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Coordinates: 48°40′N 29°15′E / 48.667°N 29.250°E / 48.667; 29.250
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'''Ladyzhyn''' ({{Lang-uk|Ладижин}}, {{Lang-pl|Ładyżyn}}) is a city in [[Vinnytsia Oblast]], [[Ukraine]]. Population is 22,219 ([[2001]]).
{{short description|City in Vinnytsia Oblast, Ukraine}}
{{Infobox settlement
| official_name = Ladyzhyn
| native_name = Ладижин
| image_skyline = File:Ладижин у ночі.jpg
| imagesize =
| image_caption = Skyline of Ladyzhyn
| image_flag = File:Flag of Ladyzhyn.svg
| image_shield = File:Coat of arms of Ladyzhyn.svg
| nickname =
| motto =
| image_map =
| mapsize =
| map_caption =
| subdivision_type = [[List of sovereign states|Country]]
| subdivision_name = {{flag|Ukraine}}
| subdivision_type1 = [[Oblasts of Ukraine|Oblast]]
| subdivision_name1 = [[Vinnytsia Oblast]]
| subdivision_type2 = [[Raions of Ukraine|Raion]]
| subdivision_name2 = [[Haisyn Raion]]
| subdivision_type3 = [[Hromada]]
| subdivision_name3 = [[Ladyzhyn urban hromada]]
| established_title = First mention
| established_date = 1260
| established_title1 =
| established_date1 =
| leader_title = [[Mayor]]
| leader_name =
| area_magnitude =
| area_total_km2 = 9
| area_land_km2 =
| area_water_km2 =
| population_as_of = 2022
| population_note = <ref name="ua2022estimate"/>
| population_total = 22459
| population_metro =
| population_density_km2 = auto
| elevation_min_m =
| elevation_max_m =
| postal_code_type = [[Postal code]]
| postal_code = 24320-24323
| area_code = +380-4343
| twin1 =
| twin1_country =
| website = https://ladrada.gov.ua/
| footnotes =
| coordinates = {{Coord|48|40|N|29|15|E|region:UA_type:city|display=title,inline}}
| pushpin_map = Ukraine Vinnytsia Oblast#Ukraine
| pushpin_label_position = <!-- the position of the pushpin label: left, right, top, bottom, none -->
| pushpin_map_caption =
| pushpin_mapsize =
}}
'''Ladyzhyn''' ({{Lang-uk|Ладижин}}, {{Lang-pl|Ładyżyn}}) is a city in [[Vinnytsia Oblast]], [[Ukraine]]. It is located on the [[Southern Bug]] at the confluence of the {{Ill|Silnytsia River|uk|Сільниця (річка)}} Its population was {{Ua-pop-est2022|22,459|.}}


== History ==
{{Vinnytsia Oblast}}
{{Quote box
| title = Historical affiliations
| quote = <poem>{{flagicon image|Alex K Grundwald flags 1410-03.svg}} [[Grand Duchy of Lithuania]] 1459–1569
{{flagicon image|Chorągiew królewska króla Zygmunta III Wazy.svg}} [[Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth]] 1569–1672
{{flag|Ottoman Empire}} 1672–1699
{{flagicon image|Royal Banner of Stanisław II of Poland.svg}} [[Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth]] 1699–1793
{{flag|Russian Empire}} 1793–1917
{{flag|Ukraine}} [[Ukrainian People's Republic]] and [[Ukrainian State]] 1917–1920
{{flagicon image|Flag of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (1919–1929).svg}} [[Soviet Ukraine]] 1920–1922
{{flag|Soviet Union|1936}} 1922–1941
{{flag|Kingdom of Romania}} 1941–1944
{{flag|Soviet Union}} 1944–1991
{{flag|Ukraine}} 1991–present</poem>
| align = left
| width = 25em
| fontsize = 85%
| bgcolor = #ff9999
}}


=== Pre-Russian rule ===
{{Coord|48|40|N|29|15|E|region:UA_type:city|display=title}}
The land Ladyzhyn is located on has been inhabited for at least 1,700 years. Excavations in the nearby villages of {{ill|Kharpachka|uk|Харпачка}} and {{ill|Kysliak, Haisyn Raion|lt=Kysliak|uk|Кисляк (Гайсинський район)}} have revealed gold coins dated to the 3rd Century during the reign of Roman emperor [[Severus Alexander]].


