Delschyler

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Delschyler
Дельжилер
Coat of arms is missing
Delschyler (Ukraine)
Delschyler
Delschyler
Basic data
Oblast : Odessa Oblast
Rajon : Tatarbunary district
Height : 42 m
Area : 3.38 km²
Residents : 4,071 (2001)
Population density : 1,204 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 68110
Area code : +380 4844
Geographic location : 45 ° 50 '  N , 29 ° 29'  E Coordinates: 45 ° 50 '18 "  N , 29 ° 29' 4"  E
KOATUU : 5121
Administrative structure : 2 villages
Address: вул. Енгельса 49а
68110 с. Дмитрівка
Website : Website of the municipality
Statistical information
Delschyler (Odessa Oblast)
Delschyler
Delschyler
i1

Delschyler ( Ukrainian Дельжилер ; Russian Дельжилер Delschiler , Romanian Deljiler ) is a Budschak located village in the Ukrainian Odessa with about 4,000 inhabitants (2001).

St. George's Church in Delschyler
House of culture in the village

The village is the administrative center of a 208.14 km² district council in the west of Tatarbunary Rajon , to which the village Nowa Oleksijiwka ( Нова Олексіївка , ) with about 80 inhabitants belongs.

The village is located 11 km west of the Tatarbunary district center and about 150 km southwest of the Odessa oblast center .

history

Since the village was founded in 1828, it has shared the history of the Budschak landscape in southern Bessarabia . After the Peace of Bucharest in 1812, this became part of the Bessarabia Governorate within the Russian Empire . In the course of the turmoil during the October Revolution , Russia lost Bessarabia, which declared itself the Democratic Republic of Moldova in 1917 and voluntarily joined the Kingdom of Romania in the same year . After the occupation of Bessarabia by the Soviet Union in 1940, the village was in the Bolhrad district of Akkerman Oblast (from August 7, 1940, Ismajil Oblast ) in the Ukrainian SSR . At the beginning of the German-Soviet War , the village came back to Romania in 1941. After the Red Army recaptured Bessarabia in 1944, the village was again in the Ukrainian Oblast Ismajil, which became part of Odessa Oblast in 1954. In 1991 the village became part of the independent Ukraine.

Between 1940 and 2016 the village was called Dmytrivka ( Дмитрівка ).

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. Local website on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada ; accessed on October 5, 2017 (Ukrainian)
  2. ^ Website of Dmytrivka District Council on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada; accessed on October 5, 2017 (Ukrainian)
  3. a b Local history of Dmytrivka in the history of the cities and villages of the Ukrainian SSR ; accessed on (ukrainian)
  4. Верховна Рада України; Постанова від 12.05.2016 № 1353-VIII Про перейменування деяких населених пунктів