Anna (ca. July 1806-26 Aug. 1806)
Anna (14 Aug. 1807-26 Aug. 1807)
Maria (b. 29 July 1808) married farmer Ivan Kiebuz (b. ca. 1804) of Sielec, son of Andrei Kiebuz, on 27 October 1822. The address associated with their marriage is 6 Wilcze. See Sielec.
Anna (22 Sept. 1811-2 Nov. 1835) married Ivan Jarosiewicz (b. 1815), son of farmers from Kulasze named Stefan and Marianna Baliczkowa, on 12 August 1832. Their address at marriage was entered as 6 Wilcze. When their son, Ihnatii, was born (2 Dec. 1833-15 Jan. 1835), they resided at house no. 55. Ihnatii's godparents were: Ihnatii Jarosiewicz, a farmer in Przekopana; and Maria, wife of Oleksander Kiebuzinski of Nehrybka (possibly my great, great, great grandmother).
Vasyl (3 April 1814-14 Oct. 1857 (of consumption at 25 Wilcze)) married Marianna Walewska (b. 26 Dec. 1817, Panko and Maria Tsokh) circa February-March 1837.
Kateryna (b. 24 April 1818) married Andrei Kuzmicz (b. 19 Oct. 1817) of Sielec, the son of Vasyl and Paraskeva Jaromiszowska, on 22 November 1835. Their address is listed as 4 Wilcze.
Halia
Eva (b. 15 Feb. 1822) married Ivan Powazniak (b. ca. 1819, Ilia and Eva). They had a daughter named Kateryna (b. 6 Oct. 1843), and, at the time of her birth, the family was living at 29, Wilcze. When their son Petro was born (29 Jan. 1848), they had moved to 6 Wilcze.
Stefan (6 April 1825-20 Oct. 1825)
Hryc (Hryhorii) (1 Feb. 1827-16 June 1835)
Maria died on 16 July 1831 of cholera at age 41. At the time of her death the family was living at 6 Wilcze. Ivan, now 56, took a second wife, 2) Maria (b. ca. 1796/1803-26 February 1856). She was the daughter of Ivan and Maria Fedun, and a widow to the late Andrei Chomicki. They married on 2 September 1832, and resided at 5-6 Wilcze. Their children were:
Pelahia (17 Oct. 1833-29 March 1900) married 1) Ivan Lohyn (b. 1827). They had one son:
Mykola (b. 26 Feb. 1853) married 1) Maria Bilyk (b. 8 Nov. 1856, Dmytro and Anastasia Mykyta of Przekopana) in 1875.
After her husband's death, Pelahia wed 2) Ivan Tsok (b. ca. 1827), the son of farmers Hryhorii Tsok and Anna Jarosiewicz, on 1 October 1854. They had at least six daughters and three sons, all baptized at the Ukrainian Cathedral. Their address was 27/32 Wilcze. When Pelahia passed away at age 68, she lived at 2 Wilcze. Pelahia's son Ivan's and daughters' address was listed as 6 Wilcze at the time of their marriages:
Ivan (13 June 1856-22 Aug. 1920) marries Kateryna Volynets (Wolyniec)) of 133, Blonie, on 13 February 1881.
