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REVISION / CENSUS / FAMILY LISTS TABLE |
by Davida Noyek
Handler, Vitalija Gircyte, Carol Coplin Baker,
Alexander Karnovsky and Judith Langer Caplan
Revision
Lists (“Reviski Skaski”) are census lists, which were first recorded in
1772. Up to, and including 1858, the census was called a revision list.
Revision Lists were revised or updated, sometimes several times, until the
next census was recorded. Such information frequently covered a period of ten
years or more. Revision Lists are by far the most useful of all of the 19th
century records. These records were written in Russian (Cyrillic) except for
those in the Memel (Klaipeda) Archive, which were written mainly in German.
Some records contain additional notations written in Yiddish or Hebrew. This
major table contains revision,
family, census, and town residents lists for the years from
1795 until the early 20th century, for most of the districts in the old Vilna
and Kovno guberniyas - more than 150 towns that today lie within Disna, Kaunas,
Lida, Oshmiany, Panevezys, Raseniai, Siauliai, Telsiai, Trakai, Ukmerge, and
Vilnius districts.
This ongoing ALD project will help to provide a
"portrait" of the presence of our Jewish ancestors' lives in
Lithuania. It is important to read the full description of the Revision List
at least once and to be able to refer back to it as needed.

Example of 1816 Revision List
See Example of Translated Revision List
FIELDS INCLUDED IN THE REVISION LISTS TABLE
Town / Uyezd / Guberniya : All spellings within the
translated databases use the current Lithuanian names. To check on alternate
spellings or names for your shtetl, or to find out in which Uyezd or Guberniya
was located, please go to the Shtetl, Uyezd, Guberniya table page.
Family Name (Surname) : Very few surnames appear in the
earlier Revision Lists. Although the majority of Jews in Lithuania did not
have surnames, some families began using surnames as early as 1816. This is
where you must use your ingenuity, and deductive reasoning. Without surnames,
one must rely exclusively on patronymics, hoping that names repeated within a
family will show a trend. A patronymic is a name derived from the name of
one's father or other paternal ancestor, usually by the addition of an affix
such as "ovich" or "ovna" as in Davidovich (son of David)
or Moshovna (daughter of Moshe or Moses). By 1834, family names began to appear more frequently
See Online Journal article, "Excel,
Schmexcel - Dig UpThose Relatives!"
Given Name : Self explanatory
Father: Self explanatory
Relationship to Head of Household: While large numbers of Jews gradually moved to the cities, many 18th and 19th Century shtetls had fewer than a thousand people - and many of these residents were fairly closely related. The chances of finding distantly related cousins within this field are very likely. This field describes how each person in the household is related to the head of the household.
Age at last revision / Age : Age given at present enumeration. In addition to the adults listed, names and ages of children born between the years that the census and each revision were recorded. By finding an ancestor listed in 1816, aged approximately 65 - 70, you could assume his/her birth year to be 1746 -1750.
Reason Left : This field explains what happened to people
registered on the list since the last census. People left their shtetl for a
variety of reasons - for instance if they moved to another town, if boys were
conscripted (or in some cases, were declared “missing” in an attempt to
avoid conscription by the “khappers”), or if someone died in the interim
period. Other reasons given were “expelled from the community” -
“converted” - “moved to ............” etc.
In 1902 a list of Jews who avoided military service (e.g.
because of emigration to the USA) was published in the Latvian newspaper "Kurlandskiye
gubernskiye vedomosti"
[KGV].
The relatives who remained in Russia were forced to pay "the enormous
pain in 300 rubles." In KGV the authorities announced they were searching
for the members of the family of the person who had avoided military service
(in 1901), and published the names of the relatives and their ages, including
the draft avoider's parents and brother; and searched their property, asking
for payment in the amount of 300 rubles. So it would seem that 300 rubles was
the standard fine to be paid by the family for draft evasion for the early
part of the 20th Century at least. This applied to families within the entire
Pale of Settlement.
Some families were able to buy their son’s way out of the
conscription, but most were extremely poor. The cost of buying one's self out
of the army was even greater than the cost of a steerage ticket to England or
the USA. When the emigrant attempted to send money “back home” to help pay
these fines, the letters were frequently opened by the post office authorities
to search for money orders or cash, and the money seldom reached the families
most in need of it.
Year Left: Self explanatory
Page # : The page number in the original document on which
this record appears.
Comments: While the comments within this field do not appear
on the original lists, this field was added by LitvakSIG to record comments by
translators, and for information on the original list which may not fit into a
specific column or field. For instance, a family may have always lived in
Kaunas, however, if they were officially registered in Uzventis they would be
listed on the Uzventis Revision list - not on the Kaunas Revision list.
Day / Month / Year : Self explanatory
Family Registration # : Registration number during this
census count. References such as "2 to 43" mean that this
registration “2” on the additional revision list is related to
registration“43” on the primary revision list.
Former Registration #: Family registration number given
during the last census count.
Type of Record:
Denotes if the record is a Revision List, an Additional Revision List (lists
made after the original revision, documenting those who may have been absent
at last revision, or other changes in status), a Tax List, Voter's List, or
any other type of record.
Archive/Fond/Inventory/File# / : KRA/ indicates the
Kaunas Regional Archives.
LVIA/ indicates the Lithuanian State Historical Archives in Vilnius = Lietuvos
Valstybes Istorijos Archyvas.
Fond/Inventory/File# indicates the number and location of the specific file.
So that KRA/I-106/1/5345 would mean Kaunas Regional Archives / Fond
I-106 /Inventory 1 / File 5345.
Some Useful Definitions of Terms:
Guberniya: A Province of the Russian Empire. Based on
the American administrative system "guberniya" could be qualified or
understood as a state. There were 60 guberniyas in 1914, including 15 in the
Pale of Settlement and 10 in the Kingdom of Poland. Each guberniya was divided
into several uyezds (districts).
Uyezd: The term "Uyezd" is very old and was in use
for several hundred years up until Lithuania became an independent country in 1919.
The Old Russian administrative terminology was changed by the Bolsheviks
(communist) government. They used the term
"Oblast" instead of "Guberniya" and "Rayon"
instead of "Uyezd." This new system is still being used in the
Russian Federation, Belarus, and Ukraine. Based on the American administrative
system "uyezd" could be understood as a county. All Uyezd names have
been listed according to their current Lithuanian spelling. Russian, Yiddish
or Polish equivalents have been provided within our Shtetl, Uyezd, and
Guberniya table for easy identification, as they would have been in documents
of the mid-19th century. Once the Uyezd has been determined, the guberniya can
be determined by using this table.
Shtetl: Where possible, towns have been listed according to their current Lithuanian spelling. Russian, Yiddish or Polish equivalents have been provided within our shtetl / uyezd / guberniya table for easy identification, as they would have been in documents of the mid-19th century. The Revision Lists cover towns within most of the Guberniyas, and the database is continuously updated.