Tyudiv

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Tyudiv
Тюдів
Coat of arms is missing
Tyudiv (Ukraine)
Tyudiv
Tyudiv
Basic data
Oblast : Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast
Rajon : Kosiv Raion
Height : 358 m
Area : 26.55 km²
Residents : 2,031 (2001)
Population density : 76 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 78653
Area code : +380 3478
Geographic location : 48 ° 14 '  N , 25 ° 8'  E Coordinates: 48 ° 14 '12 "  N , 25 ° 7' 49"  E
KOATUU : 2623687901
Administrative structure : 1 village
Address: вул. Шевченка
78653 с. Тюдів
Website : Website of the municipal council ( [1] )
Statistical information
Tyudiv (Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast)
Tyudiv
Tyudiv
i1

Tjudiw ( Ukrainian Тюдів ; Russian Тюдов Tjudow , Polish Tudiów ) is a village in the east of the Ukrainian Oblast Ivano-Frankivsk on the left bank of the Cheremosh , which forms the border with the Oblast Chernivtsi . The village has about 2000 inhabitants (2001) and an area of ​​26.55 km².

A characteristic of the village is the presence of a large number of more than a hundred years old huts built in the traditional Hutsul style. In the vicinity of the village there are mixed forests and in the area of ​​the village there is a ski area with a 300-meter-long ski lift on the slopes of Sokilskyj Mountain ( Сокільський хребет , 873  m ). The currently existing ski slopes have lengths between 400 m and 800 m, another 1500 m is planned.

The Sokil rock on the bank of the Cheremosh

In addition, the village with the Sokil rock ( Сокільська скеля ) on the bank of the Cheremosh has a geological natural monument. The rock wall formed by erosion has a length of 250 meters and a height of about 100 meters. The rock is about 25 million years old.

At the end of the 19th century, a monument in the form of an obelisk in honor of Taras Shevchenko was erected by the locals near the southern part of the cliff . Some historians have assumed that it was built in 1898, as Bohdan Lepkyj first described it in 1900 in the article " На Сокільськім ". Destroyed in the 1930s, either on the orders of the Polish government or by a block of stone from the Sokil rock, and restored in 1990 for 80,000 rubles, the monument was the first monument to Shevchenko in the Hutsul region and western Ukraine.

Geographical location

Tjudiw is the only village in the district of the same name in the east of Kosiv district .

The village of Tyudiv

The village is located within the National Natural Park "Huzulschtschyna" ( Національного природного парку "Гуцульщина" ) at an altitude of 358  m on the left bank of the Bilyj Cheremosh, straddling the border between the historic landscape Pokuttya , the southeast corner of Galicia , and on the right Bucovina region bordering the shore forms. In the vicinity of the village is the 873  m high Sokilskyj chrebet and the 879  m high Chomynskyj chrebet ( Хоминський хребет ).

The village is located about 10 km south of the Kosiv district center and about 125 km south of the Ivano-Frankivsk oblast center . In the north, the village borders on the urban-type settlement of Kuty . The regional road P-62 runs through the village .

history

The first time in 1560 in writing mentioned village (another source mentions 1593 as the founding year) was first in the Kingdom of Poland and came under the first partition of Poland in 1772 to the crown land Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria the Austrian Habsburgs , and in 1804 became part of the Empire of Austria . After the Austro-Hungarian Compromise , the village was in the Kosów district of Austria-Hungary from 1867 . After the First World War and the disintegration of Austria-Hungary , the village first came to the West Ukrainian People's Republic , but became part of the Stanisławów Voivodeship within the Second Polish Republic after the following Polish-Ukrainian and Polish-Soviet war . In September 1939, the village, as the whole eastern Poland , according to the secret additional protocol of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact between the Soviet Union and Germany , occupied by the Soviet Union . After the German invasion of the Soviet Union , the village was occupied by Germany during the German-Soviet War and incorporated into the Galicia District of the General Government. After the Second World War , the village came back to the Soviet Union, which it joined the Ukrainian SSR . With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the village finally became part of the independent Ukraine. In 2001 the first International Shevchenko Festival took place in the village .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b local website on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada ; accessed on May 31, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  2. a b c d e ТЮДІВ on if.gov.ua ; accessed on May 31, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  3. Tyudiw on huculia.info ; accessed on May 31, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  4. a b The village of Tyudiw and Taras Shevchenko on huculia.info ; accessed on May 31, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  5. ^ Website of the district council on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada; accessed on May 31, 2020 (Ukrainian)
  6. The village Tjudiw on mistaua.com ; accessed on May 31, 2020 (Ukrainian)