Buzivka (Shashkiv)

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Buzivka
Бузівка
Buzivka coat of arms
Busivka (Ukraine)
Buzivka
Buzivka
Basic data
Oblast : Cherkasy Oblast
Rajon : Shashkiv Raion
Height : 209 m
Area : Information is missing
Residents : 2,200 (2010)
Postcodes : 19243
Area code : +380 4747
Geographic location : 49 ° 7 '  N , 30 ° 5'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 7 '14 "  N , 30 ° 5' 21"  E
KOATUU : 7120981201
Administrative structure : 2 villages
Address: вул. Миру 91А
19243 с. Бузівка
Website : Rural community website
Statistical information
Buzivka (Cherkassy Oblast)
Buzivka
Buzivka
i1

Busiwka ( Ukrainian Бузівка ; Russian Бузовка Busowka ) is a village in the west of the Ukrainian Cherkassy Oblast with 2200 inhabitants (2010).

Geographical location

The village is located in the Dnieper highlands at an altitude of 209  m on the bank of the Hirskyi Tikytsch , 16 km south of the district center Shashkiv and 180 km west of the Oblast center Cherkasy . The M 05 / E 95 road runs through the municipality .

history

The village was first mentioned in writing on a map by Guillaume le Vasseur de Beauplan , who between 1630 and 1648 directed the construction of fortresses in the south of Ukraine in the service of the Polish government. The village was occupied by the Wehrmacht between autumn 1941 and January 9, 1944 .

Since September 2018, Buzivka has been the administrative center of the rural municipality of the same name in Shashkiv district , which also includes the village of Zelenyi Rih ( Зелений Ріг , ) with 628 inhabitants.

Population development

Sources: 1861; 1889; 1831, 1900, 1926, 1971; 2001; 2010

Web links

Commons : Busiwka  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Settlements in the rural municipality Buzivka on the official website of the rural municipality; accessed on July 8, 2019 (Ukrainian)
  2. a b c d Local history of Busiwka in the history of the cities and villages of the Ukrainian SSR ; accessed on July 8, 2019 (Ukrainian)
  3. Entry on Бузовка in Brockhaus-Efron ; accessed on July 8, 2019 (Russian)
  4. Local website on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada ; accessed on July 8, 2019 (Ukrainian)