Slovetschne

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Slovetschne
Словечне
Coat of arms is missing
Slovechne (Ukraine)
Slovetschne
Slovetschne
Basic data
Oblast : Zhytomyr Oblast
Rajon : Owrutsch district
Height : 204 m
Area : 3.631 km²
Residents : 1,725 (2001)
Population density : 475 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 11122
Area code : +380 4148
Geographic location : 51 ° 23 '  N , 28 ° 21'  E Coordinates: 51 ° 22 '52 "  N , 28 ° 21' 16"  E
KOATUU : 1824287301
Administrative structure : 28 villages
Address: вул. Поліська буд. 9
11122 с. Словечне
Website : Official website of the Slovechne rural community
Statistical information
Slovechne (Zhytomyr Oblast)
Slovetschne
Slovetschne
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Slovechne ( Ukrainian Словечне ; Russian Словечно Slovechno ) is a village in Polesia in the north of the Ukrainian Oblast Zhytomyr with about 1700 inhabitants (2001).

Geographical location

The village is located at an altitude of 204  m on the bank of the Slavechna , a 158 km long right tributary of the Pripyat , 33 km west of the district center Ovruch and 150 km north of the Oblast center Zhytomyr . The T-06-17 territorial road runs through the village .

history

Monument to the burned villages, sculptor Josef Tabachnyk

The village, first mentioned in writing in 1566 in the description of the Kiev Voivodeship of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania , came to Poland-Lithuania after the Union of Lublin in 1569 and became the property of the Polish magnates Potocki . In 1773 the town was granted city rights. After the second division of Poland , Slovechne was incorporated into the Russian Empire in 1793 together with the Ukraine on the right bank and from 1797 was part of the Ovrutsch district in the Volhynian governorate . In 1863 the city became the administrative center of the Ovrutsch district. Between 1868 and 1899 the number of farms grew from 145 to 257 and the population rose from 1430 to 1580 inhabitants. By 1896, water and steam mills , a distillery , iron works and hammer mills were built on site . After the end of the Russian Civil War , the village became part of the Ukrainian SSR within the Soviet Union and after the administrative-territorial reorganization of 1923, Slovechne became the center of the raion of the same name .

From August 19, 1941 to November 15, 1943 the village was occupied by the Wehrmacht . During this time the village was a center of Soviet partisan units , to which the German occupiers reacted with punitive actions and in Slovetschne and 13 surrounding villages (see also Kopyschtsche tragedy ) killed more than 5,000 people and burned entire villages.

The Chernobyl nuclear disaster in April 1986 contaminated the village with radioactivity .

local community

Since November 2017, Slovetschne has been the administrative center of the 1183.01 km² rural community of Slovetschne ( Словечанську сільську територіальну громаду Slovechansku silsku terytorialnu hromadu villages, in total the following villages with the Ovtorialnu hromadu district ) in the west of the Ovarynu hromadu district :

View of Tchoryn
  • Antonowytschi ( Антоновичі , ) with about 430 inhabitants
  • Bihun
  • Bilka ( Білка , ) with about 300 inhabitants
  • Duby ( Дуби , ) with about 30 inhabitants
  • Horodez ( Городець , ) with about 590 inhabitants
  • Koschetschky ( Кошечки , ) with about 50 inhabitants
  • Kosuli ( Козулі , ) with about 10 inhabitants
  • Kowanka ( Кованка , ) with about 190 inhabitants
  • Lutschanky
  • Lystwyn ( Листвин , ) with about 1200 inhabitants
  • Mazky ( Мацьки , ) with about 20 inhabitants
  • Moschary ( Можари , ) with about 680 inhabitants
  • Nowa Rudnja ( Нова Рудня , ) with about 20 inhabitants
  • Perebrody ( Переброди , ) with about 40 inhabitants
  • Pobychi ( Побичі , ) with about 80 inhabitants
  • Rokytne ( Рокитне , ) with about 30 inhabitants
  • Sadoroschok ( Задорожок , ) with about 60 inhabitants
  • Selesiwka ( Селезівка , ) with about 240 inhabitants
  • Syrnyzja ( Сирниця , ) with about 170 inhabitants
  • Tchoryn ( Тхорин , ) with about 970 inhabitants
  • Tscherewky ( Черевки , ) with about 300 inhabitants
  • Chervonka ( Червонка , ) with about 30 inhabitants
  • Chervonosilka ( Червоносілка , ) with 1st inhabitant
  • Ussowe ( Усове , ) with about 100 inhabitants
  • Werpa ( Верпа , ) with about 200 inhabitants
  • Wosljakowe ( Возлякове , ) with 1st resident
  • Vosnychi

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. Local website on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada ; accessed on April 22, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  2. history Slowetschne in the history of the towns and villages of the Ukrainian SSR ; accessed on April 22, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  3. Словечанська сільська об'єднана територіальна громада on decentralization.gov.ua ; accessed on April 22, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  4. Structure of the municipality on the official website of the Slovetschne rural municipality; accessed on April 22, 2020 (Ukrainian)