ShirekChamove Tree » Aggregation of Brand Brandt SCHEREK (± 1730-????)

Persoonlijke gegevens Aggregation of Brand Brandt SCHEREK 

  • Hij is geboren rond 1730 in Poznan, Wlkp., Poland.Bron 1
  • Alternatief: Hij is geboren rond 1730 in Poznan, Wlkp., Poland.
  • Een kind van Putative Scherek

Gezin van Aggregation of Brand Brandt SCHEREK


Kind(eren):

  1. Asig Scherek  ± 1775-????
  2. Daniel David Scherek  1775-1837 
  3. Aron Brand Brandt Scherek  ± 1780-???? 
  4. Helene Scherrka Scherek  ± 1780-???? 
  5. Mordechi Scherek  ± 1780-???? 
  6. Marcus Scherek  1781-1863 
  7. Isaac Scherek  1784-???? 
  8. Aron Hirsch SCHEREK  1785-1875 
  9. Auguste Scherek  1786-1883
  10. Jette Auguste Scherek  1786-1883 
  11. Tobias Scherek  1787-1848 
  12. David Scherek  1789-1837 
  13. Salomon Scherek  ± 1790-???? 
  14. Wolff W Scherek  ± 1790-???? 
  15. Samuel Scherek  1795-1875 
  16. A Scherck Scherek  ± 1800-????
  17. Kauffman Scherek  ± 1800-????
  18. Misss Muiller Muller  ± 1830-???? 
  19. Carl Scherke Scherek  ± 1779-???? 


Notities over Aggregation of Brand Brandt SCHEREK

Jewish German Surnames:
Chetrit (morocco)
SCHENK (Lutheran, few Jewish, few Catholic),
Scherak (not DNA, not Poznan),
SCHERCK (1 Civil, Poznan/same people Schereck),
SCHEREK (some not Jewish; Schereck is a typical German form, if the short and hard K mostly written as ck in German. 1 in Poznan),
SCHEREK (all civil),
Scherick (Catholic marriage),
Scherik (1 Catholic),
Scherk (Protestant marriages PMs and Civil),
Scherke/Scheerke (Protestant, few Civil),
Scherok (PM),
Scherrick (none Poznan),
Scherrk (Civil & Protestant),
Schiereck (none Poznan),
Schierke (PMs),
Schirek (none Poznan),
Schirke (PMs),
Schirok (PMs & few Civil),
Schorig (none Poznan),
Schreck (some catholic, one Protestant),
Schrek (Protestant),
Schurek (Catholic),
Schyrak not DNA,
Sherick (none Poznan),
Sherik (none Poznan),
Sheetrit (Morocco)
Shirk (none Poznan),
Shriek (none Poznan),
Szerek (Catholic),
Szurek (Jewish, Warsaw)
Chereque (French).,

Poznan (Posen) ; Kepno (Kempen)

Schreck DNA match at 111 markers with me, Alan Shirek (3rd-5th cousin), and Roger Friedenthal (2nd-3rd cousin).

Myron, a Kolbuszowa Schreck Jewish: FTDNA tells me that my Maternal Haplogroup is U5a2b2A. My Y-DNA
Haplogroup is E-A10729, which is a branch of E-L791.

Shetrit, a Sephardic surname.

The Schereks lived on the right-side-corner of the marketplace at the junction of "BreiteStr. " and "JudenStr. ".