In the 10th century, Prince [[Vladimir the Great|Volodymyr the Great]] built fortresses in Ladyzhyn along the river to protect his possessions from the nomadic peoples, such as the [[Khazars]], [[Pechenegs]], and [[Polovtsians]]. 13th-century Prince [[Daniel of Galicia]] built more fortifications upon the rivers in the region.
[[Category:Cities in Vinnytsia Oblast]]


The [[Grand Duchy of Lithuania]] expanded its territory in the 14th century by annexing principalities in Ukraine, opposed to the [[Tatars|Tatar's]] subjugation of the area. In 1363, Prince [[Olgerd]], with support of Polish and [[Ruthenia]]n troops, defeated the Tatar horde, and the cities of Ladyzhyn and [[Bratslav]] were burned.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Провільська |first=Марія |title=Ладижин древній та сучасний |publisher=Незалежна інформаційна компанія "Нове місто" |year=2001 |location=Ладижин |pages=18 |language=uk}}</ref>


In the 16th century, Ladyzhyn was a wooden fortress city of the [[Bratslav Voivodeship]], surrounded by a thirty-meter dirt [[Rampart (fortification)|rampart]]. The remains of the rampart are still preserved in the city center.
{{Vinnytsia-geo-stub}}


In 1670, Ladyzhyn was under control of [[Hetman]] [[Petro Doroshenko]], whose administration was not kind to Poles. In response, [[John III Sobieski|Jan Sobieski]] sent an army in 1671 and occupied the city. In 1672, Petro Doroshenko, supported by Turkish troops, recaptured the city, but in 1673, Left-Bank Hetman [[Ivan Samoylovych]] took the city from him, and left 5,000 Cossacks to guard the fortress. Doroshenko again asked Turks to help him recapture the city, and Sultan [[Mehmed IV]] sent a detachment with his son Oslam Giray. Colonel Murashko defeated the Turks and captured Oslam, and executed his troops.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Mušketyk |first=Jurij Mychajlovyč |title=Jasa. T. 1: Razdily 1 – 17 |publisher=Folio |year=2012 |isbn=978-966-03-6095-2 |series=Škilʹna biblioteka Ukraïnsʹkoï ta svitovoï literatury |location=Charkiv |pages=416 |language=uk}}</ref>
[[de:Ladyschyn]]

[[fa:لادیژین]]
4 years later, Mehmed re-entered the city with an army of 70,000 troops to avenge his son's death. Over the course of two weeks, Murashko fended off 11 attacks, but was wounded and taken prisoner. By sultan's order, the residents of Ladyzhyn were slaughtered, and the city was razed.
[[fr:Ladyjyn]]

[[ja:ラディージン]]
=== Russian Empire ===
[[pl:Ładyżyn]]
With the growing immigration to [[Podolia]], which began in the early eighteenth century, the settlement of Ladyzhyn, stretching across the Silnytsia River, began. By 1775, the village had 98 households. Up until 1830, the village was owned by Alexander Sabanskyi, and then it was transferred to military control. In 1844, the village was declared a city.
[[crh:Ladıjın]]

[[ro:Ladîjîn]]
By the end of the 19th century, Ladyzhyn would eventually lose its significance to the military, but economic growth occurred when multiple factories were opened, including five textile factories, three brick factories, a tannery, and a tiling factory. Following the economic success of the factories, a bank, a post office, a telegraph office, a magistrate's chamber, and four inns were opened. A ferry was also established to carry people across the Southern Bug, along with a 50-bed hospital and a pharmacy.
[[ru:Ладыжин]]

[[uk:Ладижин]]
In 1859, a parochial school was opened, which would be changed into a ministerial school. In 1876, a distillery was opened in the city. In 1897, a school for girls was opened.

