Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Places inhabited by Rusyns

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Places inhabited by Rusyns

The contemporary administrative entities roughly corresponding the traditional territory of settlement of the Rusyns. Following areas have been included which still are or up to the World War II were inhabited by each of the Rusyn sub-ethnicities mentioned below:

Dolinyans:

  • Ukraine: Zakarpattia Oblast excluding Rakhivskyi Raion, see Hutsuls;
  • Boykos:

  • Poland: Subcarpathian Voivodship: Bieszczady County, Lesko County; also see the Wikipedia article Operation Vistula;
  • Ukraine: Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast: Bohorodchanskyi Raion, Bolekhiv City, Dolynskyi Raion, Rozhniativskyi Raion; Lviv Oblast: Starosambirskyi Raion, Skolivskyi Raion, Turkivskyi Raion;
  • Hutsuls:

  • Romania: Maramureş County, Suceava County;
  • Ukraine: Chernivtsi Oblast: Hlybotskyi Raion, Putylskyi Raion, Storozhynetskyi Raion, Vyzhnytskyi Raion; Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast: Kosivskyi Raion, Nadvirnianskyi Raion, Verkhovynskyi Raion, Yaremche City; Zakarpattia Oblast: Rakhivskyi Raion;
  • Lemkos:

  • Poland: Lesser Poland Voivodeship: Gorlice County, Nowy Sącz County, Nowy Targ County, Tatra County; Subcarpathian Voivodship: Jasło County, Krosno County, Sanok County; also see the Wikipedia article Operation Vistula;
  • Slovakia: Košice Region: Michalovce District, Sobrance District, Trebišov District; Prešov Region: Bardejov District, Humenné District, Kežmarok District, Medzilaborce District, Poprad District, Snina District, Stará Ľubovňa District, Stropkov District, Svidník District; Žilina Region: Námestovo District, Tvrdošín District.
  • There are Pannonian Rusyns, too, in Serbia (most notably in Vojvodina), and in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Hungary.

    For the Rusyn diaspora see the Wikipedia articles Rusyns and Rusyn American. Also see the article Gorals for a group of related Carpathian microethnoses.

    References

    Places inhabited by Rusyns Wikipedia