Mendel Scherek's son was Nathan Scherk in SchoenhauserAllee, Berlin, Berlin, Brandenburg, Germany.

pg 296 Scherk was formerly Scherek (Geheimes Staatsarchiv of Prussia (Preuuischer Kulturbesitz)

Jews of Poznan, Wlkp., Poland originating in West Germany, emigrated eastward due to religious persecution.

http://szukajwarchiwach.pl;53;474;0;19.3;Str;1;100#tabJednostki takes you to the alphabet directly. 7 is P; 9 is Sz; Then click on Units. Then Digital copies. Scherek is Szer - Szewczynski, unit 127; http://szukajwarchiwach.pl;53;474;0;19.3;15116;Str;1;2;100#tabSkany
or
http://szukajwarchiwach.pl;53;474;0;19.3;15116;skan;medium;QeQbQ3HYVRf9VDifUJF3Vg

Hard to read:Scherek b. 16 1 1834 Rewis; wife Zann;Sann ;Jann b. 1835 Rogason, kids Renn girl 21 9 63 Poznan, Wlkp., Poland (to Berlin, Berlin, Brandenburg, Germany 1879), Vivian girl 23 10 61 Poznan, Wlkp., Poland ) to Krotoschin ss7, to Wroclaw, Silesia, Poland 88; Guilda girl 30 6 63 Poznan, Wlkp., Poland ; Talina girl 22 5 1865 Poznan, Wlkp., Poland to Glogowitz in 85; Rosalia girl 20 11 65 Poznan, Wlkp., Poland ; Heino male 1 3 69 to Berlin, Berlin, Brandenburg, Germany in 93. Put no where.

http://kehilalinks.jewishgen.org;poznan;Scherek.html

SS applications http://search.ancestry.ca;search;db.aspxssdbid=60901

done years 18...33, 34, 44, 48, 55, 68, 71, 76.

http://genealogyindexer.org;directories directories of Poland and Russia

http://e-kartoteka.net;index.phpssoption=com_content&view=article&id=3&Itemid=106
good place to start. for Poznan, Wlkp., Poland records

Poznan city 1848 Dir; http://www.wbc.poznan.pl;dlibra;docmetadatassid=305663&from=&dirids=1&ver_id=%3E%20&lp=3&QI=%29
1862 http://www.wbc.poznan.pl;dlibra;docmetadatassid=248467&from=&dirids=1&ver_id=&lp=1&QI

In Poznan 1848. Schereck, S; Scherck, Reitze, Salom, Hirsch, Marcus, Wolf Abr, Benjamin, Hirsch, Sus, Tobias, Frommet; and in 1862 Herrmann, Moritz, Samuel, Wolf, Nehemias, Moritz, Samuel, Marcus, Dorothea.
Scherk, Brothers, Julius, Saloman, Jette, M; Schiek, Ant, Aug, Agnes; and in 1862 Salomin, Joseph, Marcus, Julius, Salomon, Marcus, Hannchen.

to make a book http://www.familybookcreator.com;en;menu-features-en from FTM 2012 or 14

Earliest Poznan, Wlkp., Poland 1844 Markt 88. Dora Pander

1930 in Poznan city Fl. Scherek, wl. domu, Wolnica 4-5. and Hulda, Wolnica 4-5.

Scherek male DNA: Is in the J1c3d Cohen cluster, which is a large cluster (the largest) of Cohanim. The ancestor of this entire cluster of Cohanim lived abut 2,000 years ago, long before Ashkenazim and Sephardim went their separate ways. But there are smaller groups within this cluster who are more closely related to each other than they are to others in the larger Cohen cluster. Some of these smaller clusters with more recent common ancestors are entirely Aschkenazi, some are Mizrahi, and some are mixed Aschkenazi and Sephardic. The smaller group within the large cluster that you are in is mixed Aschkenazi and Sephardic. Our closest match with known ancestry from Spain is Rios. Using the Family Tree DNA TiP tool, we can estimate that there is an 83% chance that the Most Recent Common Ancestor between us and Rios lived in the last 24 generations (600-800 years, depending on whether we use 25 or 30 years for the generation length). It is highly likely that the paternal line was Sephardic.

In 1833 a new Jewry law was promulgated for Poznan, Wlkp., Poland its main feature was the division of the province's Jews into naturalized citizens, whose rights were conditional on their economic, moral, and educational achievements (command and use of German), and the remainder, who remained deprived of basic rights. By 1846, 80% of Poznan, Wlkp., Poland Jews were still not citizens and one-third of Prussian Jews had not attained that status.

