Konjatyn (Putyla)

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Konjatyn
Конятин
Coat of arms is missing
Konjatyn (Ukraine)
Konjatyn
Konjatyn
Basic data
Oblast : Chernivtsi Oblast
Rajon : Putyla district
Height : 563 m
Area : Information is missing
Residents : 677 (2001)
Postcodes : 59122
Area code : +380 3738
Geographic location : 48 ° 3 '  N , 24 ° 56'  E Coordinates: 48 ° 2 '34 "  N , 24 ° 56' 19"  E
KOATUU : 7323582001
Administrative structure : 10 villages
Address: вул. Центральна буд. 162
59122 с. Конятин
Website : Community website
Statistical information
Konjatyn (Chernivtsi Oblast)
Konjatyn
Konjatyn
i1

Konjatyn ( Ukrainian Конятин ; Russian Конятин Konjatin , Romanian Coniatin , German Koniatyn ) is a village in the west of the Ukrainian Oblast Chernivtsi with about 650 inhabitants (2001).

Geographical location

The village is located in the west of Putyla Rajon at an altitude of 563  m on the right bank of the Bilyj Cheremosh ("White Cheremosh"), which forms the border between the historical landscapes of Bukovina and Pokutia . On the opposite bank of the river in Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast lies the village of Cheremoshna . The Rajon center Putyla is about 19 km southeast and the Oblast center Chernivtsi about 110 km northeast of Konjatyn.

history

The village was first mentioned in writing in 1774. Shortly afterwards, following the Treaty of Küçük, the Principality of Moldova came to the Habsburg Monarchy with the whole of Bukovina . Initially under military administration, the village was then in the district of Czernowitz and then in the district of Bukowina of the crown land Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria of the Austrian Empire . In 1849 it became part of the now own crown land Duchy of Bukovina .

In the 1840s, the residents of the village were actively involved in the peasant uprisings in the Austrian part of Bukovina, led by Lukjan Kobylyzja (Ukrainian Лук'ян Кобилиця ; 1812-1851), with Konjatyn in official documents about the suppression of these uprisings as one of the most rebellious villages was designated.

After the First World War and the break-up of Austria-Hungary , it became part of the Kingdom of Romania between 1918 and 1940 . After a brief occupation of Bukovina by the Soviet Union in 1940/41, it was part of Greater Romania from 1941 to 1944 and came back to the Soviet Union after the Second World War , which it joined to the Ukrainian SSR . With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the village finally became part of the independent Ukraine.

local community

Konjatyn is the administrative center of the rural community of the same name, founded on January 26, 2017 by the amalgamation of the village councils Dowhopillja, Konjatyn and Yablunyzja, Konjatyn ( Конятинська сільська рада об'роєднаноа ааритоєднаної еритананої with a population of 121 and аритоєднаної їериторднаної 121 km and population of 121.7 km 2017). The rural community include, in addition Konjatyn, following villages: Dowhopillja , Holoschyna , Stebni , Yablunytsya ( Яблуниця , ) with about 740 inhabitants, Velyky Lypovets ( Великий Липовець , ) with about 160 inhabitants, Hreblyna ( Греблина , ) with about 180 inhabitants, Plaj ( Плай , ) with about 230 inhabitants, Plyta ( Плита , ) with about 160 inhabitants and Samakowa ( Самакова , ) with about 590 inhabitants.

St. Basil's Church
House of Culture in Konjatyn

Culture

On a hill in the village is the wooden church of St. Basil the Great , built in 1877 . The church, renovated in 1987 , is an architectural monument of national importance as one of the best examples of wooden architecture in Right Bank Ukraine . The wooden church building with a stone foundation is 25 m high and has five tin-covered domes.

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. Local website on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada ; accessed on May 29, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  2. a b Local history Konjatyn in the history of the cities and villages of the Ukrainian SSR ; accessed on May 29, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  3. ^ History of the Chernivtsi region on gromady.cv.ua ; accessed on May 29, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  4. ^ Structure of the rural municipality , on the official website of the municipality; accessed on May 29, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  5. Historical background of the rural community, on the official website of the community; accessed on May 29, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  6. Seven Wonders of Putyla on putylachudesa.blogspot.com ; accessed on May 29, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  7. Konjatyn, Basilius Church 1877 on decerkva.org.ua ; accessed on May 29, 2020 (Ukrainian)