MESERITZ Origin of surname
MESERITZ
Surnames derive from one of many different origins. Sometimes there may be more than one explanation for the same name. This family name is a toponymic (derived from a geographic name of a town, city, region or country). Surnames that are based on place names do not always testify to direct origin from that place, but may indicate an indirect relation between the name-bearer or his ancestors and the place, such as birthplace, temporary residence, trade, or family-relatives.
This name is derived from Meseritz, the German name of Międzyrzecz, a town in Lubusz Voivodeship, Poland. First mention of Jews in this city dates from the 14th century. Places, regions and countries of origin or residence are some of the sources of Jewish family names. But, unless the family has reliable records, names based on toponymics cannot prove the exact origin of the family.
Meseritz is documented as a Jewish family name with Olga Meseritz nee Chanange, born in Annaberg Germany in 1890, who perished in the Holocaust, having been deported to Riga ghetto from Hamburg, Germany.
Miedzyrzecz
(Place)Miedzyrzecz
In German: Meseritz
A town and capital of Międzyrzecz County in Lubusz Voivodeship, Poland. Until 1945 it was part of Germany.
First Jewish presence: 14th century; peak Jewish population: 1,155 in 1840 (24% of the total population); Jewish population in 1933: 105
Annexed by Prussia in 1793, the town of Miedzyrzecz was not returned to Poland until 1945. Jews had settled in Meseritz in the 14th century, and their numbers increased in the early 16th century. Feared as economic competitors, Jews were often expelled from the town during the 16th and 17th centuries; in the decades leading up to and following 1700, a combination of wars and pestilence claimed the lives of many Meseritz citizens, including those of 1,700 Jews. In 1795, however, 560 Jews lived in the town (18 % of the total population). In 1824, much of the Jewish quarter and the 35-year old synagogue were destroyed in a fire. One year later, the community established a new synagogue in the classical style. The Jewish population dropped markedly during the second half of the 19th century, so that very few Jews lived in Meseritz on Pogrom Night (November 9, 1938), when the synagogue was burned down, the few remaining Jewish-owned stores were destroyed, and the Jewish men imprisoned. By March 1940, all remaining Jews had been sent to detention camps, from which they were later deported to the Nazi concentration and death camps in eastern Europe.
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This entry was originally published on Beit Ashkenaz - Destroyed German Synagogues and Communities website and contributed to the Database of the Museum of the Jewish People courtesy of Beit Ashkenaz.