To navigate Poznan, Wlkp., Poland records:
http://szukajwarchiwach.pl;53;474;0;19.3;Str;1;15#tabJednostki is the index. From there, work through the alphabet until you find a likely range to search. It's easier if you set the "number of units per page" to 100 first. Then click on the call number or the number of scanned pages. That gives you a catalog page for that range. Now click on "digital copies" to the right of the red arrow. That should bring up the first set of thumbnail images. Set "number of units" to 100 again and start searching. The alphabetization not perfect, so don't give up too quickly.

Schreck (horror) too.

Scherek is a name well known in France (written Chereque) as he is the leader of the major trade union.
Synagogue Prayer House (Nehemiah's) 15-18, 21 Zydowska St. Poznan 1618 renovated 1880
Reformed Synagogue 8 Dominikariska & Szewska St., Poznan. 1856 Synagogue on (4-5) Stawna St., Poznan
Cementer on Focha Street, Now Glogowska Street, Poznan.
[from "Jews of Poznan", by Zbigniew Pakula (2003) Vallentine Mitchell.]

The Polish version of Scherek would be SZ or S (s), SI or RZ or Z or ZI. The German prefix is SCH, Lithuanian S. Surname spellings vary over time and location, common enough. [Note: S or any letter for that matter, indicates a letter that's accented. S would equate to the Polish letter s showing the diacritical mark.] Reference: "Polish Surnames, Origins and Meanings" by Fred Hoffman
SCHEREK: The prefix "SH" is a consonant combination not native to Poland. In Ernest Thode's "German English genealogical dictionary", "German Names" by Hans Bahlow, and "Polish Surnames, Origins and Meanings" by Fred Hoffman, and nothing on SHIREK or SCHEREK or SCHERCK or Rymut's web site or location site. This usually means that the surname is extremely rare, or the surname spelling up to about the 1800's was different than you think. I note the ScherEK and ScherCK suffix's. The ScherEK is a Polish suffix and the ScherCK can't be found. There are listings for ScherCIK,ScherCKJ, and ScherCKY, all noted simply as Slavic surname suffix's. Reference from Ernest Thode in his "German English Genealogical Dictionary". If this ScherCK information is correct, then the Germans are not involved in the surname(s) suffixs as listed at face value. Germans are not Slavic - Poles (amongst others) are Slavic. So then, by the suffix's listed then, all three spellings have a Polish connection listed therein, somewhere. From above, the SH is not used as a prefix in Polish surnames. To further the reference a little, it's not used in German surnames as a prefix either. Germans use SCHerek. Hans Bahlow's "German Names" shows NO German surnames beginning SHirek. It does show huge amounts beginning SCHerek. Looking at these three spellings with phonetics in mind, a couple things stand out. First is the prefix which is something like SHERek and here the spelling is not important. The second is the letter K in the suffix. So, we have something that sounds like SHERK, regardless of spelling. An entry in Hans Bahlow's "German Names";It's the only listing that can apply here and it's found under the surname SCHERK. The comments are little : "Probably East German - Slavic and comes from SCHERKUS". I think the odds here would favor a Polish Family in Germany (or Prussia). SHERKUS is a Latin rendition. There might well be Jewish ties into this Family. Hoffman does offer a general overview, he states that the Jewish People in Poland tried to maintain their status as the Chosen People by using names either from the Old Testament or drawing from the-day's contemporary Jewish names, with a spelling difference so as to disassociate itself in this manner from Christianity. Jewish first names (Pronames) were considered important by