Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Dobromyl

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Country
  
Ukraine

Raion
  
Staryi Sambir Raion

Area
  
4.97 km²

Population
  
4,457 (2013)

Oblast
  
Lviv Oblast

Time zone
  
EET (UTC+2)

Local time
  
Thursday 9:50 AM

Dobromyl wwwcsuncaeduboydtouringtour06imagesimgp38

Weather
  
8°C, Wind S at 10 km/h, 79% Humidity

Dobromyl (Ukrainian: Добромиль, Polish: Dobromil) is a city in Staryi Sambir Raion, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine. It is located at around 49°34′N 22°47′E, some 5 kilometers to the border with Poland. Population: 4,457 (2013 est.).

Map of Dobromyl', Lvivska, Ukraine

Dobromyl was first mentioned in 1374, as a settlement founded by the Herburt family, upon request of Polish prince Władysław Opolczyk. In 1566 it was granted Magdeburg rights by the King Sigismund I the Old. Eighteen years later, Stanislaw Herburt built a castle here, the town also had a printing shop, where in 1612 the Annales seu cronici incliti regni Poloniae (The Annals of Jan Długosz) were published. Until the Partitions of Poland (1772), Dobromil was part of Przemyśl Land, Ruthenian Voivodeship. In the course of time, the branch of the Herburt family which resided in the town changed its name into Dobromilski.

In 1772, Dobromil was annexed by the Habsburg Empire, and until 1918 belonged to Austrian Galicia. After World War I, the town returned to Poland, and in the Second Polish Republic, was the seat of a county in Lwów Voivodeship. In 1921 its population was 5386. Following the Nazi and Soviet Invasion of Poland (September 1939), Dobromil was transferred to the Soviet Union. In June 1941, Soviet NKVD murdered here hundreds of prisoners (see NKVD prisoner massacres).

Under German occupation, Dobromil was transferred to Przemyśl County, District of Kraków, General Government. Its Jewish minority perished in The Holocaust, and on August 8, 1944 the town was seized by the Red Army.

Currently, Dobromil belongs to Ukraine. The town has a local office of the Association of Polish Culture of the Lviv Land. Among famous people associated with Dobromil are:

  • Physician and major of the Polish Army, Stanislaw van der Coghen, murdered in the Katyn massacre,
  • Piotr Geisler, doctor and general of the Polish Army,
  • Tadeusz Stanislaw Grabowski, Polish historian and professor of the Jagiellonian University,
  • Kazimierz Wisniowski, brigade general of the Polish Army.
  • References

    Dobromyl Wikipedia