Chereschenka (Wyschnyzja)
Chereschenka | ||
Черешенька | ||
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Basic data | ||
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Oblast : | Chernivtsi Oblast | |
Rajon : | Vyshnytsia district | |
Height : | 441 m | |
Area : | Information is missing | |
Residents : | 1,084 (2007) | |
Postcodes : | 59207 | |
Area code : | +380 3730 | |
Geographic location : | 48 ° 13 ' N , 25 ° 17' E | |
KOATUU : | 7320585501 | |
Administrative structure : | 4 villages | |
Address: | Чернівецька обл., Вижницький р-н 59207 с. Черешенька |
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Statistical information | ||
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Tschereschenka ( Ukrainian Черешенька ; German also Czereszenka ; Romanian Cireșel or Cereșenca , Russian Черешенка ) is a village in Vyshnytsia district in the Ukrainian Oblast of Chernivtsi . It is located west of the city of Storozhynets on the Sereth River , southwest of Chernivtsi in northern Bukovina .
history
The village of Cireșel was part of the Principality of Moldova from its foundation in the historical region of Bukovina until 1775 .
After the Bucovina was occupied by neutral Austria towards the end of the Russo-Ottoman War (1768–1774) in 1774 , this was confirmed in the peace treaty of Küçük Kaynarca in 1775 , officially as thanks for Austria's "intermediary services" between the war opponents. As a result, Czeresenka was a part of Austria, first in the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria , and from 1849 in the newly founded crown land Duchy of Bukowina .
The village was assigned in 1849 the district Wischnitz (Vijniţa) and was one of the estates of the family Wassilko of Serecki , the contemporary name was under Austrian rule in Polish notation Czereszenka .
After Bukovina was annexed to the Kingdom of Romania on November 27, 1918, the place belonged to what was then the Storojineț district. At that time the majority of the population was Ukrainians, but there was also a large Romanian community. In the interwar period, the "Edelweiss Youth Association" also worked here.
Due to the Hitler-Stalin Pact , the annexation of North Bukovina took place on June 28, 1940 and Cereșenca became part of the Soviet Union , in between, from 1941 to 1944 again Romanian, the entire region was integrated into the Ukrainian SSR in 1947 and has been since 1991 part of the independent Republic of Ukraine .
Attractions
- Monument of the struggle for freedom of Ukraine in the 20th century
Individual evidence
- ↑ romaniainterbelica.memoria.ro
- ^ Județul Storojineț
- ↑ Dr. Ion Popescu - Cap. II. Populația românofonă din Regiunea Cernăuți la sfârșitul perioadei sovietice (Nordul Bucovinei, nordul Basarabiei și Ținutul Herței) ( Memento of the original from January 5, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF; 438 kB)
- ↑ gromady.cv.ua
literature
- Documents bucoviniene, Vol. 3, Institutul de arte grafice şi editură "Glasul Bucovinei", Cernăuţi 1937
- Gothaisches Genealogical Pocket Book of the Count's Houses Part B, 114th year, 1941, pp. 536-537
- Erich Prokopowitsch: The nobility in the Bukowina, Südostdeutscher Verlag, Munich, 1983