Artyukhovka ( Ukrainian: Artyukhovka ) - village , Chemuzhovsky village council , Zmievsky district , Kharkiv region , Ukraine .
| Village | |
| Artyukhovka | |
|---|---|
| Ukrainian Artyukhivka | |
| A country | |
| Region | Kharkov |
| Area | Zmievskoy |
| The village council | Chemuzhovsky |
| History and Geography | |
| Based | 1680 |
| Square | 1.14 km² |
| Height above sea level | 88 m |
| Timezone | UTC + 2 , in summer UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 711 people ( 2001 ) |
| Density | 623,680 people / km² |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +380 5747 |
| Postcode | 63430 |
| Car code | AX, KX / 21 |
| KOATUU | 6321786502 |
The code of KOATUU is 6321786502. The population according to the 2001 census is 711 (314/397 m / f) people. According to local residents, the governor of the Kharkiv region, Mikhail Dobkin , lived in Artyukhovka for several years. [1] [2] Artyukhovka is included in the list of tourist routes of the Kharkiv region. [3] [4]
Content
Geographical position
The village of Artyukhovka is located on the left bank of the Mzha river near the confluence of the Bolshaya Vilovka and Olshanka rivers. The riverbed is winding, very swampy, with many estuaries and lakes. Upstream on the right bank of the Mzhi, the village of Sokolovo is located 4 km away, and on the left in the depths of the forest is the village of Repyakhovka . 2 km downstream on the opposite shore is the village of Proletarskoe . Further on the right side of the Mzha river towards Sokolovo is the village of Vodyakhovka . There is a railway near the village of Artyukhovka, the nearest stations are 2 km away - Sokolovo and Platform 23 km . The village is adjoined by a large forest (pine, birch forests, oak plantings).
Mzha river in winter
Nature in Artyukhovka
Village History
According to the website of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine [5], the village was founded in 1680 .
As follows from the description of Archbishop Filaret , the Vysochinovka Orthodox parish included “ Cherkasy settlements Artyukhovka and Chemuzhovka”: [6]
There were temples here. Artyukhov Arkhangelsk priest is known by the act of 1681; both Artyukhovsky and Chemuzhovsky priests are mentioned in the universal of 1712. But one and the other church is not visible in 1732.
At the same time, according to Mikhail Lutenko, the village of Artyukhovka "is one of the cradles of Adventism in the Kharkov region." The Seventh-day Adventist Church was organized in this village after the First World War. In 1961, an Adventist prayer house was opened in Artyukhovka, which operated until May 1989. In the same year, the Adventist community was dissolved and transferred to Zmiev. [7]
In 2012, entrepreneur and philanthropist Sayenko A.I. [8] [9] built about 20 modern cottages here and the village was re-developed as a tourist destination, home to a number of Kharkov artists led by the honored art worker of Ukraine A. Shekhovtsov [ 10] Subsequently, this part of the village was called “Artvillage” .
Economics
- Dairy farm.
Social Objects
- The feldsher-midwife station.
- Grocery store.
Transport
Artyukhovka is connected by bus with Zmiev , the bus goes from the railway station 5 times a day.
Notes
- ↑ Mikhail Dobkin got into an accident near Zmiev (photo)
- ↑ Dobkin's house burned in Kharkov
- ↑ Timchenki - Mzha - Artyukhovka 07/03/2011
- ↑ Route number 10. To the Museum of Soviet-Czechoslovak friendship. Levkovka platform - Artyukhovka village - Sokolov village - Pervomaiskaya platform
- ↑ Website of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine
- ↑ Filaret (D.G. Gumilevsky). Historical and statistical description of the Kharkov diocese
- ↑ Community on the outskirts of the forest. History of the Artyukhov community
- ↑ Catalog of leading enterprises of Ukraine
- ↑ From October 30 to November 7 will be held "GAGARIN-FEST" - the first festival of contemporary art
- ↑ Shekhovtsov Alexander Alexandrovich
Literature
- Zelenin S. M., Bondarovich I. M. Hiking trails in the Kharkov region. Kh.: “Prapor” - 1967.
- In the Kharkov region on a bicycle: a guide. The author is N. Tkachenko. Kharkov: Golden Pages, 2011.