Bison ( Ukrainian: Bison ) is a village in the Pustomyty district of the Lviv region of Ukraine .
| Village | |||||
| Bison | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ukrainian Bison | |||||
| |||||
| A country | |||||
| Region | Lviv | ||||
| Area | Pustomitovsky | ||||
| History and Geography | |||||
| First mention | 1407 | ||||
| Village with | 1408 | ||||
| Square | 3.35 km² | ||||
| Center height | 338 m | ||||
| Timezone | UTC + 2 , in summer UTC + 3 | ||||
| Population | |||||
| Population | 2,491 people ( 2001 ) | ||||
| Density | 743.58 people / km² | ||||
| Digital identifiers | |||||
| Telephone code | +380 3230 | ||||
| Postcode | 81135 | ||||
| Car code | BC, HC / 14 | ||||
| KOATUU | 4623683301 | ||||
The population for the 2001 census was 2491 people. It covers an area of 3.35 km². Zip code is 81135. Phone code is 3230.
Content
History
Researchers believe that in ancient times powerful forest bison converged in the valley of the river, bearing the same name, which gave the name to the river and the village. The origin of the name Bison in the Polish "Geographical Dictionary" of 1895 says that the village arose in the forests where bison were found. The modern historian Vasily Laba slightly altered the version of the origin of the name of the village, which notes that the “Galician-Volyn annals” (1219) say that “ Prince Mstislav stood on the Bison, ” and the thousand-strong Dmitry retreated to her under pressure from the Polish-Hungarian army . That is, the Bison is referred to as a defensive line, which the river could very well be.
The first mention of the Bison dates back to October 1407 . Then the Polish king Jagiello presented Jan from Berava and his heirs with. The bison of Lviv district, but with the condition that the gifted settled in it constantly and appeared on every military campaign with one spearmen and two arrows. A year later, at the request of Jan, Vladislav II transferred the village from Polish law to Magdeburg .
In 1630, a school was first established in the village. Then she was kept at the expense of the church and the rural community. The second school was founded in Bison in 1790.
In 1900, 1,198 people lived in the Bison.
After World War II, the composition of the Bison population changed. The Poles were repatriated to Poland, the Ukrainians arrived in the village, who were deported from Nadsyanyya, Podlasie and Kholmshchyna (the village of Radruzh, Devyatir, Verkhrata, Gorinets and Syanok).
Attractions
- Church of the Archangel Michael (1833), now the church of St. Paraskeva ( UGCC ).
- In 1848, in honor of the abolition of serfdom, four linden trees were planted in two places in the Bison, three of which are still growing today.
Local Council
81135, Lviv region, Pustomytovsky district, s. Bison, st. I. Franka, 6a