Metadata: Departments of the Security Police in Borysław, Drohobycz, and Stryj (Consolidated Archival Fond)
Collection
- Country:
- Ukraine
- Holding institution:
- State Archive of the Lviv Region
- Holding institution (official language):
- Державний Архів Львівської області
- Postal address:
- ul. Pidvalna 13, 79008, L’viv
- Phone number:
- +38 (032) 235-47-22
- Email:
- archive_lviv@arch.gov.ua
- Reference number:
- F. R-1936
- Title:
- Departments of the Security Police in Borysław, Drohobycz, and Stryj (Consolidated Archival Fond)
- Title (official language):
- Відділення охоронної поліції в Бориславу, Дрогобичу, Стрию (ОАФ)
- Creator/accumulator:
- Department of the Security Police in Borysław; Department of the Security Police in Drohobycz; Department of the Security Police in Stryj
- Date(s):
- 1941/1944
- Language:
- German
- Polish
- Extent:
- 18 archival storage units
- Type of material:
- Textual material
- Scope and content:
- The fonds contains (no. 1) correspondence of the Borysław city commissar with the Borysław Department of the Security Police and the Borysław Municipal Administration about registering an apartment (with furniture) whose residents had been sent to a “Jewish camp” (concentration camp) (1943).
- Archival history:
- This consolidated archival fonds was created in 1983 by combining the fonds of the Department of the Security Police in Borysław with small-sized fonds of similar institutions in Drohobycz and Stryj as separate inventories of the former.
- Administrative/biographical history:
- The Departments of the Security Police in Borysław, Drohobycz and Stryj were all established by the German occupation administration in 1941 and were abolished in 1944.
- Access points: locations:
- Borysław
- System of arrangement:
- The fonds comprises three series: no. 1 – the Department of the Security Police in Borysław, no. 2 – in Drohobycz, no. 3 – in Stryj. Files in each series are arranged chronologically.
- Finding aids:
- Inventories are available.
- Yerusha Network member:
- Jewish Theological Seminary