Dolizhny Shepit

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Dolizhny Shepit
Долішній Шепіт
Coat of arms is missing
Dolizhny Shepit (Ukraine)
Dolizhny Shepit
Dolizhny Shepit
Basic data
Oblast : Chernivtsi Oblast
Rajon : Vyshnytsia district
Height : 671 m
Area : Information is missing
Residents : 1,304 (2007)
Postcodes : 59240
Area code : +380 3730
Geographic location : 48 ° 1 '  N , 25 ° 17'  E Coordinates: 48 ° 0 '45 "  N , 25 ° 17' 17"  E
KOATUU : 7320581501
Administrative structure : 4 villages
Address: 59240 с. Долішній Шепіт
Statistical information
Dolizhny Shepit (Chernivtsi Oblast)
Dolizhny Shepit
Dolizhny Shepit
i1

Dolischnij Schepit ( Ukrainian Долішній Шепіт ; Russian Долишний Шепот Dolischni Schepot , Romanian Șipotele pe Siret or Şipotele Siretului , German  Schipoth ) is a village in Vyshnytsia district in Chernivtsi Oblast .

The district council of the same name includes, in addition to the village, the villages of Leketschi ( Лекечі ) Lopuschna ( Лопушна ) and Falkiw ( Фальків ).

location

The place is located at 671  m at the sources of the Great Sereth in the southern part of the Vyshnytsia district near the Romanian border .

history

Schipoth on a festival day around 1900

Schipoth was first mentioned in a document on March 15, 1490 in a certificate of confirmation of the goods in Putna Monastery. On December 9, 1627, the Moldovan prince Miron Barnovschi-Movilă donated the villages Toporăuţi and Şipotele to the monastery "Adormirea Maicii Domnului" from Iași . The place belonged to the Principality of Moldova until 1775 .

After the Bucovina was occupied by neutral Austria towards the end of the Russo-Ottoman War (1768–1774) in 1774 , this was confirmed in the peace treaty of Küçük Kaynarca in 1775 , officially as thanks for Austria's "intermediary services" between the war opponents. As a result, Schipoth was a part of Austria, first in the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria , and from 1849 in the newly founded crown land Duchy of Bukowina .

The village and the surrounding area belonged to the Wassilko family since the beginning of the 19th century and to the Iordaki Wassilkoschen Fideikommiss since 1888 . In 1862 a school with two classes was set up there. After the governor of Bukovina , Alexander Freiherr Wassilko von Serecki , had the St. Nicholas Church, built in Berhometh in 1786 , demolished for the purpose of a new building in Berhometh in 1889, he had it re-erected in Schipot.

After Bukovina was annexed to the Kingdom of Romania on November 27, 1918, the place belonged to what was then the Storojineț district.

The annexation of North Bukovina, which was conditioned by the Hitler-Stalin Pact , took place on June 28, 1940. When Dolizhny Sheepot became part of the Soviet Union , in between, from 1941 to 1944, it was again Romanian, and the entire region was integrated into the Ukrainian SSR in 1947 and is since 1991 part of the independent Republic of Ukraine .

Due to emigration and immigration after the Second World War, residents of predominantly Ukrainian descent currently live there.

Individual evidence

  1. Teodor Balan, Prof. univ., Documente bucoviniene, Vol. 2, Institutul de arte grafice şi editură "Glasul Bucovinei", Cernăuţi 1934, p. 125, p. 131
  2. http://www.monitorulsv.ro/Povestea-asezarilor-bucovinene/2012-05-24/SIPENIT#ixzz29pH7D0rF
  3. Erich Prokopowitsch: The nobility in the Bukowina, Südostdeutscher Verlag, Munich, 1983, p. 146
  4. Teodor Balan, Prof. univ., Documente bucoviniene, Vol. 6, Editura casei şcoalelor şi a culturii poporului, Bucureşti 1942, p. 276 f
  5. http://romaniainterbelica.memoria.ro/judete/storojinet/index.html#
  6. http://www.monitorulsv.ro/Povestea-asezarilor-bucovinene/2011-11-03/LUCAVAT-I#ixzz225NYIVDk

literature

  • Teodor Bălan , Prof. univ., Documente bucovinene, Vol. 2, Institutul de arte grafice şi editură "Glasul Bucovinei", Cernăuţi 1934
  • Teodor Bălan, Prof. univ., Documente bucovinene, Vol. 6, Editura casei şcoalelor şi a culturii poporului, Bucureşti 1942
  • Gothaisches Genealogical Pocket Book of the Count's Houses Part B, 114th year, 1941, pp. 536-537
  • Erich Prokopowitsch: The nobility in the Bukowina, Südostdeutscher Verlag, Munich, 1983