Ust-Putyla
Ust-Putyla | ||
Усть-Путила | ||
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Basic data | ||
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Oblast : | Chernivtsi Oblast | |
Rajon : | Putyla district | |
Height : | 1183 m | |
Area : | Information is missing | |
Residents : | 623 (2001) | |
Postcodes : | 59114 | |
Area code : | +380 3738 | |
Geographic location : | 48 ° 6 ' N , 25 ° 3' E | |
KOATUU : | 7323585501 | |
Administrative structure : | 6 villages | |
Address: | 59114 с. Усть-Путила | |
Website : | Rural community website | |
Statistical information | ||
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Ust-Putyla ( Ukrainian Усть-Путила ; Russian Усть-Путила Ust-Putila , Romanian Gura Putilei ) is a village in the Eastern Carpathians in the Ukrainian Oblast Chernivtsi with about 620 inhabitants (2001).
On the main street in the center of the village is the Orthodox wooden church of Saint Paraskewa, built in 1881 (according to other sources, 1896) in the typical style of the folk architecture of Bukovina , a monument of national importance. In addition, the 30 m high sandstone rock Kamjana Bahatschka ( Кам'яна Багачка ⊙ ) is a geological natural monument in the village.
history
The village was first mentioned in writing in the 18th century and was initially called Meschybridky ( Межибрідки ). Until the end of the First World War , the village was part of Austria-Hungary in the crown land of Bukovina . Then the village came to the district of Rădăuţi in Romania . After the annexation of northern Bukovina on June 28, 1940, it fell to the Soviet Union , during the Second World War it was again given to Romania between 1941 and 1944, and after the reconquest by troops of the Ukrainian Front of the Red Army after the end of the war, it was incorporated into the Ukrainian SSR . After the collapse of the Soviet Union , Ust-Putyla became part of independent Ukraine in 1991.
Geographical location
The village is located at an altitude of 1183 m near the mouth of the 42 km long Putylka ( Путилка ) in the Cheremosh , about 20 km north of the Rajon center Putyla and about 100 km southwest of the Oblast center Chernivtsi . Territorial road T-26-01 runs through the village .
local community
Ust-Putyla is the administrative center of the 92.06 square kilometers of rural community Ust-Putyla ( Усть-Путильська сільська громада ) in the north of Putyla Raion with more than 2,200 inhabitants (24 inhabitants / km²), to which even the villages Marynytschi ( Мариничі , ⊙ ) with about 540 inhabitants, Biskiw ( Бісків , ⊙ ) with about 190 inhabitants, Schpetky ( Шпетки , ⊙ ) with about 190 inhabitants, Byskiw ( Бисків , ⊙ ) with about 150 inhabitants and Petra ski ( Петраші , ⊙ belong) with about 460 inhabitants .
Personalities
- Ostap Wilschyna ( Остап Вільшина , real name Юрій Пилипович Пентелейчук Jurij Pylypowytsch Pentelejchuk ; 1899-1924) Ukrainian poet, prose writer, publicist and literary critic lived in the village in the 1920s
- Wassylyna Samurjak ( Василина Олексіївна Самуряк ; 1948–2018) People's Artist, Honored Master of Folk Art of Ukraine (2006) was born in the village
Web links
- Municipal Council website on rada.info (Ukrainian)
- Website of the rural community Ust-Putyla on the Chernivtsi Oblast website (Ukrainian)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Local website on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada ; accessed on May 27, 2019 (Ukrainian)
- ^ Church of St. Paraskeva (Ust-Putila village, Chernivtsi Oblast) on drymba.com ; accessed on May 27, 2019 (Ukrainian)
- ↑ a b Ust-Putyla on castles.com.ua ; accessed on May 27, 2019 (Ukrainian)
- ↑ Kamjana Bahatschka on castles.com.ua ; accessed on May 27, 2019 (Ukrainian)
- ↑ Kamjana Bahatschka on we.org.ua ; accessed on May 27, 2019 (Ukrainian)
- ^ Local history Ust-Putyla in the history of the cities and villages of the Ukrainian SSR ; accessed on May 27, 2019 (Ukrainian)
- ^ Village history on the official website of the rural community; accessed on May 27, 2019 (Ukrainian)
- ↑ Ust-Putyla rural community on decentralization.gov.ua ; accessed on May 27, 2019 (Ukrainian)