Ushkowytschi

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Ushkowytschi
Ушковичі
Coat of arms is missing
Uschkowytschi (Ukraine)
Ushkowytschi
Ushkowytschi
Basic data
Oblast : Lviv Oblast
Rajon : Peremyshlyany district
Height : no information
Area : 3.68 km²
Residents : 555 (2001)
Population density : 151 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 81240
Area code : +380 3263
Geographic location : 49 ° 39 '  N , 24 ° 33'  E Coordinates: 49 ° 38 '31 "  N , 24 ° 32' 48"  E
KOATUU : 4623388001
Administrative structure : 4 villages
Address: 81240 с. Ушковичі
Statistical information
Ushkowytschi (Lviv Oblast)
Ushkowytschi
Ushkowytschi
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Uschkowytschi ( Ukrainian Ушковичі ; Russian Ушковичи Uschkowitschi , Polish Uszkowice , formerly Ustkowice ) is a village in the western Ukrainian Lviv Oblast with about 550 inhabitants.

It belongs with the villages of Kymyr , Nedilyska ( Неділиська ) and Tschupernossiw ( Чуперносів ) to the district council of the same name .

history

The place was first mentioned in 1370, and then in 1395 and 1396 as Ustkovicze . In 1397 the village of Ustkovice was transferred to German law. Later it was named as Uschkowicze (1469), Hustkowicze (1578), but also as Ушковичи (1882) or Uszkowce (1891). The original name is patronymically derived from Ustek (<Polish usta , lip )

The place initially belonged to the Lviv region in the Ruthenian Voivodeship of the aristocratic republic of Poland-Lithuania . During the first partition of Poland in 1772 the village became part of the new Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria of the Habsburg Empire (from 1804).

In 1784 in the course of the Josephine colonization , German colonists of the Lutheran denomination were settled on the grounds of the village. The colony was seldom called Josephsthal.

In 1900 the Uszkowice community had 140 houses with 862 inhabitants, 595 of them Ruthenian-speaking, 132 German-speaking, 132 Polish-speaking, 527 Greek-Catholic, 176 Roman-Catholic, 56 Jews, 103 of other faiths.

After the end of the Polish-Ukrainian War in 1919, the community became part of Poland. In 1921 it had 160 houses with 867 inhabitants, of which 856 Poles, 11 Ruthenians, 482 Greek Catholics, 318 Roman Catholics, 13 Germans, 54 Jews (religion).

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 .

Attractions

  • Former Roman Catholic subsidiary church, built in 1936, today Protestant

A classicist manor from the 18th and 19th centuries. The 19th century was destroyed around 1939.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Anna Czapla: Nazwy miejscowości historycznej ziemi lwowskiej [The names of the localities of the historical Lviv country] . Towarzystwo Naukowe Katolickiego Uniwersytetu Lubelskiego Jana Pawła II, Lublin 2011, ISBN 978-83-7306-542-0 , p. 198 (Polish).
  2. Henryk Lepucki: Działalność kolonizacyjna Marii Teresy i Józefa II w Galicji 1772-1790: z 9 tablicami i MAPA . Kasa im. J. Mianowskiego, Lwów 1938, p. 163-165 (Polish, online ).
  3. Ludwig Patryn (Ed.): Community encyclopedia of the kingdoms and countries represented in the Reichsrat, edited on the basis of the results of the census of December 31, 1900, XII. Galicia . Vienna 1907.
  4. Główny Urząd Statystyczny: Skorowidz miejscowości Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej. Województwo tarnopolskie . Warszawa 1928 (Polish, online [PDF]).
  5. a b Grzegorz Rąkowski: Przewodnik po Ukrainie Zachodniej. Część III. Ziemia Lwowska . Oficyna Wydawnicza "Rewasz", Pruszków 2007, ISBN 978-83-8918866-3 , p. 375 (Polish).