Research, reconstruction and documentary confirmation of events from the 17th to the 20th centuries in Russian Empirie and USSR, Eastern and Central Europe

Peter Rempel

Certified Archivist,

Business Owner

The strongest archivist-researcher according to the International Genealogical Center

 

 

"We knew next to nothing about our ancestors as our grandfather didn’t really talk about them and our dad couldn't give much information. We assumed that all documents had vanished during WWII. BUT! Peter was able to successfully restore the entire lineage from the end of the 18th century till the present day...."

"... Mr. Rempel conducted an investigation in many Russian archives and, like a detective, he was able to reconstruct the extraordinary and dramatic life path of my great-grandfather... He has also traced the life paths of my ancestors over 400 years, starting from the 16th century, and found among other their grievance letters which tell about their household, disobedience to authorities, aspirations and worries..."

"Many documents were found, from which the real story emerged; it was possible to imagine how these people lived, what they dreamed of, what they knew and were able to do..."

"My request was done surprisingly quickly and for a very reasonable price. I was impressed by his professionalism, attention to detail and willingness to answer all my questions..."

Do you know who your ancestors were?

How did they live in the country of origin? What were they doing? What did they own? What nationality did they have?

 

The archives contain documents about almost every person who lived in the last 300 years. We just need to find the evidence!

 

Since 1990, I have been working on private commissions in the archives of the former Russian Empire, the USSR, Germany and other countries .

 

I can find information and documents relating to the lives of your ancestors or people you are interested in, confirm or refute family legends, and reveal the secrets of the past. I take on the most difficult search tasks — finding information using incomplete and indirect source data. In most cases — with a guarantee of a positive result.

 

Diploma of higher education in the historical and archival field. Vast experience and highest professionalism.

 

Transparency at work.

I work in archives without intermediaries.

Complete confidentiality.

 

Highest
professionalism

Amazing
discoveries

Guaranteed
results

Success
since 1990

Practice area

Lost Records, Saved Stories

Searching for information and documents in archives is the main direction of my work. I undertake the most complex research in state, departmental and special archives of many countries...

No initial data

“We don’t know anything”, “It was a forbidden topic”, “Nobody remembered about them”, “They were afraid to talk”, “Those who remembered died”, “All documents were lost”, “I don’t know where they came from”...

Missing

Almost every family had “lost people” - missing people, disappeared in prisons and camps, died under occupation, disappeared in combat. There were people whose memory was deliberately erased from the family...

Historical criminology

It is almost impossible to find a family whose history does not include murders or suicides, robberies, violence, forgeries, as well as arrests, trials, prisons and hard labor...

Workflow

Recommendations

Experts recommendations and customer reviews... Read more

Рrices

Consultation and evaluation of search prospects - for free... Read more

Operating procedure

I make the entire work process as transparent and safe as possible for the customer... Read more

Guarantees

Search work is paid only if there is a positive result... Read more

Archival Journeys

How closely we lived together in the 19th century! Among the documents of Vitebsk Jews, I came across a remarkable address book of Vitebsk residents from 1865. It lists the inhabitants of each house! (Although it only covers half of the city). The variety of houses described is astonishing. For example, here are the lists of residents of two ordinary single-story wooden houses: one housed four tenant families alongside the owners, totaling 26 people, while the other housed 17 people within an extended family. Moreover, in these same rooms, a melamed taught students, a bookbinder, a coppersmith, and a goldsmith worked in their workshops, and shopkeepers, ritual slaughterers, butchers, day laborers, beggars, and the sick also lived there—these were just typical homes and families in a large provincial city within the Pale of Settlement! Below are excerpts preserving the original style of the document:

City of Vitebsk, Part 1, Quarter 1, Ploshchad Street, House No. 110, owned by Vitebsk townsman Zolman Shub.


This house is a single-story wooden building. On the property is a single-story wooden outbuilding. In the outbuilding resides a goldsmith.

Names and surnames of all residents, both permanent and temporary:
Owner of the house: Zolman Shub.
Social class and occupation: Townsman, assistant to a ritual slaughterer.
Religion: Jewish.
Age, marital status: 35, married.
Literacy and language: Illiterate (likely referring to Russian).
Province of origin and time in the city: Vitebsk Province.
Animals owned in the city: Horses: none, cows: none, goats: none, pigs: none.

Family:

Wife: Rivka, 32 years old, married.
Sons:
Izroel, assists his father, 17 years old, single.
Berki, 7 years old.
Girsha, 4 years old, sick.
Daughter: Feiga, 14 years old, unmarried.
Tenants in the house:

Gilka Zabezhensky, townsman, butcher, 24 years old, married.
Wife: Sora Riva, 25 years old, married.
Sons:
Gershen, 3 years old.
Elya, 1 year old.
Tenant: Vulf Dyshon, townsman, day laborer, 26 years old, married.
Wife: Rivka, 23 years old, married.
Relative: Sheyna Ester, beggar, 60 years old, widow.
Outbuilding tenants:

Herz Borenbum, townsman, shopkeeper, 37 years old, married.
Wife: Minka, 36 years old.
Children:
Daughters: Hana, 14 years old; Sorka, 12 years old; Kreina, 10 years old; Basya, 1 year old.
Son: Notka, 3 years old.
Yesel Shverdlin, townsman, craftsman, 30 years old, married.
Wife: Bluma, 32 years old.
Children:
Daughters: Sheyna, 14 years old; Itka, 11 years old; Rivka, 3 years old.
Son: Abram, 6 years old.
(Source: NIAB, f. 2631, op. 2, d. 1, ll. 205–206).

City of Vitebsk, Part 1, Quarter 1, Smolenskaya Street, House No. 150/188, owned by Hatzkel Liburkin.
This is a single-story wooden house with a single-story wooden outbuilding in the yard.

Names and surnames of all residents, both permanent and temporary:
Owner: Hatzkel Liburkin, Vitebsk townsman.
Religion: Jewish.
Age, marital status: 66, married.
Literacy: Illiterate.

Family:

Wife: Tsirlya, blind, 65 years old, married, illiterate.
Sons-in-law:
Israel Kagan, melamed (teacher), 40 years old, married.
Wife: Khava, housekeeper, 35 years old, literate in Hebrew.
Children: Sons: Khaim, 5 years old; Yankel, 3 years old.
Daughters: Khaya Sima, 11 years old, literate in Hebrew; Leah, 1 year old.
Aron Kabisher, coppersmith, 32 years old, married, literate in Hebrew.
Wife: Rohlia Khena, housekeeper, 30 years old, married, literate in Hebrew.
Children: Sons: Borukh, 5 years old, starting Hebrew lessons; Shmerka, 3 years old.
Daughters: Genya Gruna, 7 years old; Feyga, 1 year old.
Movsha Shubik, bookbinder, 26 years old, married, illiterate.
Wife: Rasya, 27 years old, married, illiterate.
(Source: NIAB, f. 2631, op. 2, d. 1, ll. 283, ob.).

The book itself is extensive—over a thousand double-sided pages. 

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