Volosyanka (Skole)

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Volosyanka
Волосянка
Coat of arms is missing
Volosjanka (Ukraine)
Volosyanka
Volosyanka
Basic data
Oblast : Lviv Oblast
Rajon : Skole district
Height : 673 m
Area : 3.01 km²
Residents : 1,452 (2001)
Population density : 482 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 82663
Area code : +380 3251
Geographic location : 48 ° 47 '  N , 23 ° 26'  E Coordinates: 48 ° 46 '48 "  N , 23 ° 25' 42"  E
KOATUU : 4624580801
Administrative structure : 1 village
Address: 82663 с. Волосянка
Website : Website of the former municipal council
Statistical information
Volosyanka (Lviv Oblast)
Volosyanka
Volosyanka
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Wolosjanka ( Ukrainian and Russian Волосянка ; Polish Wołosianka ) is a village in the Forest Carpathians in the south of the Ukrainian Lviv Oblast with about 1400 inhabitants (2001).

One of the churches in the village

Volosjanka has an area of ​​3.01 km² and administratively belongs to the settlement municipality of the urban-type Slavske settlement in the south of the Skole district in the border region to the Transcarpathian and Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast . The village has a national architectural monument with the wooden church of the Transfiguration, built between 1804 and 1824.

The village is surrounded by the mountains of the Skoler Beskids over 1200  m high , at an altitude of 673  m in the valley of the Slavka ( Славка ), a 15 km long right tributary of the Opir . The village is located 9 km south of the Slavske community center, 36 km south of the Skole district center and about 140 km south of the Lviv oblast center . The “ Urengoy - Pomary - Uzhhorod natural gas pipeline ” runs north of the village .

tourism

"Sachar Berkut" ski area in Volosyanka

The well-known ski and summer recreation complex "Sachar Berkut" ( Захар Беркут ) , named after the hero of the story of the same name by Ivan Franko , belongs to the village . In the ski area there is an approximately 2800 m long double cable car and two ski lifts with a length of 700 m and 750 m respectively.

history

The village, first mentioned in writing in 1572, was in the Ruthenian Voivodeship within the aristocratic republic of Poland-Lithuania until the first partition of Poland in 1772 . Then it was in the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria , a crown land of the Habsburg Monarchy and the Habsburg Empire / Austria-Hungary .

After the First World War , the village was briefly part of the West Ukrainian People's Republic , until it became part of the Second Polish Republic after the end of the Polish-Ukrainian War . Here it was initially within the Stanislau Voivodeship in the Powiat Skole and from 1932 in the Powiat Stryj . In the interwar period there was a customs post and a border post in the village.

After the beginning of the Second World War , the village was occupied by the Soviet Union in September 1939 and in the summer of 1941 the Wehrmacht occupied the village for the German Reich . Under German rule it was incorporated into the General Government , District of Galicia . After the reconquest of the village by the Red Army , it fell to the Ukrainian SSR within the Soviet Union at the end of the Second World War and after its collapse it became part of the independent Ukraine. Here the village was the administrative center of a 69.77 km² district council with 2,400 inhabitants until 2019 , which also included the villages of Khashchevanja ( Хащованя ) and Jalynkuwate ( Ялинкувате ). Since February 2019 it has been part of the Slawske settlement community.

Sons and daughters of the village

Web links

Commons : Volosjanka  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c local website on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada ; accessed on May 18, 2019 (Ukrainian)
  2. ^ Website of the district council on the official website of the Verkhovna Rada; accessed on May 18, 2019 (Ukrainian)
  3. National Architectural Monuments . Lviv Oblast Part 3 , No. 675 & 676 on ukrainaincognita ; accessed on May 18, 2019 (Ukrainian)
  4. Ski area & hotel "Zakhar Berkut" in the Carpathian Mountains on zaharberkut.ua ; accessed on May 18, 2019 (Russian)
  5. Article on the village of Volosyanka and the Sakhar Berkut ski area on karpaty-slav.com ; accessed on May 18, 2019 (Ukrainian)
  6. a b Local history of Volosyanka in the history of towns and villages of the Ukrainian SSR ; accessed on May 18, 2019 (Ukrainian)
  7. a b Ordinance of the Council of Ministers of January 7, 1932 on the abolition and modification of the boundaries of certain districts in the territory of the Stanisławów Dz.U. 1932 no 6 poz. 37; accessed on May 18, 2019 (Polish)
  8. website of the municipal council on rada.info ; accessed on May 18, 2019 (Ukrainian)