Iwaniwzi (Kelmenzi)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ivanivtsi
Іванівці
Coat of arms is missing
Ivanivtsi (Ukraine)
Ivanivtsi
Ivanivtsi
Basic data
Oblast : Chernivtsi Oblast
Rajon : Kelmenzi district
Height : 254 m
Area : Information is missing
Residents : 3,253 (2004)
Postcodes : 60144
Area code : +380 03732
Geographic location : 48 ° 29 '  N , 27 ° 2'  E Coordinates: 48 ° 29 '15 "  N , 27 ° 2' 2"  E
KOATUU : 7322084401
Administrative structure : 1 village
Address: вул. Механізаторів 3
60144 с. Іванівці
Website : City council website
Statistical information
Ivanivtsi (Chernivtsi Oblast)
Ivanivtsi
Ivanivtsi
i1

Iwaniwzi ( Ukrainian Іванівці ; Russian Ивановцы Iwanowzy , Romanian Ianăuţi ) is a village in the Ukrainian Oblast of Chernivtsi in the historic landscape of northern Bessarabia with about 3200 inhabitants (2004).

geography

Iwaniwzi is located in the east of Kelmenzi district on the regional road P 63 near the Moldavian- Ukrainian border and is the only village in the district council of the same name . The Kelmenzi district center is 22 km southwest and the Chernivtsi Oblast center 100 km west of the village. The village has a train station on the Chernivtsi – Ocnița railway line .

history

The village, first mentioned in 1659 as Enăuţi , was located in the Bessarabia region in the Principality of Moldova and was repeatedly devastated by invading Tatars and Turks. This frequent destruction largely inhibited the growth of the settlement. In 1771 there were only seven estates and in 1817 there were only 180 inhabitants in the village. After the 7th Russo-Turkish War , the village fell to the Russian Empire in 1812 . The Soviets came to power in Iwaniwzi in January 1918 , but the village was occupied by Austro-German troops at the end of February 1918, which were replaced by Romanian troops in November of the same year . On June 28, 1940, the village was occupied by Soviet troops and in early July 1941 by German and Romanian troops. On March 27, 1944, the village was captured by the 133rd Infantry Division of the 40th Army of the 2nd Ukrainian Front of the Red Army and fell to the Ukrainian SSR within the Soviet Union. Since 1991 the village has been part of independent Ukraine.

Sons and daughters of the village

Individual evidence

  1. Ivanivtsi on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada ; accessed on September 9, 2017 (Ukrainian)
  2. ↑ Location description on the website History of the Cities and Villages of the Ukrainian SSR ; accessed on September 9, 2017 (Ukrainian)