Malyj
Malyj | ||
Малий | ||
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Basic data | ||
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Oblast : | Lviv Oblast | |
Rajon : | Zhovkva district | |
Height : | 217 m | |
Area : | 1.42 km² | |
Residents : | 55 (2001) | |
Population density : | 39 inhabitants per km² | |
Postcodes : | 80318 | |
Area code : | +380 3252 | |
Geographic location : | 50 ° 13 ' N , 23 ° 44' E | |
KOATUU : | 4622785212 | |
Administrative structure : | 11 villages | |
Mayor : | Yaroslav Kushta | |
Address: | 80318 с. Липник | |
Statistical information | ||
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Malyj (Ukrainian Малий ; Russian Малый / Maly , Polish Hołe Małe ) is a village in Shovkwa Raion in Lviv Oblast in western Ukraine, south of the Rata River ( Рата ).
Maly, together with the villages Holokamjanka (Голокам'янка) Dubriwka (Дубрівка) Sahirja (Загір'я) Jonytschi (Йоничі) Lypnyk (Липник) Luschky (Лужки) Luzyky (Луцики) Pomlyniw (Помлинів) Rawske (Равське) and Stare Selo (Старе Село) the district council of Lypnyk .
The place emerged in the middle of the 19th century as an independent municipality as part of Hołe Rawskie and belonged as Hołe Małe to the Austrian Galicia , District Commission Rawa until 1918 , after the end of the First World War the place came to the Second Polish Republic ( Lemberg Voivodeship , Powiat Rawa Ruska , Gmina Kamionka Wołoska), was occupied in the Second World War from September 1939 to June 1941 by the Soviet Union and then by Germany until 1944 , which incorporated the place into the Generalgouvernement , District of Galicia .
After the reconquest by the Red Army in 1944 and the end of the war, the town was added to the Soviet Union , there the town came to the Ukrainian SSR and has been part of today's Ukraine since 1991.
Web links
- Hołe . In: Filip Sulimierski, Władysław Walewski (eds.): Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich . tape 3 : Haag – Kępy . Sulimierskiego and Walewskiego, Warsaw 1882, p. 104 (Polish, edu.pl ).