Tucholka (village)

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Tucholka
Тухолька
Coat of arms is missing
Tucholka (Ukraine)
Tucholka
Tucholka
Basic data
Oblast : Lviv Oblast
Rajon : Skole district
Height : 731 m
Area : 3.926 km²
Residents : 955 (2001)
Population density : 243 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 82644
Area code : +380 3251
Geographic location : 48 ° 53 '  N , 23 ° 17'  E Coordinates: 48 ° 52 '36 "  N , 23 ° 16' 56"  E
KOATUU : 4624588301
Administrative structure : 1 village
Address: 82644 с.Т ухолька
Website : City council website
Statistical information
Tucholka (Lviv Oblast)
Tucholka
Tucholka
i1

Tucholka ( Ukrainian Тухолька ; Russian Тухолька Tucholka , Polish Tucholka ) is a village in the south of the Ukrainian Lviv Oblast with about 950 inhabitants (2001).

Listed wooden church in the village

history

The village, first mentioned in writing in 1552, was part of the aristocratic republic of Poland-Lithuania until 1772 and after the first partition of Poland became part of the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria , a crown land of the Habsburg monarchy and, from 1804, of the Habsburg Empire . During the First World War , Tucholka was temporarily on the eastern front , for example in 1915 when the Zwinin was stormed . Conquering this ridge was part of the battle in the Carpathian Mountains . In the Austro-Hungarian army report of April 10, 1915, it says: German troops conquered a high altitude north of Tucholka that had been controversial since February 5 and stubbornly defended by the Russians; 1 colonel, over 1000 men were captured in this attack and 15 machine guns were also snatched from the Russians. After brief membership in the West Ukrainian People's Republic at the end of the First World War , Tucholka came to the Second Polish Republic in 1919, at the end of the Polish-Ukrainian War . During the Second World War , the village fell to the Soviet Union and from 1941 to the German Empire , which it became part of the Generalgouvernement , District of Galicia . At the end of the war in 1945 it became part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic and, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the now independent Ukraine .

The village has a wooden church built in the classicistic style in 1845.

Geographical location

Tucholka is the only village of the same name, 3.926 km² district council in the southwest of the Skole district .

The village is located in the Forest Carpathians at an altitude of 731  m on the bank of the Ukernyk ( Укерник , also known as Bryniwka / Brymuwka), an 11 km long left tributary of the Holovchanka ( Головчанка ), which flows into the Opir . The village is located 28 km southwest of the Skole district center and 135 km southwest of the Lviv oblast center .

The M 06 / E 471 - E 50 road runs through the village .

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. Local website on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada ; accessed on December 29, 2018 (Ukrainian)
  2. a b Local history of Tucholka in the history of the towns and villages of the Ukrainian SSR ; accessed on December 29, 2018 (Ukrainian)
  3. The Austro-Hungarian Army Report, Vienna April 10, 1915, The Deputy Chief of the General Staff. v. Hoefer , Lieutenant Field Marshal
  4. ^ Website of the district council on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada; accessed on December 29, 2018 (Ukrainian)