the Jewish People of Poland because basically they didn't like to use surnames and when they did, the process was different from that of Non-Jews. If they had to use a surname, they tried everything in their power to draw from the Patronymic, keeping the Father in the surname as much as possible. The Patronymic method was accepted by the authorities in Poland up until the 3 partitions [late 1700's] took effect and the Prussian authorities demanded a surname other than Patronymic, a hereditary surname was either acquired or forced upon the Jews. Most Polish Jews viewed these forced surnames as B.S. because they didn't have Familial value, traditional significance or biblical overtones. The key here, is that this forced surname system happened under Prussian occupation between the late 1700's to the mid 1800's - and it happened all around Poland to include the Poznan, Wlkp., Poland ;Poznan area through the first partition.
From Fred Hoffman [(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)]
Scherek 1) Etymology: T: from "SHEREK," the Jewish name for => Zirke; also cf. "szereg" [Polish] "row". . {cf. SCHERECK; SCHERICK; SCHERK; SZERAKOWER; BRAND (Poznan, Wlkp., Poland )}. 3) After 1800: Poznan, Wlkp., Poland , Pos. (1800 - previous name was Brand Brandt Scherek => Scherk Scherek); Reisen, Fra. (1834 => Scherk Scherek); Schwersenz;Swarzedz, Pos. (1834)
Meaning that a Scherek in Poznan, Wlkp., Poland as of 1800 previously went by the name Brand Brandt Scherek. Phonetically, German Scherek is pronounced the same way Polish Szereg is pronounced, from a Polish word meaning "row, line, rank." That's why Menk mentions that possible connection. It would not be at all unusual for Germans to take the Polish name Szereg and spell it phonetically as Scherek. But Menk seems to feel the primary derivation would be from the name Zirke; in other words, Scherek is a Jewish modification of Zirke. Menk gives numerous derivations for that name, mostly referring to places Germans called Zirke, such as Sierakow [35 miles WNW of Poznan] near Poznan in modern Poland. He also cites Zierke near Neu-Strelitz, and that seems to be one place with which he links Scherek specifically. [[Sierakow is near to Zirke. Zierke might be Jewish pronounciatin of the Polish name]]
Tomasz Lassek (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
Zirke (now Sierakow, Poland).
name 'Shirek' from Alexander Beider's Dictionary of Jewish Surnames from Galicia.
Alt. spelling (as you indicated): Scherek (city resides; which it's associated is Jaroslaw, Pussia). Primary spelling of the name is Schurek (cities: Jaroslaw & Zbaraz, Ukraine. Name's origin is Hebrew. In Yiddish it is pronounced 'shurek' although in Central Yiddish [my 2 cents here -- that means essentially Galicia and Hungary] it is pronounced 'shirek' -- I guess the name is from the Hebrew letter, or that seems to be what Beider is saying. Finally he gives these additional spellings: Schirak, Schirok, Scherek, and Scherak.
"The Polish word for wide is "szeroki". As a result, a name derived from it and taken in Poznan (where people used Polish along with German) and spelled according to German orthography would be Scheroki or Scherok, with "o" stressed, but not Scher(e)k. Moreover, semantically such a meaning is inappropriate for surname, noone would be called "wide" because he lives on the wide street or on the wider side of the market. The derivation from ShR"Z is phonetically impossible, the final ;ts; can not give ;k;. The most plausible etymology is the derivation from the town of Sierakuresides (pronounced ;sherakuv;), situated in the immediate vicinity to Poznan. The German name of it is Zirke. It is quite possible that the Yiddish name (blend of Polish and German names) was Sherek. "

