Borschtschowytschi

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Borschtschowytschi
Борщовичі
Borschtschowytschi coat of arms
Borschtschowytschi (Ukraine)
Borschtschowytschi
Borschtschowytschi
Basic data
Oblast : Lviv Oblast
Rajon : Pustomyty Raion
Height : 224 m
Area : 5.345 km²
Residents : 2,258 (2001)
Population density : 422 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 81124
Area code : +380 3230
Geographic location : 49 ° 52 ′  N , 24 ° 17 ′  E Coordinates: 49 ° 51 ′ 41 ″  N , 24 ° 16 ′ 40 ″  E
KOATUU : 4623680401
Administrative structure : 1 village
Address: вул. С. Бандери 98
с. Борщовичі
Website : City council website
Statistical information
Borschtschowytschi (Lviv Oblast)
Borschtschowytschi
Borschtschowytschi
i1

Borschtschowytschi ( Ukrainian Борщовичі ; Russian Борщовичи Borschtschowitschi , Polish Barszczowice ) is a village in the Ukrainian Lviv Oblast with about 2200 inhabitants (2001).

Entrance

Geographical location

The village is the only locality of the eponymous, 5.345 km² district council in the northeast of Pustomyty Rajon .

The village is located at an altitude of 224  m on the right bank of the Poltwa , an approximately 70 km long tributary of the Bug , about 35 km northeast of the Pustomyty district center and 20 km east of the Lviv oblast center .

The M 06 / E 40 trunk road runs nine kilometers north of the village and the N 02 / M 09 national road runs ten kilometers south of the village . Borschtschowytschi has a train station on the Lviv – Sdolbuniw and Przemyśl – Khyriv lines .

history

The first time in 1442 in writing mentioned village was originally in Lviv land in the province of Ruthenia the noble Republic of Poland-Lithuania and came within the first partition of Poland in 1772 to the crown land Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria the Austrian House of Habsburg (from 1804 part of the Empire of Austria ), where it was in the Lviv district .

After the First World War and the disintegration of Austria-Hungary , the village first came to the West Ukrainian People's Republic , but after the following Polish-Ukrainian and Polish-Soviet war it became part of the Second Polish Republic and was incorporated into the Lvov Voivodeship .

In September 1939, the village, as the whole eastern Poland , according to the secret additional protocol of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact between the Soviet Union and Germany , occupied by the Soviet Union . After the German invasion of the Soviet Union , the village was occupied by Germany during the German-Soviet War and incorporated into the Galicia District of the General Government. After the Second World War , the village came back to the Soviet Union, which it joined the Ukrainian SSR . With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the village finally became part of the independent Ukraine.

Sons and daughters of the village

  • Bogdan Nikolaevich Stashinsky (Russian Богдан Николаевич Сташинский ; Ukrainian Богдан Миколайович Сташинський Bohdan Mykolajowytsch Staschynskyj ; born November 4, 1931), KGB -Agent, defectors and assassin of Lev Rebet and Stepan Bandera .

Web links

Commons : Borschtschowytschi  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Local website on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada ; accessed on June 13, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  2. ^ Website of the district council on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada; accessed on June 13, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  3. ^ Local history Borschtschowytschi in the history of the cities and villages of the Ukrainian SSR ; accessed on June 13, 2020 (Ukrainian)