Gazetteer of the Pale

        The Pale of Jewish Settlement existed from the late 1790’s until 1917. Much of Jewish ancestry hails from this region making it a popular target for Jewish research. After 1825, the Pale consisted of the fifteen western provinces of the Russian Empire, not including the Kingdom of Poland (Congress Poland). Before 1825 the province of Astrakhan was included, and until 1887 the Taganrog district around the mouth of the Don river was attached to the province of Ekaterinoslav. A small number of localities have been included from these areas. By 1881 there were 2.9 million Jews living in the Pale of Settlement, which amounted to 12.5% of the total population of Imperial Russia.
        The Gazetteer has been assembled to assist in finding settlements, once home to Jews, in over 5,000 locations in the former Pale. Many of these were home for Jews up to the end of WWI, as well as between WWI and WWII. Distinguishing between these two periods is not accomplished by this data set. However, comparisons of proximity for locations up to a 40 kilometer radius are given for every place search and links to additional information are found on pins in the map window. Localities (1,469) with links in the District column in search results are part of the JewishGen Communities Database.
 
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Results for Obukhove

Matching Town Modern
Country
Pale
Province
Provincial
District
Alt. Names Coordinates
Obukhove Ukr. Poltava Priluki Obukhovo 50°50'49"/33°01'28"

Nearby Towns Modern
Country
Pale
Province
Provincial
District
Alt. Names Distance (km) Coordinates
Lypove Ukr. Poltava Romny Lipovoye 9.32 50°53'14"/33°08'28"
Rubanka Ukr. Chernigov Konotop 19.09 50°57'16"/32°48'44"
Repki Ukr. Poltava Romny Ripky 21.31 50°48'32"/33°19'19"
Sribne Ukr. Poltava Priluki Srebnoye, Sribnoye 21.69 50°39'50"/32°55'07"
Mali Bubny Ukr. Poltava Romny Malyye Bubny 22.34 50°43'38"/33°16'47"
Rogintsy Ukr. Poltava Romny Rohyntsi 23.37 50°51'10"/33°21'26"
Kalyuzhintsy Ukr. Poltava Priluki Kaliuzhyntsi, Kalyuzhintsy, Kalyuzhyntsi 25.68 50°41'60"/32°44'35"
Parafiivka Ukr. Chernigov Borzna Parafeyevka, Parafiyivka, Parafiyevka 26.78 50°52'38"/32°38'46"
Levchenky Ukr. Poltava Romny Levchenki 26.93 50°44'31"/33°22'11"
Ivanitsa Ukr. Poltava Priluki Ivanytsia, Ivanytsya (Pogrom Nov. 1917) 28.09 50°47'20"/32°38'07"
Lebedyntsy Ukr. Poltava Priluki Lebedintsy 30.56 50°34'20"/33°01'33"
Savintsy Ukr. Poltava Priluki Savyntsi 31.00 50°34'39"/32°54'45"
Khmelev Ukr. Poltava Romny Khmeliv, Khmelov (Opened to Jewish settlement after exemption from the Temporary Rules of 1882) 32.57 50°53'36"/33°28'58"
Irzhavets Ukr. Poltava Priluki Irzhavets' 33.01 50°51'52"/32°33'18"
Romny Ukr. Poltava Romny Romny [Ukr, Rus], Romen [Yid], Rommy 33.39 50°45'04"/33°28'29"
Karabutovo Ukr. Chernigov Konotop Karabutove 33.43 51°03'53"/33°21'13"
Perevolochna Ukr. Poltava Priluki Perevolochnoye, Perevolochnaya 34.27 50°38'15"/32°40'02"
Zasul'ye Ukr. Poltava Romny (Opened to Jews in 1903 after the exemption from the "Temporary Rules" of 1882.) 36.84 50°43'60"/33°31'00"
Kuren Ukr. Chernigov Konotop Kurin', Kurin' 38.08 51°09'06"/32°46'35"
Bobryk Ukr. Poltava Romny Bobrik 38.98 50°40'40"/33°30'36"
Ozeryany Ukr. Poltava Lokhvitsa Ozeriany, Ozeryane, Ozeryany 39.40 50°30'01"/32°54'32"