Scherk An East German name; after 1800 Berlin, Berlin, Brandenburg, Germany; 1837 from Poznan, Wlkp., Poland Wroclaw, Silesia, Poland) 1812, Poznan, Wlkp., Poland 1800 -> Scherek; Reisen, France 1834 -> Scherek.
Schereck -> Scherek; after 1800 Berlin, Berlin, Brandenburg, Germany; 1806 from Poznan, Wlkp., Poland --father Brand Brandt Scherek in Poznan, Wlkp., Poland Nakel, Wlkp., Poland;Naklo 1830; Poznan, Wlkp., Poland 1800 -> Scherek.
Scherek from place Sherek, Jewish name for Zirke. also Schereck, Scherick, Scherk, Szerakower, Brand Brandt Scherek (Poznan, Wlkp., Poland ).
The name of the Hebrew character / (Schirak, Schirok, Scherek, Scherak)
---
http://cemetery.jewish.org.pl;results; Warsaw Jewish Cemetery at Okopowa Street
1. Serek Rivka (83.3%);
2. Serek Boruch Dawid (83.3%);
3. Szczurek Rozalja (66.6%);
4. Serko Nechemia Arie (66.6%);
5. Szczurek Fruma Basha (66.6%);
6. Serko Chava Sheindel (66.6%);
7. Szurek Feiga (61.5%);
8. Szurek Yitzhak Elkana (61.5%);
9. Szurek Stefcia (61.5%);
10. Szurek Herman (61.5%);
11. Szurek Chawa (61.5%);
12. Szurek Zeev;Wolf (61.5%);
13. Szurek Shlomo (61.5%);
14. Szurek Ewa (61.5%);

In 1889 Jews owned 5 factories, 6 large stores and storehouses and a hotel. Many of them still dealt with Wholesale of timber, agricultural products, spirit, cloth, wool. Jews founded the first big surface department stores in Poznan: (the companies: Michaelis Michaels and Kartowicz, M. Zadik, Rudolf Petersorff, Samuel Samter, Wlkp., Poland, David Schrek).

Sammlung der deutschen Handels-Register: Hrsg. mit dem Central-Organ for den deuktschen Hendelsstand. Erster Band, 1862. ..., Volume 1 B. Scherek zu Poznan, Wlkp., Poland , Proc: Joseph Scherek.

(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX);(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX);(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX);(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)hoo.com;(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX);(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX);(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX);dwightl@softcom.net;(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX);(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX);(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)cast.net;(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX);(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX);charlie1029@comcast.net;(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX);(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX);(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)om;(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX);(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX);william.degoff@@ucsfmedctr.org;(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX); (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX); (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)

'Sherek' was the Jewish name for the town of Zirke (now Sierakow), in Polish: Sierakuresides [pron.: 'Sherakoov'], in the Poznan, Wlkp., Poland .

Poznan, Wlkp., Poland - Death Records (Jewish) 1831-1835; (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)m; Date format is: Number to indicate day of week, Day of Month, Hebrew Month. For example, A Burial Date "5, TET NISAN" will be Thursday (=5), 9th of NISAN (9=Hebrew letter TET.)
d. 1835 HUNDA SHPRINTZA DAUGHTER OF LIBER SHERIK;SHERICH d. 2,KAF TET,ADAR

http://translate.google.com;translatessu=http%3A%2F%2Fwww2.hu-Berlin, Berlin, Brandenburg, Germany.de%2Fdjgb%2Fwww%2Ffind&hl=en&langpair=auto|en&tbb=1&ie=UTF-8
7 Jewish businesses in Berlin, Berlin, Brandenburg, Germany 1933
uEugen Schereck InsuranceBusinessuft
InsuranceBusinessuft (Banken und Versicherungen)
(Insurance business)
Eingetragen 1909, Liq.: 1943
Hohenzollerndamm 194;95 (Wilmersdorf)
uMoritz Schereck
Fondsmakler (Banken und Versicherungen)
Eingetragen 1923, Liq.: 1937
NettelbeckStr. 9 (Charlottenburg)

