Suvorovo ( Ukrainian: Suvorov ) is an urban-type settlement in the Izmail district of Odessa region of Ukraine .
Settlement | |
Suvorovo | |
---|---|
Ukrainian Suvorov | |
A country | Ukraine |
Region | Odessa region |
Area | Izmail district |
History and Geography | |
Based | 1815 |
Former names | Shikirlik-China |
PGT with | 1961 |
Square | 5.53 kmΒ² |
Timezone | UTC + 2 , in summer UTC + 3 |
Population | |
Population | 4,546 [1] people ( 2017 ) |
Digital identifiers | |
Telephone code | +380 484144 |
Postcode | 68640 |
Car code | BH, HH / 16 |
KOATUU | |
Geographical position
Located on the shores of Lake Catlabuh .
History
The village was founded in 1815 on the site of the Tatar nomad Shikirli-China (Sugar Coast) by immigrants from Bulgaria.
According to the conditions of the Paris world in 1856. Shikirli-China became part of the Moldavian Principality.
After the end of the Russian-Turkish war (1877-1878), Southern Bessarabia returns to Russia.
During the first Russian revolution, June 11, 1906. the peasants of the village of Shikirli-China wrote a collective letter to the State Duma, in which they put forward political and economic demands.
In November 1917, under the leadership of the peasant K.V. Draganov, the Council of Peasant Deputies was created in the village.
In January 1918 Shikirli-China, like the whole of Bessarabia, was captured by royal Romania.
In 1918 an underground roar was created in the village. Committee.
June 28, 1940 The Red Army liberated the Danube region. A village council was elected.
In January 1941, the village became a district center.
February 22, 1941 the village of Shikirli-China was renamed Suvorovo in honor of the great Russian commander A.V. Suvorov .
During the Great Patriotic War in 1941 - 1944, the village was under German-Romanian occupation .
In 1989, the population was5902 people [2] .
According to the 2001 census of Ukraine, the population was 4835 people, the distribution of the population according to their native language to the Suvorov Village Council was as follows (in% of the total population): Ukrainian - 7.92%; Russian - 15.45%; Belarusian - 0.27%; Bulgarian - 71.04%; Gagauzian - 0.46%; Moldavian - 3.58%; German - 0.02%; gypsy - 0.97%; Hungarian - 0.02%.
As of January 1, 2013, the population was 4663 people [3] .
Notes
- β The number of the explicit population of Ukraine on 1 September 2017 rock. State Statistics Service of Ukraine. Kiev, 2017.
- β 1989 All-Union Population Census. Number of urban population of Union republics, their territorial units, urban settlements and urban areas by gender
- β The number of the explicit population of Ukraine on 1 September 2013. State Statistics Service of Ukraine. Kiev, 2013.