Eliazer van Geuns

Rotterdam, – Schoppinitz,

Reached the age of 52 years

Occupation: Driver

Known relations

Parents

Siblings

Children

Other relatives

No other family known yet

No images yet

Click on the contribution button to add pictures of Eliazer van Geuns

Stories (6)

The fate of Eliazer van Geuns and his family.

Eliazer van Geuns was a son of Hartog van Geuns and Kaatje van Biene. He was born in Rotterdam on 10 October 1890 but his parents came to Amsterdam already in 1893. He married 27 August 1919 in Amsterdam to Frederika Tas, who was born in the municipality of Nieuwer Amstel on 13 October 1894 as a dau…

Read more

Eliazer van Geuns' death certificate

Eliazer van Geuns died on 5 January 1943 in Reichsautobahnlager Annaberg, Upper Silesia, Germany (today Poland). The official cause of death: gangrene and heart failure (Gangraen und Herzschwäche.). Source: the official death certificate issued by German authorities (Standesamt).

Read more

Eliazer van Geuns

Eliazer is een zoon van Hartog Geuns en Kaatje van Biene. Hij trouwde 27 augustus 1919 met Frederika Tas (Nieuwer Amstel, 13 oktober 1894), dochter van Levie Tas en Clara Velt. Kinderen Hartog, 31 maart 1921 Kind, 1922 Bron SAA archiefkaart Eliazer Geuns 10-10-1890 en wiewaswie.nl (huwelijk Eliaz…

Read more

Eliazer van Geuns and his family

In addition, Jokos files (number 4083) on this family or other family members are at the Amsterdam Municipal Archive. Access is subject to authorization from the Stichting Joods Maatschappelijk Werk.The Jokos files reveal that a claim was lodged for compensation for valuables surrendered to the Lipp…

Read more

The death of Eliazer van Geuns

Research into the wartime civil registries of one of the civil registry offices in Upper Silesias (Poland) discovered many records that corresponded to deaths of inmates from the "Reichsautobahnlager Annaburg" and "Zwangsarbeitslager Niederkirch" camps. A certificate of death for Eliazer van Geuns a…

Read more

The Kozel period.

The period between 28 August till 12 December 1942 was known as the so-called “Kozel-period”. Named as such, as a number of transports with deported Jews from Belgium, France and Holland were stopped at Kozel station, about 80 km west from Auschwitz, where the Germans unloaded men who were suitable …

Read more

The address of Eliazer van Geuns

Laing's Nekstraat 26 III, Amsterdam Visit location page

Residents