Sources and method

Sources

This page describes the record types, archival conventions, spelling variants, and limits of interpretation used in building the Zaichyk surname archive.

How the Archive Was Built

The site is based on dated records rather than surname lore.

The archive was assembled from surviving historical records in which the surname Зайчик / Zaichyk, or closely related spellings, appears in identifiable documentary contexts. Each entry is interpreted through the institution that produced it: town books, parish registers, oath books, household rolls, civic directories, or printed local reference works.

For a short overview of the research project, see The Zaichyk Surname Archive.

Types of Sources Used

The archive draws on legal, parish, military, civic, and printed record traditions.

The site is based on a working corpus of over 500 unique identified pre-1920 records and source references for the surname Zaichyk / Zaichik and related historical spellings.

Town law

Testaments and Municipal Records

Seventeenth-century Volhynian material includes town-book and testamentary records, especially from Dubno. These sources preserve households, property, inheritance, witnesses, burial instructions, and municipal legal procedure.

Cossack-era records

Oath Books and Sotnia Rolls

Left-Bank records include oath-book and Hetmanate administrative material, such as the 1654 Stol'ne entry and later Zinkivska Sotnia household evidence.

Parish life

Orthodox and Catholic Registers

Parish records preserve baptisms, marriages, deaths, godparents, parents, residence, estate labels, and local community affiliation across Ukrainian, Belarusian, Crimean, Volhynian, and Galician settings.

Imperial administration

Status and Estate Categories

Many records identify people through imperial estate or social-status labels such as mishchany, krestyane, kazenni seliany, kuptsi, Cossack status, military rank, or residence formulas such as zhitel.

Jewish records

Communal and Imperial Records

Jewish Zaichyk records appear in settings such as Mogilev and Mykolaiv. These are treated as distinct documentary contexts tied to Jewish communal life, urban records, and the legal geography of the Pale of Settlement.

Civic sources

Directories and Public Institutions

Kherson civic evidence includes printed directories, city-administration references, legal-professional listings, city duma records, and public-library chronicle material.

Spelling and Transliteration

The surname appears across Cyrillic, Polish, Latin-register, and transliterated forms.

Historical records do not preserve surnames in one fixed modern form. The archive includes forms such as Зайчик, Заичикъ, Zaichyk, Zaychyk, Zaichik, and Polish-form Zajczyk. These variations reflect the language, script, orthography, and institution of the source.

A Polish spelling in a Roman Catholic or Galician record does not automatically determine ethnicity. A Russian imperial spelling does not automatically determine origin. A Cyrillic parish form, a Polish register form, and a transliterated modern form may all represent related documentary forms of the same surname.

Interpreting Social Labels

Status terms are treated as historical record categories, not as modern identity labels.

Terms such as mishchany, kuptsi, Cossack, peasant, state peasant, soldier, cannoneer, townsman, and zhitel are interpreted within the record systems that used them. Some terms indicate legal estate or profession; others function mainly as residence formulas or parish identifiers.

The site therefore avoids treating every label as a complete biography. A parish record may preserve only a name, parentage, residence, and status word, while a testament or civic directory may preserve a richer social position. The level of interpretation depends on the type of source.

Limits of the Evidence

Surviving records do not equal total historical distribution.

The archive reflects surviving and accessible documentation. Some regions preserve rich parish books or town records; others have gaps caused by war, fire, administrative loss, missing volumes, restricted access, or uneven digitization. A dense cluster of records may reflect real family continuity, better survival of records, or both.

For that reason, the site does not treat record concentration as proof of a single point of origin. It presents clusters as documentary centers: places where the surname is visible in the surviving historical record.

Major Source Groups

The principal evidence comes from several recurring archival and published source types.

1600s

Volhynian town books and testaments

Early modern municipal legal records, especially from Dubno, preserving town households, property, inheritance, and religious obligations.

1654

Cossack oath-book material

The Stol'ne oath-book entry for Trofym Zaichyk, recorded as a townsman in the Cossack-era documentary world of northern Ukraine.

1700s

Hetmanate and sotnia records

Household and administrative material such as the Zinkivska Sotnia roll, placing the surname within the regimental-sotnia structure of the Hetmanate.

1800s

Orthodox and Catholic parish books

Metrical books from Ukrainian, Belarusian, Volhynian, Crimean, and Galician settings, including baptisms, marriages, deaths, godparents, residence, and status labels.

1800s–1900s

Printed directories and civic records

Kherson city directories, legal-professional listings, public-library chronicles, and other civic sources documenting Sysoi Karpovych Zaichyk.