Kurovichi ( Ukrainian Kurovichі Polish. Kurowice ) is a village in the Zolochevsky district of the Lviv region of Ukraine .
| Village | |
| Kurovichi | |
|---|---|
| Ukrainian Kurovichі | |
| A country | |
| Status | village council center |
| Region | Lviv |
| Area | Zolochevsky (Lviv region) |
| The village council | Kurovichsky |
| History and Geography | |
| Based | 1400 |
| First mention | 1443 |
| Former names | Kurowice |
| Square | 4,343 km² |
| Center height | |
| Timezone | UTC + 2 , in summer UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 1355 people |
| Density | 312 people / km² |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +380 3265 |
| Postcode | 80725 |
| KOATUU | 4621883901 |
Center of the Village Council (happy). It is located on the highway Lviv - Ternopol , 39 km from the regional center of Zolochev and 15 km from the railway station Zadvorye . The population is 1355 people. The village council is subordinated to the villages of Pecheniya and Solov.
In Kurovichy is the oil pumping station of the Druzhba trunk pipeline, commissioned in February 1965.
Content
History
The first written mention of Kurovichy dates back to 1400 . [1] In the 14th century the neighborhood called Mlynivtsi belonged to the boyar Jan Hleb Diatkowicz from Svirzh , the Kolomyia elder and the governor of Galich . The village of Kurovichi was founded by his son Nikolai from Romanov (Romanovsky). In 1400, Kurovichi belonged to Jan Klus from the neighboring village of Vizhnyany (this is mentioned in the document of Archbishop Jakub Strepa of August 25, 1400). Later, the village became the property of the tycoons Kuropatnitsky, Grabyanok, Gedzinsky, Olshevsky, Czartoryski, Lubomirsky, and finally, the Potocki, who owned it before the outbreak of World War II.
Until the 19th century, as part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth , then in the 19th - beginning of the 20th century - p. Kurovice Peremyshlsky district of Galicia as part of Austria-Hungary . In 1919-1939 - as part of Poland , in 1939-1991 - USSR .
A significant number of villagers were previously Jews. In the summer of 1941, Kurovichi was occupied by units of the Wehrmacht . In October 1941, a Jewish work camp was set up here in the buildings of the former estate of Count Potocki, whose prisoners (up to 200 people) were used mainly for road works. On July 21, 1943 the camp was liquidated, most of the prisoners were transferred to the Yaktorov camp and shot there, a small group was sent to the Yanovsky death camp in Lviv. On June 22, 1944, the Red Army liberated the village from the Nazis. At the same time, 116 Soviet soldiers died.
Attractions
- Church of St. Anthony (1934-1938)
- Monument to the soldiers who died during the liberation of the village from Nazi invaders and at the hands of nationalists.
Village Council (Council)
80725, Lviv region, Zolochevsky district, with. Kurovichi, tel. 53-3-41