Zarichchia, Nadvirna Raion, Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast Explained

Official Name:Zarichchia
Native Name:Заріччя
Native Name Lang:uk
Other Name:Polish: Zarzecze nad Prutem
German: Saritschtschja
Settlement Type:Village
Established Title:Founded
Established Date:early 15th century
Population Total:3841
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Oblast (province)
Subdivision Type2:Raion (district)
Subdivision Name2:Nadvirna Raion
Subdivision Type3:Hromada (municipality)
Subdivision Name3:Deliatyn settlement hromada
Coordinates:48.5164°N 24.6442°W
Pushpin Map:Ukraine Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast#Ukraine

Zarichchia (Ukrainian: Зарі́ччя; German: Saritschtschja; Polish: Zarzecze nad Prutem; Yiddish: זאריטש|translit=Zaritsh) is a village in Nadvirna Raion of Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast of Ukraine. It belongs to Deliatyn settlement hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine.[1]

Geography

The village is located in the Pokuttia foothills at a distance of 14 km from the city of Nadvirna, 5 km from the . In the east, Zarichchia is bordered by the village of Bili Oslavy, and in the south by the mountains Malyvo (848 m) and Yavorova (1001 m).

The village is located on a plain 8 km long and 1 to 4 km wide.

The Ivano-Frankivsk — Yabluniv highway passes through the village.

The village stretched for 4 km along the right bank of the Prut River. The (2 m) is located on the Yasynovets stream, the right tributary of the Prut.

History

Bronze Age burials have been discovered in the territory of Zarichchia.

It is mentioned on 4 March 1463 in the books of the Galician court.[2] The village is mentioned in historical sources of the second half of the XVIII century.

Like all other Pokuttia villages, Zarzecze suffered from Tatar raids. In 1645-1650, the Delatyn land suffered from the war between the Bełżecki brothers.

The interwar period

In the interwar period, there was a consumer cooperative in Zarzecze nad Prutem, which was a branch of the Delatyn cooperative. At that time, this cooperative branch had its own mill in the village.

There was a wooden parish church in Zarzecze nad Prutem, which was built in 1909, but burned down in 1916. So from that time until the mid-30s of the 20th century, there was a theological chapel in the village, which was consecrated in 1922. At that time, there were four roadside chapels in Zarzecze nad Prutem. In the 1930s, Fr. wing Antonii Dmytrash, city dean, councilor of the Episcopal Consistory.[3]

In the 1930s, a systematic 4-grade Utraquist school worked in Zarzecze nad Prutem.

Second World War

On 17 January 1940, was separated from, part of which was Zarzecze nad Prutem. On 13 November 1940, by decree of the Presidium of the Verkhovna Rada of the Ukrainian SSR, the Deliatyn Raion was liquidated, and the Zarichchia nad Prutom village council entered the from its composition.

After the beginning of the occupation of the Republic of Poland in 1941, the rural gmina of was created, which consisted of the abolished gmina of and parts of the (not abolished) gminas of and .

Starting in 1943, many Zarichchians joined the ranks of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) to fight against both the Wehrmacht and the Red Army.In August 1943, the remnants of Sydir Kovpak's partisan unit, after being defeated by the SS detachment in Deliatyn, passed through the Zarichchia in the direction of the village of Bili Oslavy. The apartment of the inhabitant of the village A. M. Kovalchuk housed the headquarters of the connection. A fierce battle broke out outside the village in the Dilok tract, in which Major General Semyon Rudnev, the union's commissioner, was killed. Residents of the village D. V. Vatsyk, M. Y. Kostytskyi, M. S. Humeniuk, I. Yu. Boicheniuk were the leaders of the Kovpakivtsi. During the passage of the front in the building of the village school was a hospital, here after a serious injury on 31 August 1944, died Hero of the Soviet Union, Lieutenant . On the outskirts of the village in the tract Dilok in honor of the 50th anniversary of Soviet rule and the 20th anniversary of the laid a .

On 17 February 1944, the criminal elements of the village killed the village foreman Mykhailo Stelmashchuk, who ran away for fear of punishment, and therefore on 28 February the Gestapo shot 24 innocent people.[4]

Soviet Era

After World War II, the village was collectivized. The kolhosp (and then the radhosp) "Deliatinskyi" had 4,419 hectares of land, mills and a sawmill. The production direction was meat and dairy, there was also the cultivation of flax.

In 1962, due to the liquidation of the, Zarichchia became part of the Bohorodchany Raion,[5] but was transferred to the Nadvirna Raion.[6]

Independent Ukraine

In the period from 1989, Zarichchians took an active part in the national revival that spread throughout Ukraine. In December 1989, a branch of the Ukrainian Language Society was established. The symbolic grave of the heroes of Ukraine was restored. The people of Zaricha poured it in the old place — on the "Grave" and consecrated it in May 1990. A lot of work was done to perpetuate the memory of the OUN-UPA.

