| Link | Description |
| Convert Lithuanian Litas to US Dollars and other currencies. | |
| This is the culmination of over five years of research into the names of those killed in the Holocaust in Lithuania. | |
| After linking to the
page, click on the hyperlink at the bottom of the page; the next page will
have a set of numbers representing pages. Click on the page numbers
to access the web pages. |
|
| Because
Vilna Gubernia was part of Poland between the two World Wars, the names of
thousands and thousands of Jews from towns in Vilna Gubernia can now be
found online in the 1929 Polish Business Directory. There are more villages
that surround larger shtetls.
This Town Index lists towns EXACTLY as they were in the 1929 Polish Business Directory, which means you must use the Polish spelling of a town to find its listing such as the Polish Wilno for today's Vilnius or Ejszyszki for Eisiskes.In addition, in 1929 the towns in the Lida District were part of the Nowogrodek Province, and this Province's pages are not only available through the Town Index, but these pages have been indexed and are searchable by name and town at http://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Poland/NowogrodskieTowns.htm |
|
| This 1872 letter on
legal position of Jews in Russia by a US Diplomat is extremely
informative, especially on the topic of the various taxes imposed. |
|
| This is a project
to find where Jews are buried. So far information on more than 21,000 cemeteries has been
gathered. |
|
| This is the largest Lithuanian resource center outside Lithuania. | |
| This document
attempts to provide basic information about accessing records of genealogical value from
Eastern Europe. It is in three parts:
(1) An introduction, describing the four ways to access records, and a bibliography of basic reference works. (2) A country-by- country description of resources. (3) A list of regions, former provinces, and counties, and where they are today. |
|
| The
Lithuanian Jewish Communities home site.
The chairman of the project: Dr. Simon Alperovitch, Jewish Community of Lithuania
|
|
| Dedicated to the preservation,
acquisition and dissemination of Jewish records from archives and other repositories in Eastern Europe,
with a focus primarily on the Grand Duchy of Lithuania-Kingdom of Poland Commonwealth, in the 18th century |
|
| Your fellow researchers
have prepared Web pages on their families. You may search for surnames/keywords or you may
browse by the letter of the alphabet. If you already have a Family Web Page you can link
it here. If you do NOT, JewishGen has provided a means for you to create your own, ONLINE. |
|
| A Legal Resource on Jewish Life in the Pale
For those interested in researching the effect of Czarist decrees on Jews, this site has material from three 19th century resources, including: * the translated text of some Czarist decrees |
|
|
An excerpt from the 1892 Foster Commission report, a U.S. Government commission investigating, in part, the causes of Russian Jewish emigration. |
|
| Over
two hundred Lithuanian museum web sites in English can be found through
the "Lithuanian Museum" web site directory.
Many of the museum web sites have email
contact information along with detailed descriptions of the museum and the
region in which the museum is located. |
|
| This guide gives you
everything you ever wanted to know about Eastern Europe and the Baltic capital cities of
Vilnius, Riga & Tallinn, the Lithuanian cities
of Kaunas and Klaipeda, the Belarusian capital Minsk and the Russian enclave
of Kaliningrad. Included are down-to-earth and up-to-date hotel, restaurant & club
reviews, what to see, how to call, how to get there, how to obtain visas and where to go
to find just about anything... |
|
| Mission:
To promote Lithuanian fellowship, culture, and history. To increase awareness of present social and economic conditions in Lithuania. To assist Lithuanians in discovering their heritage through genealogy exchange. To support and contribute to non-profit entities serving Lithuania. |
|
| An internet-only museum
created by Steve Lasky that includes information of interest to Litvak researchers, such as unique
surnames for all the Vilnius landsmanshaftn plots in the New York metropolitan area, as well as a
list of those who last lived in Vilnius before immigrating through Ellis Island. Also on this site
are photos of modern-day Vilnius, family photographs from pre-war Vilnius, and photos of
Lithuania-associated Holocaust memorials located in New York, New Jersey, Lithuania, and elsewhere.
|
|
| Researching Jewish Genealogies in South Africa by Saul Issroff, London UK: A JewishGen InfoFile | |
| The grave of
Rabbi Eliyahu ben Shelomo
Zalman, the Vilna Gaon |
|
| The Jewish State Museum continuously researches, collects, and exhibits material on Jewish history and culture in Lithuania. | |
| A Scott Noar contribution, containing over 17,400 entries from the 1915 city directory for Vilnius, Lithuania. | |
| A TIME TO KEEP by Cherie Goren, who was born in Memel, relates how life was in Memel, East Prussia, now Klaipeda, before WWII. |
Please note: The LitvakSIG has found these suggested links to be of interest to Jewish researchers, but we are not responsible for their content, which will change from time to time. If you find any links to be inaccurate or inappropriate for any reason, please contact the Webmaster.