The distillery was closed in 1899 following the death of its Jewish owner, Volko Skliarevskyi, and was rented out to various businesses and governments until it was destroyed, being rebuilt in 1926 by the [[Soviet government]].

=== Civil war and USSR ===
In May 1919, the city was liberated from Soviet rule by the troops of Ataman {{Ill|Ananii Volynets|uk|Волинець Ананій Гаврилович}}. A Ukrainian administration was established in the city. After the defeat of the Ukrainian troops, Soviet rule was established in July 1919, marking an end to the [[Ukrainian People's Republic]]'s control.

From 1923 to 1931, the city was the administrative center of the Ladyzhyn Raion. Over the next two years, at least 20 people in the city died during the [[Holodomor]].<ref>Ladyzhyn. Geographic information system of places "Holodomor of 1932–1933 in Ukraine". Ukrainian Institute of National Memory.</ref>

Ladyzhyn was [[Operation Barbarossa|occupied by Nazi troops]] during the [[Second World War]], and the city wear almost entirely destroyed. The troops of the 2nd Ukrainian Front liberated the city in 1944.

In 1954, the Zhdanov and Lenin collective farms in the city were merged to form the Rossiya collective. In Spring of 1968, construction began on one of the largest power plants in the country at the time. The {{Ill|Ladyzhyn TPP|uk|Ладижинська ТЕС}} was finally established in 1970, the same year that a concrete plant was opened in the town.

By a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian SSR of March 21, 1973, Ladyzhyn, in the [[Trostianets Raion, Vinnytsia Oblast|Trostianets Raion]], was classified as a city under district authority.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Відомості Верховної Ради Української PCP № 14 |year=1973 |location=Vinnytsia |pages=115 |language=uk}}</ref>

=== Post-Soviet era ===
[[File:Ладижин.jpg|thumb|Aerial photo of Ladyzhyn]]
In 2000, Ladyzhyn was declared a city of regional significance.

In 2010, [[Myronivsky Hliboproduct]] started construction of the Vinnytsia Broiler poultry farm with a capacity of 400,000 tons of chicken per year and the Ladyzhyn feed mill with a total cost of $750 million, which was scheduled to be completed in 2013–2014. Ladyzhyn was chosen because of the significant amount of agricultural land MHP leases in the area and its proximity to the Ladyzhyn TTP plant, which provides sufficient power for such a project.

In modern times, the city is home to attractions such as the {{Ill|Korostovets Nature Reserve|uk|Коростовецький заказник}}, {{Ill|Zelenoklyniv Rapids|uk|Зеленоклинівські пороги}}, and {{Ill|Ladyzhyn Grove|uk|Ладижинський гай}},

== Jewish community ==
[[Bohdan Khmelnytsky]] and Colonel {{Ill|Ivan Hanzha|uk|Іван Ганжа}} invaded the city during the [[Khmelnytsky Uprising]] of 1648. The [[Cossacks|Cossack]] troops occupied the area, and massacred the [[Poles in Ukraine|Polish]] population. The Cossacks then rounded up the Jews, tied them up, and demanded that they convert to [[Russian Orthodoxy|Orthodoxy]]. Those who refused were killed in mass shootings.

== Transportation ==
A bus service regularly carries passengers to the Oblast capital, Vinnytsia, and to other nearby villages and towns. There are also regular bus routes to [[Kyiv]] and [[Odesa]].