In October 1992, a cross was erected and consecrated on the site of the Kernychky UPA base-village, and a commemorative sign dedicated to the 50th anniversary of the UPA was erected near the school. One of the streets of the village is named after Pavlo Vatsik (Major "Prut").

In 2000, a new school building was built, which was mainly financed by Anna-Liuba Yavorska, a citizen of Canada, a native of Zarichchia.

On 17 August 2017, Zarichchia together with Deliatyn and the villages of and formed the Delyatyn settlement community.[7]

On 21 January 2022, a sports facility was opened in Zarichchia with the participation of the Governor of Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast Svitlana Onyshchuk, the head of the Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast Council Oleksandr Sych, People's Deputy of Ukraine Vasyl Virastiuk, representatives of the community and the clergy.[8] [9]

Russo-Ukrainian War

After the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, on 28 April 2022, the executive committee of the Deliatyn settlement council decided to dismantle monuments-busts and memorial signs on the territory of the hromada, including the bust of Rudnev in Zarichchia.[10] On 6 May 2022, the bust of Rudnev was dismantled near the building of the Zarichchia Starostyn district.[11] [12] Semyon Rudnev Street was also renamed to Stepan Bandera Street.[13]

On 18 December 2022, in the area of the village of Klishchiivka, Bakhmut Raion, Donetsk Oblast, a fiance from Zarichchia Liubomyr Zhovnirovych died.[14] The funeral took place on Christmas — 25 December symbolically, after the burial, two rainbows appeared in the sky at once, interrupting the light rain.[15]

Culture

The village has a lyceum named after Volodymyr Yavorskyi, a post office, a first-aid post, a house of culture, and a library. The village is fully gasified, there is street lighting. The Orthodox Church of Ukraine of the Holy Intercession, Father Mykhailo Kupchak, and the Greek Catholic Church, Father Mykhailo Smetaniuk, are registered in the village.

Demographics

As of 1 January 1939, the village had 3,920 inhabitants, including 3,790 Ukrainian Greek Catholics, 80 Poles, and 50 Jews.[16]

According to the 2001 census, the population of Zarichchia was 3,997 people.

Notable people

References

  1. Web site: Делятинская громада . Портал об'єднаних громад України . ru.
  2. Web site: Polona. 2020-09-01. polona.pl.
  3. Web site: Моє Заріччя над Прутом :: М. Домашевський. Історія села Заріччя. zarichchya.org.ua. 2023-01-16.
  4. Web site: Василь Яшан "Під брунатним чоботом". 2020-09-01. kalusz.io.ua.
  5. Decree of the Presidium of the Verkhovna Rada of the Ukrainian SSR dated 30 December 1962 "On consolidation of rural areas of the Ukrainian SSR"
  6. Deliatin // Ukrainian Soviet Encyclopedia. volume 3. Kyiv, "Ukrainian Soviet Encyclopedia", 1980. p. 297
  7. Web site: Deliatyn hromada - welcome to the official website . 2023-01-23 . delyatynska-gromada.gov.ua.
  8. Web site: A universal sports hall worth almost 20 million hryvnias was opened in Zarichchia - Nadvirna Raion State Administration . 2023-01-23 . nadrda.gov.ua . uk-UA.
  9. Web site: It took ten years to build: a modern gym was opened in the village of Zarichchi in Deliatynshchyna (PHOTO) . 2023-01-23 . Агенція новин Фіртка.
  10. Web site: "Even in the west of Ukraine there are still monuments to Chapaev and Vatutin", - Vadym Pozdniakov . 2023-01-23 . localhistory.org.ua . uk.
  11. Web site: 2022-05-08 . The busts of Rudnev and Pushkin were dismantled in Prykarpattia . 2023-01-23 . West Observer . en-US.
  12. Web site: Busts of Pushkin and Commissar Rudnev were dismantled in Prykarpattia . 2023-01-23 . www.ukrinform.ua . uk.
  13. Web site: 2022-05-07 . In the Deliatyn hromada, they decided to dismantle the busts of Rudnev and Pushkin . 2023-01-23 . Курс.
  14. Web site: The Deliatyn hromadawas once again shaken by the sad news about the tragic death of a soldier, a native of Zarichchia. . 2023-01-23 . delyatynska-gromada.gov.ua . uk.
  15. Web site: 25 December in the village Zarichchia buried the fallen Hero of the serviceman Liubomyr Zhovnirovich. . 2023-01-23 . delyatynska-gromada.gov.ua . uk.
  16. Кубійович В. Етнічні групи південнозахідної України (Галичини) на 1.1.1939. — Вісбаден, 1983. — с. 53.

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