shoah Victim's Names: IMRE GELLÉRT, Yad Vashem, retrieved on 24 August 2017
- ^ The Central Database of Shoah Victim's Names: MARGIT GELLÉRT, Yad Vashem, retrieved on 24 August 2017
The Central Database of Shoah Victim's Names: MARGIT GELLERT, Yad Vashem, retrieved on 24 August 2017 - ^ The Central Database of Shoah Victim's Names: MIKLOS GELLERT, Yad Vashem, retrieved on 24 August 2017
The Central Database of Shoah Victim's Names: MIKULAS GELERT, Yad Vashem, retrieved on 24 August 2017 - ^ The Central Database of Shoah Victim's Names: Helen Preisz, Yad Vashem, retrieved on 13 August 2017
The Central Database of Shoah Victim's Names: Helen Preisz, Yad Vashem, retrieved on 13 August 2017 - ^ Likvidácie podnikov Židov (1941-1942), retrieved on 13 August 2017
- ^ The Central Database of Shoah Victim's Names: Ludovit Preisz, Yad Vashem, retrieved on 13 August 2017
- ^ The Central Database of Shoah Victim's Names: Arnold Silberstein, Yad Vashem, retrieved on 13 August 2017
- ^ The Central Database of Shoah Victim's Names: Eta Silberstein, Yad Vashem, retrieved on 13 August 2017
The Central Database of Shoah Victim's Names: Eta Silberstein, Yad Vashem, retrieved on 13 August 2017
The Central Database of Shoah Victim's Names: Eta Silberstein, Yad Vashem, retrieved on 13 August 2017 - ^ Announcement of the Collocations in Smolenice, retrieved on 23 August 2017
External links
[edit]- stolpersteine.eu, Demnig's website
- Yad Vashem, Central Database of Shoah Victims' Names
Trnava Region
Category:Holocaust memorials
Stolpersteine