Zebrykowe

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Zebrykowe
Цебрикове
Coat of arms of Zebrykowe
Zebrykowe (Ukraine)
Zebrykowe
Zebrykowe
Basic data
Oblast : Odessa Oblast
Rajon : Velyka Mychajlivka district
Height : no information
Area : 5.87 km²
Residents : 2,934 (2004)
Population density : 500 inhabitants per km²
Postcodes : 67131
Area code : +380 4859
Geographic location : 47 ° 9 '  N , 30 ° 6'  E Coordinates: 47 ° 8 '47 "  N , 30 ° 6' 27"  E
KOATUU : 5121655500
Administrative structure : 1 urban-type settlement , 7 villages
Mayor : Tetjana sailors
Address: вул. Леніна 1
67130 смт. Цебрикове
Statistical information
Zebrykowe (Odessa Oblast)
Zebrykowe
Zebrykowe
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Zebrykowe (Ukrainian Цебрикове ; Russian Цебриково / Zebrikowo , German Hope Valley , also Hope Valley ) is an urban-type settlement with around 2,900 inhabitants in the Welyka Mychajliwka district , Odessa Oblast in Ukraine . It is located about 50 kilometers east of Tiraspol and about 90 kilometers northwest of Odessa . Together with the 7 lying around villages Iryniwka (Іринівка) Malozebrykowe (Малоцебрикове) Mardariwka (Мардарівка) Nowopawliwka (Новопавлівка) Noworomaniwka (Новороманівка) Oleniwka (Оленівка) and Olhynowe (Ольгинове) they form a settlement Council community.

history

Plan of the colonist district of Glückstal from 1809

The Hopesthal colony was established in the Ukrainian-speaking area in 1819 by German emigrants from Württemberg. They had arrived two years earlier in the small village of Zebrik in the valley of the Malyj Kujalnyk in the Cherson Governorate , Tiraspol district, and were given land to settle in the unfinished place that had been built by Bulgarian colonists. The Hope Valley, part of the Glückstal colonist district, was granted market rights in 1835 and the first church was built in 1847. In 1848 850 people lived in the village. The inhabitants belonged to the ethnic group of the Black Sea Germans .

With the approach of the Red Army on May 18, 1944, the population of German origin was evacuated . In 1961 the village was granted urban-type settlement status.

Personalities

  • Georg Leibbrandt (1899–1982), Nazi functionary and author, born in Hoffnungsthal
  • Siegfried Springer , Bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of European Russia, grew up in the village
  • Immanuel Winkler (1886–1932), pastor from 1911 to 1918, chairman of the “Main Committee of the All-Russian Association of Russian Citizens of German Nationality” and author
  • Igor Evgenyevich Levitin (* 1952), Russian politician, former Minister of Transport

literature

Web links