Dolsk (Lyubeshiv)

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Dolsk
Дольськ
Coat of arms is missing
Dolsk (Ukraine)
Dolsk
Dolsk
Basic data
Oblast : Volyn Oblast
Rajon : Lyubeshiv district
Height : 142 m
Area : 2.828 km²
Residents : 791 (2001)
Population density : 280 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 44232
Area code : +380 3362
Geographic location : 51 ° 54 '  N , 25 ° 31'  E Coordinates: 51 ° 53 '35 "  N , 25 ° 31' 2"  E
KOATUU : 0723184801
Administrative structure : 3 villages
Address: вул. Незалежності 80
44232 с. Дольськ
Statistical information
Dolsk (Volyn Oblast)
Dolsk
Dolsk
i1

Dolsk ( Ukrainian Дольськ ; Russian Дольск , Polish Dolsk ) is a village in the northeast of the Ukrainian Volyn Oblast with about 800 inhabitants (2006).

geography

The village is the center of the district council of the same name and is located on the P-14 regional road in the north of Lyubeschiw Rajon near the border with the Belarusian Rajon Ivanava . Lake Skoren ( Скорень ) is located northwest of Dolsk, right on the border . The Belarusian city of Ivanava is 31 km to the north, the Lyubeshiv district center 19 km south and the Lutsk Oblast center about 150 km south of the village.

To district municipality Dolsk even the villages are Hretschyschtscha ( Гречища ) with about 120 inhabitants and Schlapan ( Шлапань ) with about 160 inhabitants.

history

The village was first mentioned in writing in 1650 and was initially in the Volyn Voivodeship of the Polish aristocratic republic . After the Third Partition of Poland in 1795, the village belonged to the Russian Empire , where it was in the Minsk governorate . In 1921 it fell to Poland and became part of the Polesian Voivodeship in the powiat Kamień Koszyrski , Gmina Lubieszów . As a result of the Hitler-Stalin Pact , the Soviet Union occupied the area in September 1939. After the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, the village was under German rule until 1944. After World War II , Dolsk was again annexed by the Soviet Union , where it was part of the Ukrainian SSR . Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, it has been part of independent Ukraine.

Individual evidence

  1. page of the village on the website of the Verkhovna Rada ; accessed on June 1, 2015