Kamyanka buska

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Kamyanka buska
Кам'янка-Бузька
Kamjanka-Buska coat of arms
Kamjanka-Buska (Ukraine)
Kamyanka buska
Kamyanka buska
Basic data
Oblast : Lviv Oblast
Rajon : Kamyanka-Buska district
Height : 680 m
Area : 8.63 km²
Residents : 10,779 (2016)
Population density : 1,249 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 80404
Area code : +380 3254
Geographic location : 50 ° 6 ′  N , 24 ° 21 ′  E Coordinates: 50 ° 6 ′ 0 ″  N , 24 ° 21 ′ 0 ″  E
KOATUU : 4622110100
Administrative structure : 1 city, 20 villages
Mayor : Mychajlo Wladyka
Address: вул. Шевченка 2
80400 м. Кам'янка-Бузька
Website : http://www.kambuz.org.ua
Statistical information
Kamjanka-Buska (Lviv Oblast)
Kamyanka buska
Kamyanka buska
i1

Kamjanka-Buska (Ukrainian Кам'янка-Бузька ; Russian Каменка-Бугская / Kamenka-Bugskaja , Polish Kamionka Bużańska - until 1945 Kamionka Strumiłowa ) is a city in Lviv Oblast in western Ukraine (2016) with about 10,800 inhabitants. The city is the administrative center of the Kamyanka-Buska district .

View of the town hall in the village

On August 17, 2017, the city became the center of the newly founded municipality Kamjanka-Buska (Кам'янка-Бузька міська громада / Kamjanka-Buska miska hromada ), which also includes the 20 villages Batjokatichi (Батайтич), Hajokichi (Батятич) Hruschka (Грушка) Jahidnja , Krassitschyn (Красічин) Lypnyky (Липники) Masjarka (Мазярка) Obydiw (Обидів) Prybuschany (Прибужани) Roschanka , Ruda (Руда) Ruda-Silezka (Руда-Сілецька) Scheldez ( Желдець) Sabuschschja , Subiw Mist (Зубів Міст) Sokil (Сокіл) Tadani (Тадані) Wereny (Верени) Wolja-Schowtanezka (Воля-Жовтанецька) and Wyssokofedoriwka , until then it was formed together with the villages Sabuschschja and Tadani the city ​​council of the same name.

location

Kamjanka-Buska is located about 38 kilometers northeast of Lviv and 96 kilometers southwest of Lutsk on the N17 road to Lutsk. The Bug River , into which the Kamjanka coming from the left flows, flows into the city from the east and turns there to the north.

history

The first written mention of Kamjanka-Buska was in 1411 as Dymoszyn , in 1471 the place received the Magdeburg city charter from the nobleman Jerzy Strumiło , who gave the name Kamionka Strumiłowa , which was valid until 1945 . During the Swedish Wars (1655–1661) the city was almost completely destroyed. Until 1772 it belonged to the Polish Aristocratic Republic (in the Bełz Voivodeship ), after the first partition of Poland it came to the Austrian Galicia . From 1854 to 1918 it was the seat of the Kamionka Strumiłowa district administration , and in 1867 a district court was set up. After the end of the First World War, the city came to Poland and was from 1921 to 1939 in the Tarnopol Voivodeship , Powiat Kamionka Strumiłowa , Gmina Kamionka Strumiłowa . In September 1939 the city was initially annexed by the Soviet Union due to the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact and came under German occupation from June 1941 after the German attack on the Soviet Union . There she belonged to the district of Galicia within the General Government . During this time, the entire Jewish population was almost completely murdered. The wooden synagogue from the first half of the 18th century was burned down. After 1945 the city came back to the Ukrainian SSR and after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 to independent Ukraine.

In 1910 a train station was opened in the village on what is now the Lviv – Kiversi railway line , the formerly independent village of Krzywulanka (Ukrainian Кривулянка / Krywuljanka ) was incorporated in 1933, and the western town of Podzamcze was incorporated as early as the 1920s .

sons and daughters of the town

Web links

Commons : Kamjanka-Buska  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Population figures on pop-stat.mashke.org
  2. Відповідно до Закону України "Про добровільне об'єднання територіальних громад" у Львівській області у Кам'янка-Бузькому районі від 3, 4, 8, 14 і 17 серпня 2017
  3. Maria and Kazimierz Piechotka: Heaven's Gates. Wooden synagogues in the territories of the former Rzeczpospolita of Poland and Lithuania. Page 266 ff. Polish Institute of World Art Studies & POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews, Warsaw 2015, ISBN 978-83-942048-6-0 . Page 343.
  4. Rizzi Zannoni, Woiewodztwo Ruskie, Część Krakowskiego, Sędomirskiego Bełzkiego y z y granicami Węgier, Polski, Które gory Karpackie nakształt łańcucha wyciągnione, od góry Wolska aż do Talabry, wyznaczaią .; 1772
  5. ^ Reichsgesetzblatt of April 24, 1854, No. 111, page 401