Ivan Fyodorov Street ( Ukrainian: Vulitsa Ivana Fedorova ) is a street in the Galitsky district of Lviv , located in the eastern part of the medieval village between Armenian and Staroyevreyskaya streets . The street is covered with paving stones, the length of the street is 280 m.
| Street of Ivan Fedorov | |
|---|---|
| Ukrainian Vulitsa Ivana Fedorova | |
| general information | |
| A country | Ukraine |
| Region | Lviv region |
| City | Lviv |
| Area | Galitsky district |
| Name in honor | |
History and Names
The northern part of the current Fedorov Street was populated mainly by Greek Catholics and divided in two into two small streets, called Dominican Lateral (Dominikańska boczna) and Russian Lateral (Ruska boczna), and its southern part since the middle of the XIV century was the main street of the Jewish ghetto and was called Jewish ( ul. Żydowska). In 1871, three streets were combined into one, which received the name Blyakharskaya (ul. Blacharska) from the tinsmith workshops that were in this neighborhood.
In 1949 , on the occasion of the 375th anniversary of the first book in Ukraine, the street was named after Ivan Fedorov , a Russian and Ukrainian first printer.
Notable Buildings
Buildings - architectural monuments of national importance: No. 1, 2, 4, 8, 10, 14. 16. Buildings - architectural monuments of local importance: No. 6, 11, 15, 20, 21, 27, 28, 30.
- No. 2 in the 1950s was the hostel No. 7 of the Polytechnic Institute .
- Number 8 in the Polish period was the Society of Jewish Merchants.
- No. 9 is the former printing house of the Stavropigi Institute , on the facade of which there is a memorial table in honor of Ivan Fedorov . In this room, in Soviet times, the first vocational school was founded No. 2, which later became a printing school, and later received the name Stavropigi Professional Lyceum.
- No. 11 in Soviet times - the Leninsky district library named after T. G. Shevchenko.
- No. 18 (other addresses are Market Square , 10 and Russkaya Street , 1) - the Lyubomirsky Palace .
- Number 20 from Soviet times is the stronghold of law and order.
- No. 27 - in the XVIII century - a synagogue , later - a kagal , under Poland the Society of Small Jewish Merchants was located; until the 1970s, the six-pointed star “Shield of David” hung above the gates of the house; later, a memorial plaque in honor of the Jewish philosopher David Halevi was erected at this place.
- No. 29 - since the 1990s - the premises of the Lviv Jewish society.
Links
- Ivan Fedorov Street on the Yandex.Panorama service.
- Lemko I. Galitska, Ivan Fedorov and the Museum Square
- Melnik I. Vulitsa Ivana Fedorova