Rosalia (15 Sep. 1860-24 Sep. 1860)
Pelahia (b. 18 Apr. 1863)
Kateryna (b. 14 July 1865) marries Andrei Makar (b. 4 Dec. 1855, Ivan and Paraska Kihaczynska of Buszkowice) on 3 October 1880
Anna (b. 4 Nov. 1867) married 1) Danylo Glus on 15 Nov. 1885 (d. 1888), and 2) Teodor Pouch on 5 Feb. 1893
Vasyl (b. 7 July 1870-d. 1870)
Maria (19 June 1871-9 April 1872)
Hryhorii (b./d. 23 Feb. 1873)
Anastasia (23 May 1875-24 May 1875)
Mykola (21 May 1836-21 Jan. 1913 in Przemysl (see: Peremyskyi visnyk, v.7, no. 3 (31 Jan. 1913)), married 1) Maria Kozakiewicz (ca. 1835/1837-18 Nov. 1869), daughter of Roman and Anna Sikora, on 17 October 1852. One of their witnesses was Ivan Lohyn. The couple resided at 2 Wilcze. Their children included: Pelahia (3 Nov. 1856-7 Dec. 1856), Anna (13 Jan. 1858-20 July 1858), and Anna (11 Feb. 1860-26 Feb. 1860). The second Anna's baptism took place at the Ukrainian Cathedral. Mykola Kiebuzinski was a military veteran, home owner, and ran for the socialist party in the municipal elections for Przemysl, representing the Lviv District, in 1897 (Kuryer Przemyski 25 Feb. 1897). When his son Mykhailo was attending the Juliusz Slowacki Gymnasium in Przemysl, Mykola was listed as a retired railway official with the Prince Albrecht Railway, which in 1873 connected Stryi-Dolyna-Stanyslaviv. He may have also been involved in the railway development through the Lupkow Pass in 1872.
After the death of his first wife, Mykola remarried. His second wife was 2) Rosalia (née Binicka; 1 Feb. 1846, Stryi-25 May 1902 (of pneumonia), daughter of Vasyl Binicki and Marianna Serednicka Tomaszewska of Blonie). They were married on 21 January 1870 by Bishop Joseph Sembratovych, and resided at 31-33 ul. Sienna (today ul. Gen. Zygmunta Zielinskiego). The family maintained close ties with the city of Stryi, and lived there in the mid-1880s.
Mykola's and Rosalia's children were:
Ivan Kiebuzinski (26 Feb. 1871, Przemysl-16 Apr. 1906) is presently buried in Przemysl city cemetery. At the time of his death, of heart trouble, he was a seminarian in the Ukrainian Catholic Church. His last address was 33 ul. Sienna, Lwowskie district.
The 1877/1878 directory of the Institute for the Deaf in Lviv, lists among its first year students one Jan Kiebuzinski. This student may be the same person buried in the Przemysl city cemetery. (See: Sprawozdanie o stanie gal. zakladu gluchoniemych za rok 1877/78 (Lwow, 1878), p. 7).
Mykhailo (Michal) Kiebuzinski (10 Nov. 1872-5 Jan. 1939) attended the Higher Real gymnasium in Stryi (1884/85), and the Polish gymnasium in Przemysl (from 1887), from which he graduated in 1893. He lived with his father at ul. Lwowska, nr. 420. Afterwards he studied law. He then worked for postal-telegraph offices in Lviv (1897), Przemysl (1898-1899), Jaroslaw (1900-1902), and again in Przemysl (1903-1914). He married the widow Konstantyna Demak Misinkiewicz (b. 22 March 1870; the late Ignacy Misinkiewicz, a carpenter (d. 30 Jan. 1913)) in Przemsyl on 9 September 1914. Mykhailo served as executive member of the Society for Merchants and Commerce in Przemysl (Source: Peremyskyi vistnyk v.4, no. 11 (25 Feb. 1910). He donated funds towards the establishment of a private Ukrainian school to be named after Markiian Shashkevych (Peremyskyi vistnyk v.5, no. 6 (11 Aug. 1911). During World War I, Mykhailo’s political orientation was conservative, and he aligned himself with the pro-monarchist Hetmanite movement. He was arrested by Polish authorities in Przemysl in 1918 (Source: Reprint of article “Visti z kraiu-Peremyshl” in Holos z-nad Buhu, no. 1 (1 Mr. 2010)), following the seizure of the city by Ukrainian forces in early November, during which Kiebuzinski was charged with overseeing the city's postal and telegraph bureau. He was interned as a prisoner of war at Dombie from 1918 to 1919, along with some 6,000 to 12,000 other Ukrainians. At the time he was a city controller (or accountant), and identified as a well-known Ukrainian patriot (Source: The Bloody Book: Returns Concerning the Invasion of the Poles into the Ukrainian Territory of East-Galicia, in 1918/19, vol.1, p. 50). After the war and revolutionary period, he returned to work for the postal and telegraph service, and was stationed in Bochnia (located between Krakow and Tarnow) in 1923, before being transferred back to Przemysl (Source: Dziennik Urzedowy Ministerstwa Poczt i Telegrafow, 1923, p. 551). Mykhailo became a member of the Ukrainian National Democratic Society (UNDO), and took part in the city’s district council meeting of 1932. He ran unsuccessfully for municipal elections (District III) held in Przemysl in May 1934 (Ukrainskyi beskyd, 34 May 1934). Mykhailo was a member of the Society of the Ukrainian Peoples' Home, and served as assistant director of its executive from 1935 until circa 1938 (Peremyshl i peremyska zemlia protiahom vikiv z instytutsii. Peremyshl-Lviv, 2003). His obituary noted that he had been a member of many other local and regional Ukrainian societies, among them a number of local savings and loan associations. and had served on the board of the Society of the Ukrainian Girls' Institute. He was credited with founding the Prosvita society branch in Błonie, a neighborhood of greater Przemysl, to which he donated property. (Nadsianska zemlia 2 (4) (1939).
