Velyki Mezhyrichi Explained

Official Name:Velyki Mezhyrichi
Native Name:Великі Межирічі
Pushpin Map:Ukraine Rivne Oblast#Ukraine
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Oblast
Subdivision Type2:Raion
Subdivision Name2: Rivne Raion
Established Date:1544
Area Total Km2:5,441
Population Total:2192
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone:EET
Utc Offset:+2
Timezone Dst:EEST
Utc Offset Dst:+3
Coordinates:50.6567°N 26.8647°W
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Postal Code:34725
Area Code:+380 3651
Website:село Великі Межирічі/райцентр Корець/облцентр Рівне (Ukrainian)

Mezhirichi (Ukrainian: Вели́кі Межи́річі|Velyki Mezhyrichi; Polish: Wielki Międzyrzecz) is a village in western Ukraine, in the Rivne Raion of Rivne Oblast, but was formerly administered within the Korets Raion. It is located 13miles west of Korets and 27miles east of Rivne. Local government is administered by Velykomezhyritska village council.[1]

Names

Mezhirichi is also known as Polish: Międzyrzec Korecki, Yiddish: מעזריטש Mezritsh, Hebrew: מזריטש גדול.

Jewish life in Mezhirichi

Undoubtedly the most significant event in the Jewish community of Mezhirichi was the arrival there of the Maggid, Rabbi Dov Ber. After the death of the founder of Hasidism, the Baal Shem Tov, in 1761, Rabbi Dov Ber became the next leader of the movement. He moved to Rivne, and later to Mezhrichi, where he remained for the rest of his life. Mezhrichi rapidly became a magnet and place of pilgrimage for the chasidim. The location of Mezhrichi, nearer to Poland and White Russia than the Baal Shem Tov's seat in Medzhybizh, acted as a spur to the fledgling chasidic movement.

History and attractions

The first written record of the village dates from 1544. However, archaeologists found in the area a settlement of Bronze Age and the Roman coins of II century AD.
The Magdeburg rights were provided for the village Mezhyrichi by the King of Poland Sigismund III Vasa in 1605. And in 1702 the owner of the village, Jerzy Lubomirski, started to build a stone church of St. Anthony in the village, which took 25 years to erect. The church was built on the place of an old wooden church, which had been erected by means of by Konstantine Ostrogski and which burned down in 1601.
Monuments of architecture national importance in the Rivne region is the stone church of St. Anthony (N - 1503 0) and Peter and Paul Church (wooden) (N – 1505 0) in the village Velyki Mezhyrichi.[2]

Notable people from Mezhirichi

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://rada.info/rada/04385971/ Великомежиріцька сільська рада
  2. [:uk:Пам'ятки архітектури національного значення Рівненської області|Пам'ятки архітектури національного значення Рівненської області]