Yuskovets ( Ukrainian Yuskivtsi ) - village , Yuskovetsky village council , Lanovetsky district , Ternopil region , Ukraine . Until 1914 it was called Іskіvtsі. Nearby are the farmsteads of Buygori, Dodatki and Koshelevka (Ukrainian: Buygori, Dodatki, Koshelіvka).
| Village | |
| Yuskovtsi | |
|---|---|
| Ukrainian Yuskivtsі | |
| A country | |
| Region | Ternopil |
| Area | Lanovetsky |
| The village council | Yuskovetsky |
| History and Geography | |
| Based | 1545 |
| Square | 3.28 km² |
| Timezone | UTC + 2 , in the summer UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 1047 people ( 2001 ) |
| Density | 319,210 people / km² |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +380 3549 |
| Postcode | 47422 |
| Car code | BO, BUT / 20 |
| Koatuu | 6123886201 |
Code KOATUU - 6123886201. The population according to the 2001 census was 1047 people [1] .
It is the administrative center of the Yuskovetsky village council, which does not include other settlements.
Geographical position
The village of Yuskovtsi is located on the banks of the Gorynka River at the place where it flows into the Goryn River; Akimovtsy is located upstream at a distance of 1.5 km. A railway passes through the village, Yuskovtsi station.
History
- 1545 is the date of foundation. In 1594 it is known under the name "Eskovtsy" in the Polish state ("Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth") and belonged to the Kremenets district of the Volyn Voivodship. At that time, the village belonged to the Pisochinsky Lavrin Gnivoshevich (Ukrainian Lavrin Pichochinsky Gnivoshevich, also the possible spelling Pesochinsky, Pyasochinsky), a native of the Volyn noble family, “subordinate” (“judge”, who decides for land affairs in Poland, a high position in from 1583 to 1606. The main estates of Pisochinsky were in the Bratslav Voivodeship. [2] .
- According to the "List of Populated Places of Volyn Province" from 1906, at that time in Yuskovtsi there were 218 yards and 1167 people of both sexes [3] .
- In the Russian Empire, the village belonged to the Yampol volost, the Kremenets district, and the Volyn province.
- According to the Riga Peace Treaty of March 18, 1921, concluded between Poland, the RSFSR, the Ukrainian SSR and the Byelorussian SSR, the village, together with neighboring settlements, was transferred to Poland as part of the Volyn Voivodeship. In 1936 it was part of the Lanovetsky commune ( Polish gmina - volost) of the Kremenets district of the Volyn Voivodeship [4]
- In 1939, the commune was liquidated as a result of the invasion of the Soviet army and later the village became part of the Lanovetsky region of the Ukrainian SSR.
Social Objects
- School.
- House of Culture.
- Medical and obstetric point.
Attractions
- Mass grave of Soviet soldiers, erected in 1958 .
- There are 2 churches of the Holy Ascension in the village. One of 1620 , wooden, was transported from Kremenets in 1760, and the second new year 2006 , a stone chapel. The priest of the village in 1914 was Priest Averky Barshchevsky, who asked for a transfer on September 29 and was first appointed a priest to the village of Zabolottsy and later to the village of Boryatin. [five]
Gallery
Pond in the village
Old wooden church
Notes
- ↑ The site of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine.
- ↑ Archaeographic Commission of the Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. "Ukrainian archaeographic schorichnik" / P.S. Sohan. - New Series, Issue 2, Volume 5. - Kiev: Naukova Dumka, 1993. - S. 160. - 472 p. - ISBN 5-12-003884-0 .
- ↑ Volyn Provincial Statistical Committee 1906. List of the inhabited places of the Volyn province. - Zhytomyr: Volyn Provincial Printing House - 1906. - 170 pp.
- ↑ Ґміна Ланівці (Ukrainian) // Vіkіpedіya. - 2017-02-08.
- ↑ Holy Martyr Arkady (Ostalsky). "We must not be afraid of any suffering ...". Creations. In two volumes. / Comp. Deacon Igor Kucheruk, with the participation of Evgeny Timiryaev .. - Volume I. - Zhytomyr: Edition of the Zhytomyr Diocese of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church., 2007. - 544 p.