Biriukove Explained

Official Name:Biriukove
Native Name:Бірюкове
Native Name Lang:uk
Settlement Type:Rural settlement
Pushpin Map:Ukraine Luhansk Oblast#Ukraine
Coordinates:47.9544°N 39.7369°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Oblast
Subdivision Type2:Raion
Subdivision Name2:Dovzhansk Raion
Subdivision Type3:Hromada
Subdivision Name3:Dovzhansk urban hromada
Population Est:3951
Pop Est As Of:2022

Biriukove (Ukrainian: Бірюкове; Russian: Бирюково|Biryukovo) or Krynychne (Ukrainian: Криничне, Russian: Криничное|Krinichnoye) is a rural settlement in Dovzhansk urban hromada, Dovzhansk Raion (district) of Luhansk Oblast in Ukraine. Population:, .

It is situated in 18 km from Sverdlovsk near the river Kundryuchya, a tributary of the Donets. The nearest railway station, Dolzhanskaya, is situated in 12km (07miles) out of Biryukove. The nearby villages and are subordinated to Biriukove, because it is a center of the village council.[1]

Geography

Biriukove is located on the left bank of the Kundryuchya river, near the source.

History

Burial mounds dating back to the Bronze Age have been uncovered near Biriukove.

Biriukove was founded in 1778 by serfs from the villages Rovenky and Krasnovka, as the village Krynychne.[2]

During the Russian Civil War, the Bolsheviks established control over Krynychne in December 1917, incorporating it into the Soviet Union. In March 1920, the Communist chairman of the village council, a man named M. Biriukov, was allegedly murdered by "kulaks".[3] Krynychne was renamed to Biriukove in his honor in 1921.[4]

About a thousand citizens of Biriukove were participants in World War II. About 340 of them died, while 780 were decorated with awards. A monument named "Motherland" was erected in honor of the soldiers who died.[2]

In 1964, Biriukove received urban-type settlement status.[4]

Since 2014, Biryukove has been occupied by the unrecognized state the Luhansk People's Republic.[5] On July 7, 2014, one Ukrainian border guard was wounded after a mortar attack on this town's checkpoint, south of Sverdlovsk, Luhansk Oblast.

In 2016, the settlement was renamed by the Verkhovna Rada back to Krynychne as part of decommunization in Ukraine.[6]

Culture

There is a Church of St. Mitrophan in the town, which denominationally belongs to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate).[2]

Demographics

As of the 2001 Ukrainian census, there were 4414 people in Biriukove, of whom 60% were Ukrainians, 39% were Russians, and 1% were of other ethnicities.[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The History of cities and villages, 2009—2010. Volume Luhansk Oblast, p. 592. https://web.archive.org/web/20101013110228/http://www.igsu.org.ua/Luganskaja.obl/Sverdlovskij.rajon/Birjukovo.html . October 13, 2010 . unfit.
  2. Encyclopedia: Бірюкове . ЕНЦИКЛОПЕДІЯ СУЧАСНОЇ УКРАЇНИ . Інститут енциклопедичних досліджень НАН України . Лисенко . А. В. . 2004-02-01 . 3 . Ukrainian . 978-966-02-2074-4.
  3. Encyclopedia: Бірюкове, Свердловський район, Луганська область . Історія міст і сіл Української РСР . uk.
  4. Encyclopedia: Biryukove . The Columbia Gazetteer of the World: A to G . Columbia University Press . Cohen . Saul Bernard . 2008 . 435 . en . 978-0-231-14554-1.
  5. Web site: Численность населения по состоянию на 1 октября 2015 года по Луганской Народной Республике. Luhansk People's Republic. Russian. 21 December 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20160204211939/http://gkslg.info/files/chisl_0915.pdf. 2016-02-04. dead.
  6. Web site: Resolution of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine No 1351-VIII: On renaming of some localities and districts in the temporarily occupied territories of Donetsk and Luhansk regions.