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==History== Turov was an ancient capital of the [[Dregoviches|Dregovich]] tribe - one of the three [[Eastern Slavs|Eastern Slavic]] tribes that are considered ancestors of the modern [[Belarusians|Belarusian people]] (the others being [[Krivichs]] and [[Drevlians]]). Turov was first mentioned in the ''[[Tale of Bygone Years]]'' from 980. It is located in the southern part of Belarus, in the historical region of [[Polesia]]. According to legend, the city was founded at the crossing of Yazda and Strumen rivers by Duke Tur - hence the name Turov. Other etymology draws the name from ''Tur'', the Slavic name of the [[Aurochs]]. Both rivers join with the [[Pripyat River|Pripyat river]], which in turn flows into the [[Dnieper]] and then leads to the [[Black Sea]]. This river route was known to [[Viking]]s, who used it extensively for communication and during their frequent raids to [[Constantinople]]. The [[Varangian]] dynasty of [[Rurik]]s became dukes in the neighboring Duchy of [[Kiev]]. Soon Turov also came under the dominion of a local branch of dukes of the [[Rurik Dynasty]] and particularly of [[Izyaslav I]], son of [[Yaroslav the Wise]]. In that period the town of Turaŭ was not only an important trade center within the [[Kievan Rus']], due to its proximity to major trade routes running from the [[Baltic Sea]] to the Byzantine Empire, but also one of the most important cities of the Rus among [[Kiev]], [[Chernihiv]], [[Novgorod]], and [[Pereyaslav]]. The [[Prince of Turov]], the main contender to the throne of the [[Kievan Rus']] before their subjugation to the [[Vladimir Monomakh|Monomakhs]] considerably influenced the early politics of the neighboring [[Kingdom of Poland (1025–1385)|Duchy of Poland]] in the 11th century having together an intertwined history. Thanks to the towns' strategic location, many different crafts were developed and practiced in Turov. It was also home to bishops [[Cyril of Turov]] and Laverentiy of Turov. In 1005 the first [[Catholic|Roman Christian]] bishopric on the territory of Belarus was founded in Turov. The town's period of prosperity ended with a number of feudal conflicts in the 12th century. Soon afterwards Turaŭ lost much of its importance as well as its autonomy. In 1320 Turov became a part of the [[Grand Duchy of Lithuania]] having closely assimilated with the [[Prince of Minsk]]. In 1430 it became a [[private town]] of the [[Grand Duke]] [[Svitrigaila]]. In the end of the 15th century Turaŭ became a property of Grand Court Marshal of Lithuania [[Michal Glinski]]. In 1502 it was damaged by a [[Tatars|Tatar invasion]]. After Glinski's betrayal and escape to [[Grand Duchy of Moscow]] in 1508, Turov was confiscated by the family of [[Konstanty Ostrogski]], who started the reconstruction, but the town was yet again destroyed by the Tatars in 1521. The [[Ostrogski]] family owned the town for more than a century, until it was given as a [[dowry]] to the [[Sapieha]] and then [[Potocki]] [[magnate]] families. During [[The Deluge (Polish history)|The Deluge]] the town was taken by Muscovy, but was soon retaken by [[Janusz Radziwiłł (1612-1655)|Janusz Radziwiłł]]. After the period of constant wars with Muscovy, the town was severely damaged. By 1667, Turov had only 111 households left of the 401 there in 1648. The town never fully recovered. After the [[Partitions of Poland|Second Partition of Poland]] in 1793 it was annexed by Russia and remained a small, provincial town for most of the 19th century. From that time onwards it shared the fate of the nearby town of [[Gomel]]. in 1810, the wooden Orthodox Church of All Saints was built in Turov. It has survived down to this day, never having been rebuilt. Inside the church are kept the weeping icon of St Nicholas, and two old Christian crosses covered in legends and stories. The church remains as a centre of Orthodox life in the town. ===Jewish population=== The [[shtetl]] (Jewish community) in Turov began in the 16th century. The population of Jewish people reached its peak at the end of the 19th century. After that time they began to emigrate to larger cities and to other countries. Turov was subjected to [[pogroms]] (violence against Jewish communities), but the Jewish population managed to hang on through [[World War I]] and the [[Russian Revolution]]. Even after the [[Bolsheviks]] took over, the Jewish population continued to carry on their traditions and there was a degree of tolerance among the non-Jewish population of Turov. Greater efforts to suppress religious activity began in the 1930s.<ref name="Jewish">[http://www.jewishgen.org/Belarus/newsletters/misc/TurovShtetl/index.html Smilovitsky, Leonid, A Byelorussian Border Shtetl in the 1920s and 1930s: The Case of Turov]</ref> In 1921 two schools opened in Turov, both a general school and a [[Yiddish]] school; both were attended by Jewish students. There were three synagogues in Turov, one Misnagdim and two Hasidic. All three closed in the early 1930s.<ref name="Jewish" /> The Jewish population in Turov was wiped out during [[World War II]]. Some Jews volunteered to join the army to fight the Germans. The first German army units to come through Turov, in July 1941, did nothing to the Jewish population. The Holocaust began with the arrival of later units. Very few families returned after the war and as of 2003 there were only three Jewish people living in Turov.<ref name="Jewish" />
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