Puneet Varma (Editor)

Kopychyntsi

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Country
  
Ukraine

Raion
  
Husiatyn Raion

Magdeburg Rights
  
1564

Area
  
35.4 km²

Oblast
  
Ternopil Oblast

First mention
  
1443

Time zone
  
EET (UTC+2)

Local time
  
Friday 11:04 AM

Kopychyntsi

Weather
  
2°C, Wind W at 6 km/h, 82% Humidity

Kopychyntsi (Ukrainian: Копичинці, Polish: Kopyczyńce) is a small city in Husiatyn Raion, Ternopil Oblast, Ukraine. It has a population of 7,036 (census 2001). It is the birthplace of Ukrainian chess grandmaster Vassily Ivanchuk, Israel Jacob Kligler, who led the effort of eradicating malaria in Mandatory Palestine, and Israeli politician Pinhas Lavon.

Contents

Map of Kopychyntsi, Ternopil Oblast, Ukraine

History

The city was first mentioned in 1340 as a village in the povit of Terebovlia. With time it grew to become a town within the Land of Halicz, itself part of Podole Voivodeship of Poland and then the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. It was granted a city charter in 1564. In late 1648, during the Khmelnytsky Uprising, a combined Cossack and Tartar army under Asand Demko seized the town. However, following the Battle of Kopychyntsi of May 12, 1651, in which the enemy forces were defeated by hetman Marcin Kalinowski, it returned to Poland.

In the effect of the Treaty of Buchach of 1672 the town was ceded to Ottoman Empire, but it returned to Poland after the Treaty of Karlowitz of 1699. Following the Partitions of Poland it became part of Austrian Empire and was then seized by Napoleon Bonaparte who gave it to Russian Empire in the Treaty of Tilsit of 1807. Russian control however ended with the Congress of Vienna which awarded the area back to Austria. It shared the history of the surrounding lands of the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria for the rest of 19th century.

Following World War I the area was disputed between Poland and the West Ukrainian People's Republic (ZUNR) in what became known as the Polish-Ukrainian War. In June 1919, during the Chortkiv offensive, the 1st Galician Corps of the ZUNR under Osyp Mykytka seized the town, but it was retaken by Polish forces under Józef Haller the following month. Following the Treaty of Riga the town was officially restored to Poland. It was made a seat of a separate powiat within Tarnopol Voivodeship and a garrison town of a Border Protection Corps battalion Kopyczyńce.

Following the September Campaign of 1939 and the outbreak of World War II, the town was occupied first by the Soviet Union and then Nazi Germany. According to the Soviet Extraordinary Commission, approximately 8,000 Jews were killed in Kopychyntsi during the war. After the war it was annexed by the USSR, and since 1991 is part of independent Ukraine.

Houses of worship

  • Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross and bell tower (1630), located at Kutets
  • Church of St. Nicholas on the Mount (1900), architect Vasyl Nahirny
  • Roman Catholic Church of the Assumption of Mary (1802) in the center of the town
  • Synagogue
  • Attractions

  • People's House, Kopychyntsi
  • Park near the pool, founded in the XVIII century;
  • Castle (lost).
  • People from Kopychyntsi

  • Vasyl' Ivanchuk, Ukrainian chess grandmaster
  • Israel Jacob Kligler, Israeli microbiologist
  • Mefodiy (Kudriakov)
  • Adam Obrubański, Polish actor
  • Roman Hubczenko, Polish actor
  • Franciszek Slawski, Polish linguist
  • Pinhas Lavon, Israeli politician best known for the Lavon Affair
  • People associated with Kopychyntsi

  • Adam Mikołaj Sieniawski
  • References

    Kopychyntsi Wikipedia