of Abraham van Westerveld, mid-17th century. Rechytsa is one of the oldest towns in
Belarus. First settlements in this region are dated back to the epoch of mesolite (9 – 5th centuries B.C.). Later, this area was inhabited by the
Dregovichi tribe. The town was first mentioned in the Novgorod chronicle in 1213 as a town of the
Principality of Chernigov. Rechytsa was also ruled by
Kiev and
Turov Grand Dukes. At the time of
Gediminas reign (1311–1341) the town was annexed to the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania, from 1385 forming part of the
Polish–Lithuanian union. Rečyca as well as
Orsha,
Shklow,
Mogilev, Stary Bychaw and
Rahachow formed a well-developed frontier defense system at the River Dniepr. 1392–1430 – the reign of Grand Duke Vytautas. He constructed a fortified castle with five towers in the area of the detinets (old Belarusian for the downtown) on the bank of the Dniepr. At that time the town had three fortification lines in the form of water trenches and ramparts with bastions. In the area between the fortress and the second fortification line there was a territory for rich mansions, Church of the Order of Friars Preachers and a trade square. The town inhabitants settled lived between the second and third fortification lines. The construction of the town had clear right-angled forms. In 1561 the town was partially granted
Magdeburg rights by
Sigismund II Augustus. Within the
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, it was a county seat in the
Minsk Voivodeship. The town was practically destroyed during the
Cossack war of 1648–1651. After the
Truce of Andrusovo it was restored to the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. It was annexed by
Russia in the
Second Partition of Poland in 1793. It then became an
uyezd seat in the newly formed
Minsk Governorate. The first permanent town plan of Rechytsa was approved in 1800. During the
Napoleonic Wars in 1812 the town was a temporary residence of the Minsk governor. The town was occupied by Napoleon's Army in some of 1812, fought over by Whites and Reds during the
Russian Civil War of 1917–1922, occupied by
Central Powers in 1917–1918, and temporarily controlled by
Poland in 1920 during the
Polish–Soviet War. From 1922 it formed part of the
Soviet Union. It was under German occupation during
World War II in 1941–1943/4. The Germans operated a Nazi prison in the town.
Jewish community Rechytsa had one of the oldest Jewish communities in Belarus, and later the town was a center for
Chabad Hasidic Jews. In 1648, Cossacks murdered many of its Jews. The town's Jewish population in 1766 numbered 133, increasing to 1,268 in 1800 (two-thirds of the total population), and 2,080 in 1847. By 1897 the town's Jewish population grew to 5,334, which constituted 57 percent of the general population. On the eve of World War I the Jewish population is thought to have numbered some 7,500. Rabbi Shalom Dovber Schneersohn of Rechitsa (d. 1908) led the
Kapust branch of the Chabad movement until his death in 1908.
World War II During
World War II, the Germans occupied the town on 23 August 1941 and in November all 3,000 remaining Jews were gathered in a
ghetto. On 25 November the Jews were murdered by the Nazis. Following the war, a few Jews returned to Rechytsa. The town had no synagogue, and in 1970 the Jewish population was estimated at 1,000. In the 1990s most Jews of the town emigrated to Israel and the West. Local residents said the Russian military had been unloading weapons on train platforms there and had commandeered at least two abandoned factories. ==Demographics==