Lypovets | |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Map of Ukraine with Lypovets highlighted |
Pushpin Map: | Ukraine Vinnytsia Oblast#Ukraine |
Pushpin Relief: | 1 |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Type1: | Oblast |
Subdivision Name1: | Vinnytsia Oblast |
Subdivision Type2: | Raion |
Subdivision Name2: | Vinnytsia Raion |
Unit Pref: | Metric |
Area Total Km2: | 10.33 |
Population As Of: | 2022 |
Population Total: | 7958 |
Population Density Km2: | auto |
Population Demonym: | Lypovets' |
Timezone: | EET |
Utc Offset: | +2 |
Timezone Dst: | EEST |
Utc Offset Dst: | +3 |
Coordinates: | 49.2208°N 29.0569°W |
Elevation M: | 242 |
Postal Code Type: | Postal code |
Postal Code: | 22500-22505 |
Area Code: | +380-4358 |
Subdivision Type3: | Hromada |
Subdivision Name3: | Lypovets urban hromada |
Lypovets is a small city in Vinnytsia Raion, Vinnytsia Oblast, Ukraine. Until the administrative reform of 2020, it served as the administrative center of the former Lypovets Raion. Population: It is located in the historic region of Podolia.
Lipowiec, as it was known in Polish, was granted town rights in the early 17th century. It was a private town, administratively located in the Winnica County in the Bracław Voivodeship in the Lesser Poland Province of the Kingdom of Poland.[1] It was annexed by the Russian Empire in the Second Partition of Poland in 1793. In 1802, it became the administrative center of Lypovets uyezd in Kiev Governorate.[2] In the late 19th-century the population was mostly employed in agriculture and grain trade, which was sold mostly to Odesa.[2]
During World War II, Lypovets was the site of a battle between the Soviet Union and the Slovak State. The battle ended with a Slovak victory, with a cumulative casualty count of nearly 700. Afterwards it was occupied by Nazi German troops, from 1941, to 1944. In a field near Lypovets, from the end of April 1942, over 950 Jews were shot by German security forces with the support of local policemen and buried in two mass graves.[3] To commemorate the extermination, obelisks were erected in the 1950s - on the initiative of Leontii Usharenko, who was pulled out of the pit at the last minute and had to watch his family and acquaintances being murdered. Two memorials were erected at the mass graves of the Jewish victims in 2019 and ceremonially inaugurated in September 2019.
Distribution of the population by native language according to the 2001 census:[4]
Language | Percentage | |
---|---|---|
Ukrainian | 98.41% | |
Russian | 1.4% | |
other/undecided | 0.19% |