Ladyzhyn is also home to a railway station on the [[Vapniarka]] {{ill|Ziatkivtsi|uk|Зятківці (село)}} Khrystynivka line. The station has passenger trains that travel to [[Lviv]] and [[Cherkasy]], as well as to the Vapniarka Khrystynivka [[Uman]] line. There are also trains travelling to [[Chernivtsi]], [[Uzhhorod]], [[Kryvyi Rih]], [[Zaporizhzhia]], [[Izmail]], and [[Kovel]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Розклад руху пасажирських поїздів: Розклад по станції Ладижин (Україна) |url=http://www.uz.gov.ua/passengers/timetables/?station=23427&by_station=1&ordrul=5 |url-status=deviated |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140202142444/http://www.uz.gov.ua/passengers/timetables/?station=23427&by_station=1&ordrul=5 |archive-date=2014-02-02 |access-date=10 Jul 2023 |website=UZ GOV |language=uk}}</ref>

== Religion ==
In 1904, a brick [[Byzantine style|Byzantine-style]] Orthodox church with a dome and bell tower was built using church funds. It was consecrated on 4 November 1909 in honor of the icon of [[Our Lady of Kazan]].

On April 24, 1998, on the feast of the [[Life-giving Spring]] Icon, the construction of the church in honor of [[Saint George|St. George the Victorious]] began.

In 1999, in honor of the [[Annunciation of the Mother of God|Annunciation of the Mother]], a chapel was consecrated on August 28, a part of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in the town. In 2011, the Catholic community resumed its activities and returned the {{Ill|Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary (Ladyzhyn)|uk|Костел Успіння Пресвятої Богородиці (Ладижин)}} to the town. In addition to churches, there are also communities of [[Adventism|Adventists]], [[Baptists]], [[Evangelicalism|Evangelicals]], and other minor denominations of Christianity in Ladyzhyn.

In modern times, although the town once had a large population of Jews, is now nearly entirely Eastern Orthodox with a minority of Catholics.

==Gallery==
<gallery>
File:Ladyzhyn 02.jpg|Main street of Ladyzhyn
File:Ладижинська міська рада. Площа..jpg|City hall
File:Ladyzhin Power Factory 1 Ukraine.JPG|Ladyzhyn power plant
File:Ладижинське водосховище. Гребля1.jpg|Dam on the [[Southern Bug]]
</gallery>

==References==
{{Reflist}}

==External links==
{{Commonscatinline}}
* [http://www.yadvashem.org/untoldstories/database/index.asp?cid=745 The murder of the Jews of Ladyzhyn] during [[World War II]], at [[Yad Vashem]] website.
{{Haisyn Raion}}
{{Vinnytsia Oblast}}
{{Authority control}}

[[Category:Cities in Vinnytsia Oblast]]
[[Category:Podolia Governorate]]
[[Category:Cities of regional significance in Ukraine]]
[[Category:Holocaust locations in Ukraine]]
[[Category:Populated places on the Southern Bug]]

{{Vinnytsia-geo-stub}}

Revision as of 11:59, 30 April 2024

Ladyzhyn
Ладижин
Skyline of Ladyzhyn
Skyline of Ladyzhyn
Flag of Ladyzhyn
Coat of arms of Ladyzhyn
Ladyzhyn is located in Vinnytsia Oblast
Ladyzhyn
Ladyzhyn
Ladyzhyn is located in Ukraine
Ladyzhyn
Ladyzhyn
Coordinates: 48°40′N 29°15′E / 48.667°N 29.250°E / 48.667; 29.250
Country Ukraine
OblastVinnytsia Oblast
RaionHaisyn Raion
HromadaLadyzhyn urban hromada
First mention1260
Area
 • Total9 km2 (3 sq mi)
Population
 (2022)
 • Total22,459
 • Density2,500/km2 (6,500/sq mi)
 [1]
Postal code
24320-24323
Area code+380-4343
Websitehttps://ladrada.gov.ua/

Ladyzhyn (Ukrainian: Ладижин, Polish: Ładyżyn) is a city in Vinnytsia Oblast, Ukraine. It is located on the Southern Bug at the confluence of the Silnytsia River [uk] Its population was 22,459 (2022 estimate).[1]

