Jaslowez

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Jaslowez
Язловець
Coat of arms of Jaslowez
Jaslovets (Ukraine)
Jaslowez
Jaslowez
Basic data
Oblast : Ternopil Oblast
Rajon : Butschach district
Height : 286 m
Area : 2.29 km²
Residents : 586 (2004)
Population density : 256 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 48467
Area code : +380 3544
Geographic location : 48 ° 58 '  N , 25 ° 27'  E Coordinates: 48 ° 57 '35 "  N , 25 ° 26' 32"  E
KOATUU : 6121288401
Administrative structure : 4 villages
Mayor : Marija Futryn
Address: 48467 с. Язловець
Statistical information
Jaslovets (Ternopil Oblast)
Jaslowez
Jaslowez
i1

Jaslowez (Ukrainian Язловець ; Russian Язловец , Polish Jazłowiec ) is a village in the Butschach district in Ternopil Oblast in western Ukraine, south of the Oblast capital Ternopil on the Vilkhovets River (Вільховець).

The village is part of the district council of the same name Jaslowez to which, in addition to the main town, the villages Browari (Броварі), Novosilka (Новосілка), Peredmistja (Передмістя) and Poschescha (Пожежа) belong.

history

The place arose in the 14th century on an important trade route from Lviv to the Vltava , the later Jaslovets castle is mentioned in 1441. Yazlovets was first in the province Podolien as part of the Kingdom of Poland (until 1569 in the aristocratic Republic of Poland ), after the Turkish occupation it was, however, from 1672 to 1699 under the name Yazlofça chief town of a sanjak within the eyalet Podolia . Before the Turkish occupation, Armenians were settled in the place, they favored the development of trade and built their own church. Already in 1519 the place received the Magdeburg city charter . From 1772 to 1918 it belonged again under its Polish name Jazłowiec to Austrian Galicia and from 1854 to 1867 it was the seat of a district administration , after which it was divided into the districts of Czortków, Zaleszczyki and Buczacz.

After the collapse of the Danube Monarchy at the end of the First World War in November 1918, the city was briefly part of the West Ukrainian People's Republic . In the Polish-Ukrainian War , Poland occupied the last parts of the West Ukrainian People's Republic in July 1919. On November 21, 1919, the High Council of the Paris Peace Conference awarded Eastern Galicia to Poland.

After the end of the First World War, the place came to Poland (in the Voivodeship of Tarnopol , Powiat Buczacz, Gmina Jazłowiec) and lost its town charter in 1934. In the course of the Second World War it was first occupied by the Soviet Union and then by Germany from 1941 to 1944 , here the place was incorporated into 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.

architecture

St. Nicholas Church in Jaslovets

Sons and daughters of the church

  • Roman Wilhuschynskyj, Ukrainian sculptor
  • Teofil Wiśniowski (1806–1847), Polish insurgent
  • Karl Witkowski (1860–1910), Polish-American portrait and genre painter

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. Official Website to Poschescha on the website of the Verkhovna Rada ; accessed on September 7, 2017 (Ukrainian)
  2. ACA Friederich, historical-geographical representation of old and new Poland; 1839, p. 398
  3. 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
  4. http://alex.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/alex?aid=rgb&date=1854&page=545&size=45
  5. http://alex.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/alex?aid=rgb&date=1867&page=77&size=45
  6. TO Udina: Wilhuschynskyj Roman Kasymyrowytsch (= red. Col. IM Dzjuba [and others.] [Ed.]: Entsyklopedija ssutschasnoji Ukrajiny . Volume 30 ). 4: В - Вог. Kiev 2005, ISBN 966-02-3354-X , p. 543 ( esu.com.ua/search_articles.php ). (Ukrainian)