Barysch (village)

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Barysch
Бариш
Coat of arms of Barysch
Barysch (Ukraine)
Barysch
Barysch
Basic data
Oblast : Ternopil Oblast
Rajon : Butschach district
Height : 350 m
Area : 9.193 km²
Residents : 2,494 (2003)
Population density : 271 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 48424
Area code : +380 3544
Geographic location : 49 ° 3 '  N , 25 ° 16'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 2 '45 "  N , 25 ° 16' 9"  E
KOATUU : 6121280401
Administrative structure : 1 village
Address: 48424 с. Бариш
Statistical information
Barysch (Ternopil Oblast)
Barysch
Barysch
i1

Barysch ( Ukrainian Бариш ; Russian Барыш , Polish Barysz ) is a village in the Ukraine , located on the Barysch river of the same name .

history

The place was mentioned in writing for the first time in 1454, in 1559 it received the Magdeburg town charter and then belonged to the Halitscher Land in the Ruthenian Voivodeship of the Kingdom of Poland until 1772 (until 1569 of the aristocratic republic of Poland-Lithuania ). With the partitions of Poland , the place fell to the Austrian Galicia , here the place belonged to the district administration Monasterzyska and later to the district administration Buczacz .

In November 1918, after the collapse of the Danube Monarchy at the end of the First World War , the city was briefly part of the West Ukrainian People's Republic . In the Polish-Ukrainian War , Poland occupied the last parts of the West Ukrainian People's Republic in July 1919. On November 21, 1919, the High Council of the Paris Peace Conference awarded Eastern Galicia to Poland for a period of 25 years (despite protests from Poland).

After Polish independence was regained, the place was in the Tarnopol Voivodeship in the Second Polish Republic from 1921 to September 1939 , was briefly occupied by the Soviet Union during World War II and then by Germany until 1944 . In 1941 the village was finally granted city status, and the large Jewish community was almost completely wiped out during the war.

After the end of the war, the place was added to the Soviet Union , lost its city rights and became part of the Ukrainian SSR . Since the collapse of the Soviet Union , it has belonged to the independent Ukraine since 1991.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Aleksander Jabłonowski: Ziemie ruskie. Ruś Czerwona In Polska XVI wieku pod plus geograficzno-statystycznym , drukarnia Piotra Laskanera i S-ki, Warszawa 1903, vol. XVIII (VII), Part II-a , p. 201. (Polish)
  2. Aleksander Jabłonowski. Pretty ruskie. Ruś Czerwona In Polska XVI wieku pod plus geograficzno-statystycznym , drukarnia Piotra Laskanera i S-ki, Warszawa 1903, T. VIII, Cz. II-a, p. 70. (Polish)
  3. sometimes in the Podolian Voivodeship → see: Rizzi Zannoni, Karta Podola, znaczney części Wołynia, płynienie Dniestru od Uścia, aż do Chocima y Ładowa, Bogu od swego zrzodła, azkiekie, azkiekie, aziez do Ładyczawie, yz do Ładyczynago, pławdograniczego .; 1772 (Polish)
  4. Under the name BaryżOrdinance of the Austrian Ministry of State of 1867 in the Austrian National Library. Retrieved February 26, 2013.
  5. Дипломатія ЗУНР на Паризькій мирній конференції 1919 р. Archived from the original on March 25, 2016. Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. In: Український історичний журнал . 5 (482). Retrieved March 22, 2016. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / library.ua ISSN 0130-5247, p. 134. (Ukrainian)