Iosyp (Osyp or Jozef) Kiebuzinski (27 Dec. 1873, Przemysl-12 Sep. 1929, Stryi; godparents: Ivan Tsok and Kateryna Kiebuzinska) attended the Ukrainian section of the Polish gymnasium in Przemysl from 1891 to 1893, from which developed a separate Ukrainian gymnasium soon after. He completed Przemysl Ukrainian State Gymnasium only in 1897. He began teaching at the Stryi gymnasium in 1905, followed by assignments at the Arcyksiezniczki Elzbiety Gymnasium in Sambir (1906-1909), the gymnasium in Sokil (1909) and at the Polish Gymnasium in Ternopil (1910-1913). In Sambir he taught history, and the Latin, German, and Ukrainian languages; while in Ternopil he was responsible for history and geography, and the German and Ukrainian languages. Iosyp returned to Stryi in the 1913/1914 school year, teaching history and geography, and also served as the director of the Shevchenko Ukrainian Bursa, a dormitory home for out-of-town students.
Iosyp Kiebuzinski was a refugee in Vienna during the first World War (he lived at Theresianumgasse 1.10.), and taught privately there from 1914 to 1918. After the war, he returned to teaching at the Stryi State Gymnasium.
Iosyp Kebuzinskyi (2nd row: center),director of the Ukrainian branch of the Stryi State Gymnasium (June 1921)
In a memoir of a Stryi Gymansium student, the author mentions how Prof. Kebuzynskyi’s name characterized the man himself: “he would come to class with various colored shoes, and mis-buttoned jackets” (Source:Stryishchyna: istorychno-memuarnyi zbirnyk, vol.2 (Niu Iork: Komitet Stryishchyny, 1990), p. 471). Despite this unfavorable description, when Iosyp died, at age 56, his funeral, held on 14 September 1929, was attended by all the teachers and students of the school, as well as by representatives from other academic institutions. He was memorialized the following day at two masses held at the Roman and Greek Catholic churches (Source: Sprawozdanie dyrekcji Panstwowego gimnazjumi im. Marszalka Jozefa Pilsudskiego w Stryju za rok szkolny 1928/29).