Schwersenz, Poznan, Wlkp., Poland 1621
Overcrowding prevailing in the Jewish Quarter in Poznan resulted that the elders of the community has taken various attempts to solve this problem. In the early twenties of the seventeenth century, representatives of the Kahal Poznan agreed with Zygmunt Grudzinski, the key owner Schwersenz, Poznan, Wlkp., Poland. June 3, 1621 r. Signed a relevant agreement pursuant to which Jews from overcrowded Poznan, found the opportunity to settle in Schwersenz, Poznan, Wlkp., Poland. The privilege they have received, was also a record for a right of ownership of the cemetery. There is a hypothesis that the first Jewish cemetery Swarzedzkie was near the synagogue, on the eastern edge of the plots of the Jews. This is likely because the synagogue was built on the northern bypass of the seventeenth century the city and the cemetery was located near, but outside the city. The privilege Z. Grudzinski found the sentence "Slowly they too will be dead for burial reach the gate, you will want." Maybe it has to do with the street name "Bramkowa" still existing in this part of Schwersenz, Poznan, Wlkp., Poland, because her name could be taken from a large number of gates through which was brought dead to the cemetery. Jews accounted for most of the history tracking Swarzedza a significant percentage of the population. Beings also are times when Jews constituted the majority of the inhabitants of the city, eg. In 1704 to 2,767 residents in 1501 were Jews, and in 1834 was 1,665 Jews, when the whole town was inhabited by 2,829 people.

1904 in Poznan, Wlkp., Poland Scherek, Ben, Daniel, Salomon (2), Simon, Theo, Wolf.

1872 in Stadt Poznan, Wlkp., Poland :
Schereck: Isaac Gerson, Salomon at 7 BreslauerSt wiht Benno Scherek, Samuel, Moritz with Salomon.
Scherek: Abrah Wolf LivingOnSavings 11 WasserStrHerrmann resides Wonkerst with Samuel, Max Breitstr 21, Moritz 1 Breitstr with Julius, Joseph, Saul Pfandleiher;PawnBroker at 22 Wasserstr.
Scherk; Marcus, widow Taube.
Scheurich: Wilhelm, Georg.

1879 in Posen: Schenk--Joh, Heinr (2); Schereck-- Max, Sal; Scherek--Herrmann in D Scherek's widow KramerSt 21 res KanonenPl 4 & 5, Jos in B.Scherek, Jul, Moritz, S.W., F.G., Marcus Retired, Cacilie Retired, Taube widow; Scherk--R widow in SchuhmacherStr 13; Schiersch, E. St Adalberthof 2.

1845 Posen city directory; http://genealogyindexer.org/frame/d1816/56; Scherek: W. A. Trader, WasserStr 11; businessman, JesuitenStr 2; Salomon, Gelbgeisse, Markt 89; Julius, BookSeller, Mrkt 90; Businessman, BiaSt 98; Mussenmacher, NasseStr 3; Tailor, JudenStr 8; Tailor JudenStr 20; Tobtengraber, JudenStr 25; KleinHendlerin, KlosterStr 15; Trader, gerberStr 39;Handlerin, KramerSasse 18. Schurich, Restoration, MuhlenStr 3. Schrek [[ThereseHubner is there 1868Handelsfrau]], MiethsFrau, GrunStr 3.

www.jewishgen.org;databases;jripl;jridetail_2.php

17 JAN 2021
21:46:45

Brandt tree
https://www.geni.com/family-tree/index/6000000041238079165

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Bronnen

  1. Book
    - Jacobson, Jacob. Die Judenburgerbucher der Stadt Berlin1809-1851. Veroffentlichungen der Berliner Historischen Kommission at the Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut der Freien Universitut Berlin, Berlin, Brandenburg, Germany, 4, Quellenwerke 1. Berlin, Berlin, Brandenburg, Germany: 1962.

Over de familienaam SCHEREK

  • Bekijk de informatie die Genealogie Online heeft over de familienaam SCHEREK.
  • Bekijk de informatie die Open Archieven heeft over SCHEREK.
  • Bekijk in het Wie (onder)zoekt wie? register wie de familienaam SCHEREK (onder)zoekt.

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Arnold Chamove, "ShirekChamove Tree", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/shirekchamove-tree/I007433.php : benaderd 29 april 2024), "Aggregation of Brand Brandt SCHEREK (± 1730-????)".