Buniw
Buniw | ||
Бунів | ||
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Basic data | ||
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Oblast : | Lviv Oblast | |
Rajon : | Javoriv Raion | |
Height : | 250 m | |
Area : | 2.13 km² | |
Residents : | 795 (2001) | |
Population density : | 373 inhabitants per km² | |
Postcodes : | 81040 | |
Area code : | +380 3259 | |
Geographic location : | 49 ° 54 ' N , 23 ° 16' E | |
KOATUU : | 4625881301 | |
Administrative structure : | 2 villages | |
Address: | майд. Шевченка буд. 2 81040 с. Бунів |
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Website : | City council website | |
Statistical information | ||
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Buniw ( Ukrainian Бунів ; Russian Бунов Bunow , Polish Bonów ) is a village in the Ukrainian Lviv Oblast with about 800 inhabitants (2001).
Buniw is the administrative center of the same name, 3.093 km² district council in the southwest of Jaworiw Rajon , to which the village Iwanyky ( Іваники , ⊙ ) with about 170 inhabitants belongs.
The village is located at an altitude of 250 m, 10 km southwest of the Jaworiw district center and 58 km west of the Lviv oblast center .
With the wooden St. Paraskewa Church built in 1671 and its bell tower, it has an architectural monument from the 17th century.
The grave of the Ukrainian doctor, writer, poet, journalist, publicist and ideologist Jurij Lypa , who was brutally murdered by employees of the NKVD on August 19, 1944 in the neighboring village of Shutova, is located in the village cemetery . His is still remembered in the village today.
history
The village, first mentioned in writing in 1349 (another source mentions the year 1320), was initially in the aristocratic republic of Poland-Lithuania and after the First Partition of Poland from 1772 to 1918 in the Austrian crown land of Galicia and Lodomeria (there from 1855 in the Jaworów district ). After the collapse of the Habsburg Monarchy at the end of the First World War in November 1918, the village came briefly to the West Ukrainian People's Republic and then to the Lviv Voivodeship of the Second Polish Republic .
After the occupation of eastern Poland by the Soviet Union at the end of 1939, the village fell to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic within the Soviet Union until it was annexed to the Galicia district after the German occupation between 1941 and 1944 . After the village was retaken by the Red Army , the Ukrainian SSR was reunited, where it remained until the collapse of the Soviet Union and finally became part of the now independent Ukraine in 1991.
Web links
- Siedliska . In: Filip Sulimierski, Władysław Walewski (eds.): Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich . tape 10 : Rukszenice – Sochaczew . Walewskiego, Warsaw 1889, p. 512 (Polish, edu.pl ).
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b local website on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada ; accessed on December 6, 2019 (Ukrainian)
- ^ Website of the district council on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada; accessed on December 6, 2019 (Ukrainian)
- ↑ St. Paraskewa Church ; accessed on December 6, 2019 (Ukrainian)
- ↑ a b Local history of Buniw in the history of the cities and villages of the Ukrainian SSR ; accessed on December 6, 2019 (Ukrainian)
- ↑ Entry on Jurij Lypa in the Encyclopedia of the History of Ukraine ; accessed on December 6, 2019 (Ukrainian)
- ↑ On May 5, 1900, Yuri Lypa was born - a writer, a doctor, an ideologist of Ukrainian nationalism in Рідна країна on May 5, 2018; accessed on December 6, 2019 (Ukrainian)
- ↑ Dear Jurij Lypa in day.Kyiv.ua of August 20, 2018; accessed on December 6, 2019 (Ukrainian)