Volodymyr (Vladimir or Wlodizmierz) Kiebuzinski (b. 29 July 1875; godparents: Iosyf Musial and Kateryna (wife of Semen) Kiebuzinska) from Przemysl settled in Ternopil with his new bride, Rosalia (née Sawirska, daughter of Thomas and Catherine (née Kot), b. 19 Oct. 1885 in Przemysl). They had wed in their home city, Przemysl, on 20 February 1906. They moved in to no. 5, Copernicus place. By trade, Volodymyr was a tile manufacturer. According to Galician, Polish and Danzig business directories from about 1913 to 1937, Volodymyr worked as a tile manufacturer in Ternopil, at first at ul. Ostrogskiego, 24 (1913), and then at ul. Walowa, 3 and 4 (1926-1937, the street was renamed ul. Brucknera). In 1920 he contributed money (350 Polish marks) to support local Ukrainian widows and orphans of veterans of World War I (Source: Svoboda (5 Feb. 1921)). He moved to Kutno (north of Łódź) just before the Second World War and was listed in a 1941 directory as working there as a potter. He and his wife had at least three children:
Stefania Kiebuzinska (b. 8 Jan. 1907 in Ternopil) was a student at the Ukrainian Gymnasium in Ternopil from 1922 to 1927. She attended grades 3 through 7 there (Source: Iuvileina knyha Ukrainskoi himnazii v Ternopoli, 1898-1998, za red. Stepana Iaremy. Ternopil, 1998, p. 525). Her godparents were Ernest Büttner and Maria Kiebuzinska.Mykhailo Kiebuzinski (b. 18 Oct. 1908 in Ternopil) was a student at the Ukrainian Gymnasium in Ternopil from 1920 to 1926. He attended grades 3 thorugh 8 there, and was a graduate of the school (Source: Iuvileina knyha Ukrainskoi himnazii v Ternopoli, 1898-1998, za red. Stepana Iaremy. Ternopil, 1998, p. 512). He married Irena Mariia Abrysovska (Abrisowska) (b. 27 Aug. 1918 in Lviv; her mother Maria b. 26 April 1889 in Stavchany). Irena studied at the "Ridna shkola" Ukrainian Gymnasium for Girls in Lviv from 1932 to 1937. For her political activities, she faced repressions during the Second World War (Source: Pryvatna divocha gimnaziia "Ridnoi shkoly" Ukrainskoho pedahohichnoho tovarystva imeni Illi ta Ivanny Kokorudziv u Lvovi (Drohobych: Vidrodzhennia, 1997), p. 272). Mykhailo, Irena, and their three children, immigrated to Argentina. Prior, they were living as displaced persons in Austria, probably near the town of Hehenemes, and then in Fribourg. They arrived aboard the ship "Groix" in Buenos Aires by way of Le Havre on 7 December 1948. Mykhailo by profession was an engineer.They settled in the neighborhood of Longchamps in Buenos Aires.Ivan Kiebuzinski, a Ukrainian and likely the son of Volodymyr, was a manufacturer and merchant of tile stoves in Ternopil during the 1930s (Source: Konrad, Stepan, ed. Shliakhamy zolotoho Podillia (Philadelphia, 1960), v.1, p. 96, v.3, p. 282).
Maria was born on 8 January 1878 in Muszyna (house no. 113), in the parish of Powroźnik near Nowy Sacz. Her godparents at the time of baptism were Petrus Lombard, a landowner in Majdan near Nowy Sacz, and Zynovia Karpiak (wife of T. Karpiak) of Roztoka Wielka. She taught primary school in Torki (1900-1901), Butsiv (Buców) (1902), Chyrzyna (1905-1906), and in Hureczko (1907-1912). She received her certificate to teach in Polish and Ukrainian in 1902 in Przemysl. Maria married Joseph Ilnicki (born 19 March 1880 to Joseph and Francisca Smolska) on 29 September 1910 at the Greek-Catholic Church of the Transfiguration in Lviv. At the time, Ilnicki was a gymnasium teacher in Sieniawa, Jaroslaw district. Maria died 4 May 1942, and is buried in Poznań, cm. par. Bożego Ciała (Bluszczowa).
Mykola (Mikolaj) was born on 25 October 1882, and baptised at the Roman Catholic parish of St. Malgorzata in Nowy Sącz on 23 November. He died on 22 May 1883.
Stefan was born on 1 April 1885 in Stryi (house no. 83), and died on 28 July 1893 at age 8 of tuberculosis in Przemysl. At the time of his death, the family was living at 420 Blonie (same as 31-33 ul. Sienna).
Semen (b. 10 April 1839) married Kateryna Kulpak (b. ca. 1848), the daughter of Ihnatii Kulpak and Maria Hurska, on 9 December 1867. They resided at 6 Wilcze. Semen Kiebuz died on 23 November 1902 at age 65 of pulmonary tuberculosis. At the time of his death he resided at 68 ul. Polna, Wilcza. He and his descendants owned lots at 64, 66, 68, 70, 74, 76, and 78 along ul. Polna (today ul. Wladyslawa Reymonta). Semen served as an officer in the Gustav V. König von Schweden, der Goten und Wenden Nr. 10 Infantry Regiment. The regiment was part of the 24th Infantry Division of the 10th Army Corps garrisoned in Przemysl.
