Hnyltsche (Pidhajzi)

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Hnyltsche
Гнильче
Coat of arms is missing
Hnylche (Ukraine)
Hnyltsche
Hnyltsche
Basic data
Oblast : Ternopil Oblast
Rajon : Pidhajzi district
Height : 320 m
Area : 27.231 km²
Residents : 593 (2004)
Population density : 22 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 48034
Area code : +380 3542
Geographic location : 49 ° 12 '  N , 24 ° 56'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 11 '43 "  N , 24 ° 55' 48"  E
KOATUU : 6124881401
Administrative structure : 3 villages
Mayor : Ivan Smich
Address: 48034 с. Гнильче
Statistical information
Hnylche (Ternopil Oblast)
Hnyltsche
Hnyltsche
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Hnyltsche (Ukrainian Гнильче ; Russian Hniltsche , Polish Hnilcze ) is a village in the Ukraine in the Ternopil Oblast . The village belongs administratively to the same district municipality Hnyltsche, which also includes the villages Panowytschi (Пановичі) and Cherven count (Червень).

The village is located 17 kilometers southwest of the Rajons capital Pidhajzi and 62 kilometers southwest of the Oblast capital Ternopil near the border with the Oblast Ivano-Frankivsk .

history

The heir to the throne inspects the troops in Hnylche

The place was mentioned in writing for the first time in 1395 and was initially in the Ruthenian Voivodeship as part of the aristocratic republic of Poland . From 1772 to 1918 it belonged under its Polish name Hnilcze to the Austrian Galicia and from 1867 was subordinate to the political district Podhajce .

From September 1 to September 5, 1916 took place there during the Brusilov offensive the Battle of Hnilcze, the negative in the course of 1st Reserve Division to the Narajówka had to withdraw.

After the end of the First World War, the place became part of Poland (in the Voivodeship Tarnopol , Powiat Podhajce , Gmina Horożanka ), was occupied by the Soviet Union from September 1939 and then by Germany from summer 1941 to 1944 , here the place was in incorporated the district of Galicia .

After the end of the war the place was added to the Soviet Union , there the village came to the Ukrainian SSR and has been part of today's Ukraine since 1991.

Individual evidence

  1. Rizzi Zannoni, Karta Podola, znaczney części Wołynia, płynienie Dniestru od Uścia, aż do Chocima y Ładowa, Bogu od swego zrzodła, aż do Ładyczyna, pogranicze Mołdawy, Bracuskiekiego Kziegoows Bełows .; 1772