Roshadiv

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Roshadiv
Розгадів
Coat of arms is missing
Roshadiv (Ukraine)
Roshadiv
Roshadiv
Basic data
Oblast : Ternopil Oblast
Rajon : Sboriv Raion
Height : no information
Area : 2.12 km²
Residents : 429 (2001)
Population density : 202 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 47270
Area code : +380 3540
Geographic location : 49 ° 36 '  N , 24 ° 58'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 36 '25 "  N , 24 ° 57' 59"  E
KOATUU : 6122688501
Administrative structure : 1 village
Address: 47270 с. Розгадів
Website : City council website
Statistical information
Roshadiv (Ternopil Oblast)
Roshadiv
Roshadiv
i1

Roshadiv ( Ukrainian Розгадів ; Russian Розгадов Rosgadow , Polish Rozhadów ) is a village in the west of the Ukrainian Ternopil Oblast on the border with Lviv Oblast with about 400 inhabitants (2001).

geography

Until 2017, Roshadiv was the only village in the 2.12 km² district council of the same name in the southwest of Sboriv Rajon . On October 29, 2017, the village was incorporated into the newly established municipality of Sboriw ( Зборівська міська громада Sboriwska miska hromada ).

The village is located in the middle of a forest on the left bank of the Solota Lypa , a 127 km long left tributary of the Dniester , 20 km southwest of the municipality and district center Sboriw and 55 km west of the oblast center Ternopil .

history

St. Paraskewy Church in Roshadiv

The village, founded in 1494, was initially in the Polish-Lithuanian Voivodeship of Ruthenia and came under Austrian rule after the first partition of Poland in 1772 . There it became part of the Zborów district in the Austrian crown land Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria . In 1880 the village had a population of 683 residents.

After the collapse of Austria-Hungary as a result of the First World War , the village came to the West Ukrainian People's Republic in November 1918 , but was occupied by Poland in the Polish-Ukrainian War in 1919. On November 21, 1919, the High Council of the Paris Peace Conference awarded Eastern Galicia to the Second Polish Republic for a period of 25 years . Here was the village in the Tarnopol Voivodeship .

At the beginning of the Second World War , the village was annexed by the Soviet Union as part of the Soviet occupation of eastern Poland , and after the German attack on the Soviet Union in 1941, it was occupied by the Wehrmacht and incorporated into the Galicia District of the General Government. In 1944 the village was retaken by the Red Army and passed to the Ukrainian SSR within the Soviet Union. After its collapse in 1991, Roshadiv became part of the now independent Ukraine.

A museum was established in 1991 for the son of a local priest, the composer and writer Roman Kuptschynskyj, who was born in the village in 1894, and a monument with a bust of the poet was erected at the museum near the church in 1994.

St. Paraskewy Church

Between 1900 and 1911 the wooden church of St. Paraskevy, an example of the traditional Orthodox architecture of the Ukrainian wooden churches, was built. The church was consecrated in 1911 and then visited by Metropolitan Andrej Scheptyzkyj . The successor building of a wooden church from 1696 represents one of the sights of the village today, in which some icons still come from the previous church. Services were held in the church building during the Soviet era, but orthodox . It was not until 1992 that the parish returned to the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church . In spring 2010, on the occasion of the centenary of the church, the building was renovated for the last time.

Sons and daughters of the village

Roman Kuptschynskyi
  • Roman Kuptschynskyj (1894–1976), Ukrainian poet, prose writer, journalist, composer and critic

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. a b local website on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada ; accessed on April 15, 2019 (Ukrainian)
  2. ^ Website of the district council on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada; accessed on April 15, 2019 (Ukrainian)
  3. a b c Roshadiv local history on castles.com.ua ; accessed on April 15, 2019 (Ukrainian)
  4. St. Paraskewy Wooden Church on templesua.jimdo.com ; accessed on April 15, 2019 (Ukrainian)
  5. Roshadiv, Church of St. Paraskewy 1911 in decerkva.org.ua ; accessed on April 15, 2019 (Ukrainian)