Komyshivka (village)

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Komyshivka
Комишівка
Coat of arms is missing
Komyshivka (Ukraine)
Komyshivka
Komyshivka
Basic data
Oblast : Odessa Oblast
Rajon : Ismajil Raion
Height : 14 m
Area : 4.24 km²
Residents : 3,491 (2001)
Population density : 823 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 68653
Area code : +380 4841
Geographic location : 45 ° 31 '  N , 29 ° 7'  E Coordinates: 45 ° 30 '53 "  N , 29 ° 7' 11"  E
KOATUU : 5122082001
Administrative structure : 1 village
Address: вул. Миру, буд. 3
68653 с. Комишівка
Website : City council website
Statistical information
Komyshivka (Odessa Oblast)
Komyshivka
Komyshivka
i1

Komyschiwka ( Ukrainian Комишівка ; Russian Комишевка Komischewka , Romanian Hagi-Curda ) is a Budschak located village in the southwest of the Ukrainian Odessa with about 3500 inhabitants (2001).

Komyshivka is the only village in the 63.37 km² district council of the same name in the east of Ismajil district .

The village is located on the west bank of the 60 km² large Kytaj Lake (ukr. Китай (озеро)) and on Jenyka (ukr. Єника ), a 26 km long tributary of the Katlabuh lake 36 km northeast of the district center Ismajil and about 210 km southwest of Oblastzentrum Odessa .

history

The village with the name Hagi-Curda , founded in 1814 in the governorate of Bessarabia within the Russian Empire , came to the Principality of Moldova in 1856 after the Crimean War , which Russia had lost with the area around Cahul, Bolgrad and Ismail , in 1856 to the following Russian - Ottoman War in 1878 to fall back to the Russian Empire. After the October Revolution , Russia lost Bessarabia, which in 1917 declared itself a Democratic Moldavian Republic and in the same year voluntarily joined the Kingdom of Romania .

After the occupation of Bessarabia in 1940 by the Soviet Union, Komyshivka was in the Ismajil district of Akkerman Oblast (from August 7, 1940, Ismajil Oblast ) in the Ukrainian SSR . At the beginning of the German-Soviet War , the village came back to Romania in 1941. After the Red Army recaptured Bessarabia in 1944, the village was again in the Ukrainian Oblast Ismajil, which became part of Odessa Oblast in 1954. In 1947 the village got its current name and in 1991 Komyshivka became part of the independent Ukraine.

Individual evidence

  1. Local website on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada ; accessed on September 19, 2017 (Ukrainian)
  2. ^ Website of the district council on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada; accessed on September 19, 2017 (Ukrainian)
  3. ^ Local history Komyshivka in the history of the cities and villages of the Ukrainian SSR ; accessed on September 19, 2017 (Ukrainian)