Metadata: Executive Committee of the Andreevo-Ivanovka District Council of Toilers’ Deputies; Andreevo-Ivanovka
Collection
- Country:
- Ukraine
- Holding institution:
- State Archive of the Odessa Region
- Holding institution (official language):
- Державний архів Одеської області; Государственный архив Одесской области
- Postal address:
- 18, Zhukovskogo str., Оdessa, 65026, Ukraine
- Phone number:
- 380 (48) 722-9365
- Web address:
- http://archive.odessa.gov.ua/en/
- Email:
- archive@odessa.gov.ua
- Reference number:
- F. R-1058
- Title:
- Executive Committee of the Andreevo-Ivanovka District Council of Toilers’ Deputies; Andreevo-Ivanovka
- Title (official language):
- Исполнительный комитет Андреево-Ивановского районного Совета депутатов трудящихся, с. Андреево-Ивановка; Виконавчий комітет Андрієво-Іванівської районної Ради депутатів трудящих, с. Андрієво-Іванівка
- Creator/accumulator:
- Executive Committee of the Andreevo-Ivanovka District Council of Toilers’ Deputies; Andreevo-Ivanovka
- Date(s):
- 1923/1958
- Language:
- Russian
- Ukrainian
- Extent:
- (1,044 files)
- Type of material:
- Textual material
- Scope and content:
- [From 1910-27, the village of Andreevo-Ivanovka was called Chernovo.] 1058: Materials housed in the fonds include proceedings and minutes of sessions of district Extraordinary State Commissions for April-October 1944, which contain information on mass shootings of the Jewish population during the occupation of what is now the Odesa/Odessa region by German and Romanian forces in 1941-44. Also included are several documents from the mid-1920s containing information on the resettlement movement, including instructions on operating procedures for a commission tasked with registering Jews interested in transitioning to agricultural labour, and also questionnaires and family forms for settlers (op. 1, 1926-28). There is also a list of houses of worship and members of the clergy (including a synagogue in the town of Chernovo, 1923) in the territory of the Isaevo district (Odessa province) (op. 1); etc.
- Administrative/biographical history:
- These bodies were established by decree (10 March 1923) of the All-Ukrainian Central Executive Committee (VUTsIK) and the Ukrainian SSR Council of People’s Commissars as executive committees of district councils of workers’, peasants’, and Red Army deputies; they constituted the supreme executive and administration state authorities in the territory under their jurisdiction. From 1923-30, they were subordinate to area executive committees; from 1930-32, they were under the immediate jurisdiction of the VUTsIK; and from 1932-37, they were subordinate to the Odessa Regional Executive Committee. (The Odessa district was established in 1937, and the Balta district, formerly part of the Moldavian Autonomous SSR, was added to the Odessa region on 13 August 1940.) These bodies in turn had oversight of the operations of settlement and village councils. They suspended operations during the German-Romanian occupation of the region’s territory in 1941-44. Upon the adoption of the USSR Constitution of 1936 and the Ukrainian SSR Constitution of 1937, they were renamed executive committees of district councils of toilers’ deputies; and per the USSR Constitution of 1977 and the Ukrainian SSR Constitution of 1978, of people’s deputies. The Andreevo-Ivanovka District Executive Committee was dissolved on 21 January 1959, and the Odessa and Tsebrikovo District Executive Committees on 30 December 1962 (in connection with the liquidation of these districts themselves). Operations of the Balta and Berezovka District Executive Committees ceased when, with these bodies as their basis, district state administrations were established pursuant to the edict of the president of Ukraine (14 April 1992) “On the statute on local state administration” and the law of Ukraine (9 April 1999) “On local state administrations.”
- Access points: locations:
- Ukraine
- System of arrangement:
- Inventories in the fonds are systematised according to the structural-chronological principle.
- Finding aids:
- Inventories are available.
- Yerusha Network member:
- Jewish Theological Seminary