Semen and Kateryna had a daughter named Maria (b. 23 March 1868). She married Semen / Szymon Vorobel (Worobel) (7 May 1865, Wilcze-23 November 1926, Krakow) on 4 November 1890 in Przemysl. Worobel was the son of Theodor and Maria (née Martyniak) of Blonie. He worked for the postal-telegraph service from 1891 until his death, first at Zywiec and then in Krakow. Their daughter Helena Worobel was born in 1891, in Zywiec, and baptized at St. Norbert Greek-Catholic Church in Krakow.
Ivan may have had a cousin named Anton. Anton and his wife Paraskeva had two sons: Maksym Kiebuz (b. ca. 1829 in Bratkowice, near Rzeszow-5 July 1896, Przemysl) and Pavlo Kiebuz (b. 19 Jan. 1841):
Maksym married Anna Spotowicz in 1862. He worked as a laborer in Grabownicza Starzenska. Maksym committed suicide on 5 July 1896 at age 67. At the time, he was residing at 30 ul. Sienna. Maksym may have sometimes been called, interchangeably, Vasyl, and taken a second wife by the name of Anna Malecka (daughter of Semen Malecki and Tekla). Maksym's children include:
Maria (b. 28 Nov. 1866) marries Stanislaus Radecki (b. 13 May 1860, Borek), a Roman Catholic, on 5 June 1887 in Przemysl. One of their witnesses was Pavlo Kiebuz. Their address was 186.
twins Anna (21 Dec. 1869-d. 12 Nov. 1872) and Rosalia (21 Dec. 1869-9 Jan. 1870)
Ahafiia (b. 16 Feb. 1873) marries Johann Oetzl / Petrzl (b. 6 Jan. 1868) in October 1892, a Roman Catholic bricklayer from Moravia and son of Johann Petrzl and Catharine Dolezal. They had a son: Rudolph Stanislaus (6 April 1900-15 April 1931), who married on 7 July 1925.
Ivan (10 June 1876-23 June 1879)
Ihnatii (Ignacy / Ignatius) (b. 22 Jan. 1880-d. 22 Oct. 1921, Przemysl, son of Maksym and Anna Malecka,) marries Sofia Oleszko (12 Dec. 1879 or 1881-4 April 1930, daughter of Theodor and Anna Holubowska), of the Roman Catholic rite, on 24 February 1903 in Przemysl. Ihnatii worked in the concrete industry. His children were baptised as Roman Catholics in the parish of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary and St. John the Baptist: Mieczyslaw Kiebuz (30 Dec. 1899-26 Feb. 1920); Stanislaw Ludwik ( 5 Aug. 1904-?); Emilia (26 April 1907-?); Josepha (10 Mar. 1909-11 Mar. 1909); Casimir (5 Mar. 1910-17 Aug. 1910); Boleslaus (11 Feb. 1913-3 June 1913); and Maria (10 Apr. 1915-6 July 1915). They resided respectively at ul. Gleboka, 3, ul. Krownicka, 3, and ul. Mickieiwicza, 84. Ignacy, Sofia, and Mieczyslaw are buried in the same plot in the main cemetery in Przemysl (quarter 27B, Row 11, no. 13).
Another daughter was born to Maksym and Anna by the name of Ivanna. She had some connection to Sudova Vyshnia. Her husband's name was Ivan [Petselskyi]
Pavlo married Kateryna Czerpa (Martin and Lucia Stojakowska). They were both affiliated with the Roman-Catholic church in Zasanie. Their children:
Maria (ca. 1889-24 Jan. 1891, Zasanie)
Sophia (b. 1 Feb. 1890-). She got married on 26 November 1918 in Przemysl.
Anton (b. 22 Jan. 1892)