Metadata: Valea Lungă Town Hall
Collection
- Country:
- Romania
- Holding institution:
- National Archives, Alba County Branch
- Holding institution (official language):
- Direcţia Judeţeană Alba a Arhivelor Naţionale
- Postal address:
- Str. Mihai Viteazu nr. 29; cod 510010; Alba Iulia; jud. Alba
- Phone number:
- +40 0258 810 996
- Email:
- alba@arhivelenationale.ro
- Reference number:
- Primaria Comunei Valea Lungă; fond 942; inv. 641
- Title:
- Valea Lungă Town Hall
- Title (official language):
- Primăria Valea Lungă
- Creator/accumulator:
- Valea Lungă Town Hall
- Date(s):
- 1909/1950
- Language:
- Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan
- Extent:
- 28 items
- Type of material:
- Textual material
- Physical condition:
- Good
- Scope and content:
- This collection primarily contains documents from 1945-1950. The two items listed in the inventory from 1909, a cadastral book and accompanying property registration forms, are not accessible at the National Archives. According to the local archivists, this material was retained by the Valea Lungă town hall. It could be interesting for researchers due to the fact that Valea Lungă had a relatively large Jewish community with its own synagogue, which is presumably recorded in such cadastral documents. There is one document registering animals from 1928 and otherwise the rest of the material is from after World War II and generally consists of administrative paperwork. There is one folder from 1945 on expropriated property and goods in the course of the agrarian reform of 1945. It contains lists of the people from whom property including farming equipment etc. was expropriated and lists of people who received this property. It is not entirely clear but it seems that the property was expropriated from the Germans, by and large (this list does not include a note on ethnicity), and given to Romanians and Roma, as well as on occasion a "poor" Hungarian or Saxon. Though Valea Lungă once had a significant Jewish community and its own synagogue, the Jews were "evacuated" to nearby towns during World War II and as such, there appear to be no Jews involved in these transactions, though it is possible that the list of expropriated property also contains Jewish property owners (this is not clear since Saxon and Jewish names were often similar/the same and because the Jewish property may have already been expropriated before and during the war).
- Archival history:
- The documents were maintained by the town hall of Valea Lungă until they were acquired by the National Archives.
- Access points: locations:
- Valea Lungă
- Subject terms:
- Agriculture
- Plunder
- Yerusha Network member:
- Leo Baeck Institute