Sidlyschtsche

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Sidlyschtsche
Сідлище
Coat of arms is missing
Sidlyschtsche (Ukraine)
Sidlyschtsche
Sidlyschtsche
Basic data
Oblast : Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast
Rajon : Kolomyja district
Height : no information
Area : 10.658 km²
Residents : 333 (2001)
Population density : 31 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 78233
Area code : +380 3433
Geographic location : 48 ° 39 '  N , 24 ° 50'  E Coordinates: 48 ° 38 '33 "  N , 24 ° 49' 46"  E
KOATUU : 2623286201
Administrative structure : 4 villages
Address: вул. Молодіжна 1
78233 с. Сідлище
Statistical information
Sidlyschtsche (Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast)
Sidlyschtsche
Sidlyschtsche
i1

Sidlyschtsche ( Ukrainian Сідлище ; Russian Седлище Sedlischtsche , polish Siedliska , German  Bredtheim ) is a village in the western Ukrainian Ivano-Frankivsk oblast with about 330 residents.

It belongs to the district council of the same name along with three other villages .

history

Siedliska was a village in the Majdan Średni municipality until 1924 . It belonged to Theodor Bredt. In 1881 74 German families from 24 Galician locations were settled there on 1,100 yoke of parceled land. The colony was named Bredtheim after the landowner .

The Protestants belonged to the parish of Baginsberg in the Evangelical Superintendentur AB Galicia . In the interwar period there was a branch congregation of the Kołomyja-Baginsberg congregation in the Evangelical Church of the Augsburg and Helvetic Confessions in Lesser Poland , which in 1937 had 342 members.

After the end of the Polish-Ukrainian War in 1919, the community became part of Poland. In 1921 the town of Bredtheim had 93 houses with 679 inhabitants, of which 527 were Poles, 119 Germans, 17 Jews, 16 Ruthenians, 343 Protestant, 274 Roman Catholic, 46 Israelite, 16 Greek Catholic. The village of Siedliska had 46 houses with 225 inhabitants, including 145 Ruthenians, 80 Poles, 144 Greek Catholics, 81 Roman Catholics.

On July 1, 1924, the hamlet Siedliska-Bredtheim was separated from Majdan Średni to create the new municipality.

In the Second World War , the place belonged first to the Soviet Union and from 1941 to the General Government , from 1945 back to the Soviet Union, now part of the Ukraine . The Germans who were then still resident were resettled in 1940 as a result of the German-Soviet border and friendship treaty.

Attractions

  • Former Protestant church, built in 1913

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Stefan Grelewski: wyznania protestanckie i sekty religijne w Polsce współczesnej . Lublin 1937, p. 276-281 (Polish, online ).
  2. Główny Urząd Statystyczny: Skorowidz miejscowości Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej. Województwo stanisławowskie . Warszawa 1924 (Polish, online [PDF]).
  3. Dz.U. 1924 no 16 poz. 168