Samar, Dnipro Explained

Samar
Native Name:Самар
Native Name Lang:uk
Settlement Type:neighborhood (old Cossack city)
Pushpin Map:Ukraine Dnipro#Ukraine
Pushpin Label Position:bottom
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of Samar within the city of Dnipro
Coordinates:48.5006°N 35.1633°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type2:Municipality
Established Title:First mentioned
Established Date:1576
Established Date2:1783
Unit Pref:Metric
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone:EET
Utc Offset:+2
Timezone Dst:EEST
Utc Offset Dst:+3
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Area Code Type:Area code

Samar (Ukrainian: Самар, Ukrainian: Стара Самара, Old Samara) is a city neighborhood of the Samarskyi District (urban district) of the Dnipro Municipality in southern Ukraine. It is located at the mouth of Samara River on its right bank where the river enters Dnieper.

History

The exact year of foundation of the city is still researched. Archeologic founds suggest that the town existed in 1524.[1] In 2011 The Ukrainian Week stated that archaeologists of the Dnipro National University discovered artifacts dated around 1520s.[2]

The earliest mentioning of Samar as a settlement in Lower Dnieper region is a royal edict of the King of Poland Stephen Báthory in 1576. It was a river port administrated by local Cossacks.

In 1668 at its location was built Novobohorodytska (Bohorodytska) Fortress with an area of 70hectare.[3] [1] It is the only large settlement of the Zaporozhian Cossacks on Ukraine's steppes which survived without significant destruction.[4] The remains the fortress occupy an area of almost 70 hectares.[4] According to scientists, the fortress did not appear out of nowhere: more than 1,700 years ago there was a settlement of an ancient tribe.[4] In 2001, by a resolution of the Government of Ukraine, the remains of the Novobohorodytska fortress was declared a historical monument of national importance.[4] [3]

References

  1. Dnipro: pages of the city's history. The first page is Cossack, dnipro.libr.dp.ua (21 September 2017)
  2. Iryna Reva, Oleh Rypan. The Old Samar (Cтара Cамар). The Ukrainian Week. 18 July 2011
  3. Yulia Ratsybarska. "Dnipro is a city of three fortresses", not a "City of Sovok" («Дніпро – місто трьох фортець», а не «місто совка»). Radio Liberty. 28 September 2016
  4. "Dnipro is a city of three fortresses", not "a city of scoops". Radio Free Europe (28 September 2016)

External links