Alternate names: Bil'shivtsi and Більшівці [Ukr], Bołszowce [Pol], Bolshevitz and באָלשװעץ [Yid], Bol'shovtsy and Болшовцы [Rus], Bilişăuţi [Rom], Bolsewits, Bolsewitz, Bolshevetz, Bolshovtse, Bolshovtzi, Bil'sivci, Bilsziwci. Hebrew: בולשובצה 49°11' N, 24°45' E, 19 miles N of Ivano-Frankivsk (Stanisławów), 17 miles SSE of Rogatin (Rohatyn). Jewish population: 2,256 (in 1900). [June 2014]
- KehilaLink
- Jewish Galicia and Bukovina. [June 2014]
- Photos [January 2016]
- List of the soviet citizens shot by German-fascist occupants and their confederates of Bolshowetsky Rayon (district), Stanislau Oblast (county)
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- Gesher Galicia
- Museum of the History of Polish Jews
- Jewish Records Indexing Poland Town Page
- Słownik Geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego (1880-1902), I, p. 304: "Bołszowce".
- Shtetl Finder (1989), p. 9: "Bolshovtzi, Bolshevetz".
- Pinkas HaKehilot, Poland, Vol. 2 (1980), pp. 79-80: "Bołszowce".
- Encyclopedia of Jewish Life (2001), p. 168: "Bolszowce".
- Holocaust: "List of Soviet Citizens Shot By German-Fascist Occupants and their Confederates of Bolshowetsky Raion, Stanislau Oblast" [June 2014]
- Roots to Roots Foundation. [June 2014]
- During WWI, Jewish cemetery on a hill overlooking the town, was used by the Austrian army for its artillery placements. [June 2014]
- Galician Traces: "In Bil'shivtsi we found a large synagogue converted into a house of culture. The building was open but no one was around. The interior bore no resemblance to a synagogue except for a second floor area that might have been a women's balcony but that now housed a bank of theatrical lights. As I had read, the cemetery at Bil'shivtsi did occupy a commanding bit of high ground and showed signs of Austro-Hungarian World War I artillery gun emplacements. The only discernible stone was a fragment about 12″ by 18″. [June 2014]