Burshtyn
Burshtyn (Ukrainian: Буршти́н) is a city located in Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast, Ukraine. Its population is 13,000.
It was developed significantly during the Soviet Union period due to Burshtyn Coal Power Station. The city has an old Roman Catholic Church in the center of the city.
History
The first written mention of the settlement dates back to 1554 (or in 1436 according to other sources).
In the second half of the 16th century the town belonged to the Polish nobleman Skarbek. In October 1629, a famous battle took place near the town, in which the registered Cossacks and the Polish army under the command of Stefan Khmeletsky defeated the Tatar. The attackers were driven further, in particular, to Monastyrysk, where their remains were again destroyed.[1]
From 1630 the owner of Burshtyn was the magnate Yablonovsky. During the Middle Ages, the city was destroyed by raids by Tatars and Turks, in particular during the Polish-Turkish wars of the XVII century (1629, 1675).
Burshtyn Media
- Бурштин (9).JPG
Jewish cemetery in Burshtyn, western Ukraine.
- Burshtyn railway station.JPG
Залізнична станція "Бурштин"
- Україна Iвано-Франкiвська обл. мiсто Бурштин.jpg
All Saints and Saint Josaphat Kuntsevych Church
Burshtyn in 1837. Engraving Karel Auer
- Футбольний м'яч біля спорткомплексу в Бурштині.jpg
Sculpture of a soccer ball near the sports complex
- Каплиця-усипальниця Скарбеків-Яблоновських, Бурштин.jpg
The tomb-chapel of the Skarbeks and Yablonovskys (1813)
- UA-1810.jpg
Ninth issue of standard postage stamps
References
- ↑ Рудницький С. Українські козаки // Коли земля стогнала / упорядник, автор передмови В. Щербак. — К.: Наукова думка, 1995. — С. 259—260. — ISBN 5-319-01072-9.