Volochysk
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Volochysk | |||
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Map of Ukraine with Volochysk highlighted | |||
Population | |||
- Total | 20 958 ( census) | ||
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Time zone | EET (UTC+2) | ||
- Summer (DST) | EEST (UTC+3) | ||
Postal code | 31200 - 31208 | ||
Area code(s) | +380 3845 | ||
Website: http://volochysk.iatp.org.ua |
Volochysk (Ukrainian: Волочиськ, translit., Volochys’k) is a town located on the left bank of the Zbruch River in Khmelnytskyi Oblast (province) of western Ukraine. It is the administrative center of Volochyskyi Raion (district).
The current estimated population is 20 958 (2001 census).
Volochysk is an important transport center. Railroads and highways of national importance go through the town.
[edit] History
Volochysk is an old town. Its name used to be “Volochyshche”. It derives from Ukrainian word “volochyty” that means “to portage”. The town situated on the trade road from the East to the West in Halytsko-Volyn Principality time and in the following centuries. Merchants had to portage their goods through the river and its waterlogged banks. As a result, a new settlement appeared on that place soon(on left and right banks of river Zbruch). It was called “Volochyshche”. The settlement on the right bank was later renamed to “Pidvolochysk”, which means “the place near or under Volochysk”.
Slavic tribes of “volyniany” used to live on the territory of contemporary Volochysk in ancient times. This region belonged to Kievan Rus' in the ninth and tenth centuries, later to Halytsko-Volyn Principality.
Volochysk area was ravaged in 1241 by Mongol-tatar tribes, which were coming to conquer Halych after they had seized Kyiv.
Volochysk region as a part of Halytsko-Volyn Princedom was conquered by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the second quarter of XIV century. Volochysk was a part of Kuzmynsky povit (district) in that period of time.
Volochysk is first mentioned as “Volochyshche” in Podil statement of Zbarazh princes dated 9th of July 1463. Volochyshche belonged to Volyn baron, prince Vasyl Zbarazky, but after his death was inherited by his son Semen Zbarazky in 1463.
There was a “black road” not far from Volochysk in the southern part of that region. It was one of the main roads for tatars raids into Ukrainian territory. Kuzmynsky povit was vastly ravaged by Crimean horde at the end of XV century. Only few settlements survived.
The welfare of Volochysk grew after its people started trading with other towns of Ukraine. Landlord prince Vladyslav Andriovych Zbarazky received the right from the government to establish a village in the area of the settlement in 1557 and since 1558 Volochysk was called village. There were 135 households with 675 people. Volochysk became a trade-craftsmen community. Zbarazky family died out after Yuriy Zbarazky died and thus Volochysk was inherited by Vyshnevetsky princes in 1631.
The cossaks of Bohdan Khmelnytsky casted off the Polish yoke and freed Volochysk, when they defeated Polish army in the battle of Pyliavtsi in 1648. But Volochysk wasn’t annexed to Russia in 1654. It was still a part of Poland due to Zboriv treaty.
After the Vyshnevetsky family died out, their relative, governor of Kyiv province, Yuzef Pototsky inherited Volochysk in 1695.
Yuzef Pototsky sold Volochysk together with all his estates to crown marshal Fridrikh Moshynsky for 1700 thousand zlots in 1772. Fridrikh Moshynsky was one of the richest Polish landlords, who owned 4 510 000 acres (18,000 km²) of land, 30 682 serfs, many shops and factories.
Fridrikh Moshynsky established a bank in Volochysk at the end of XVIII century. He also built a five-storey castle, a school, and also built another castle 3 miles (4.8 km) to the east of the village, thus established a new settlement which was named after him – Fridrikhivka. There were already 58 households in Fridrikhivka in 1866.
The population of the village was illiterate at the beginning of XIX century, because there were no schools till that time. The first one grade school was established there only in 1801, but only children of rich people studied there.
A number of manufacturing enterprises appears in Volochysk in the second part of XIX century. There was a brewery and a candle plant in 1860. A sugar plant owned by German venture “Zbruch” was built in 1870.
A railway from Kyiv to Lviv and a railway station were built here in 1870. It was the first railroad joining Western and Eastern Ukraine.
There were no hospitals in Volochysk before the revolution. Only 4 medical attendants, 5 dentists and 4 midwives worked there in 1913.
Volochysk was at the front line during World War I.
Though not a big city, Volochysk was a famous place because Volochysk was the "gate" to Ukraine (from the West), the so-called "box of goodies" between Europe and Asia.
There were 190 private shops in 1913. 261 students studied in a one-, and a two-year schools, and also in a church school. Among the cultural establishments in Volochysk, there were a club, a cinema, two libraries and three book shops in 1913.
Many armies passed through Volochysk in the period from 1917 to 1920, when Ukraine gained its independence from Russia for a short period of time. They represented different powers: Russian Bolsheviks, Polish army of Pilsudski, Ukrainian Central Council (Tsentralna Rada), “Dyrektoriya”, and Petliura.
In November 1920, the army of the fighter for Ukraine’s independence Symon Petliura was defeated by the 8th Division of the Russian Red Army near Volochysk. Thus, the military struggle for Ukrainian independence was over and Volochysk became a part of the Soviet Union.
From 1923 Volochysk is the administrative centre of Volochyskyi rayon (district). The process of “collectivization” (when individual land and labour were consolidated into collective farms by force) was one of the fastest in the region. As the result, big numbers of people were oppressed and sent to concentration camps in Siberia in 1930-1931.
The first library for adults opened here in 1934, the library for children was opened in 1937. Local newspaper “Prykordonnyi Komunar” was established in 1930. Now it’s called “Zorya” and is still published.
In July 1941 German troops marched into the town. They occupied the town until March, 1944. In August 1942, 8634 Jews were shot dead by Nazis near Volochysk.
All together during the period of the Second World War, there were 9297 people killed in the town and 3982 were taken to Germany for forced labour.
On the 17th of March 1944 Volochysk was freed by the Soviet Army. Right after that the processes of rebuilding the town started. Most of the plants and factories restored their full functionality by 1950s.
Great changes came to the town’s industrial and socio-cultural development in 1960s. A canned food plant, a clothes factory, capacitors, brick, metal items, and bread plants were built then. The development of the town also continued in 1970s. A cheese plant and a machine-building plant were opened then.
As of today the core production in the region consists of portable electric power stations, bricks, metal items, capacitors, canned food, sugar, bread and bun goods, and more than 100 of other consumer products. Volochysk is developing with rapid strides, paying much attention to the service sector and new technologies.
[edit] People
- Rabbi Meïr Löb ben Jehiel Michel Weiser, Malbi"M
[edit] Internet Sources
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