History

Historical affiliations

Grand Duchy of Lithuania 1459–1569
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth 1569–1672
 Ottoman Empire 1672–1699
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth 1699–1793
 Russian Empire 1793–1917
 Ukraine Ukrainian People's Republic and Ukrainian State 1917–1920
Soviet Ukraine 1920–1922
 Soviet Union 1922–1941
 Kingdom of Romania 1941–1944
 Soviet Union 1944–1991
 Ukraine 1991–present

Pre-Russian rule

The land Ladyzhyn is located on has been inhabited for at least 1,700 years. Excavations in the nearby villages of Kharpachka [uk] and Kysliak [uk] have revealed gold coins dated to the 3rd Century during the reign of Roman emperor Severus Alexander.

In the 10th century, Prince Volodymyr the Great built fortresses in Ladyzhyn along the river to protect his possessions from the nomadic peoples, such as the Khazars, Pechenegs, and Polovtsians. 13th-century Prince Daniel of Galicia built more fortifications upon the rivers in the region.

The Grand Duchy of Lithuania expanded its territory in the 14th century by annexing principalities in Ukraine, opposed to the Tatar's subjugation of the area. In 1363, Prince Olgerd, with support of Polish and Ruthenian troops, defeated the Tatar horde, and the cities of Ladyzhyn and Bratslav were burned.[2]

In the 16th century, Ladyzhyn was a wooden fortress city of the Bratslav Voivodeship, surrounded by a thirty-meter dirt rampart. The remains of the rampart are still preserved in the city center.

In 1670, Ladyzhyn was under control of Hetman Petro Doroshenko, whose administration was not kind to Poles. In response, Jan Sobieski sent an army in 1671 and occupied the city. In 1672, Petro Doroshenko, supported by Turkish troops, recaptured the city, but in 1673, Left-Bank Hetman Ivan Samoylovych took the city from him, and left 5,000 Cossacks to guard the fortress. Doroshenko again asked Turks to help him recapture the city, and Sultan Mehmed IV sent a detachment with his son Oslam Giray. Colonel Murashko defeated the Turks and captured Oslam, and executed his troops.[3]

4 years later, Mehmed re-entered the city with an army of 70,000 troops to avenge his son's death. Over the course of two weeks, Murashko fended off 11 attacks, but was wounded and taken prisoner. By sultan's order, the residents of Ladyzhyn were slaughtered, and the city was razed.

Russian Empire

With the growing immigration to Podolia, which began in the early eighteenth century, the settlement of Ladyzhyn, stretching across the Silnytsia River, began. By 1775, the village had 98 households. Up until 1830, the village was owned by Alexander Sabanskyi, and then it was transferred to military control. In 1844, the village was declared a city.

By the end of the 19th century, Ladyzhyn would eventually lose its significance to the military, but economic growth occurred when multiple factories were opened, including five textile factories, three brick factories, a tannery, and a tiling factory. Following the economic success of the factories, a bank, a post office, a telegraph office, a magistrate's chamber, and four inns were opened. A ferry was also established to carry people across the Southern Bug, along with a 50-bed hospital and a pharmacy.

In 1859, a parochial school was opened, which would be changed into a ministerial school. In 1876, a distillery was opened in the city. In 1897, a school for girls was opened.

The distillery was closed in 1899 following the death of its Jewish owner, Volko Skliarevskyi, and was rented out to various businesses and governments until it was destroyed, being rebuilt in 1926 by the Soviet government.

Civil war and USSR

In May 1919, the city was liberated from Soviet rule by the troops of Ataman Ananii Volynets [uk]. A Ukrainian administration was established in the city. After the defeat of the Ukrainian troops, Soviet rule was established in July 1919, marking an end to the Ukrainian People's Republic's control.

From 1923 to 1931, the city was the administrative center of the Ladyzhyn Raion. Over the next two years, at least 20 people in the city died during the Holodomor.[4]

Ladyzhyn was occupied by Nazi troops during the Second World War, and the city wear almost entirely destroyed. The troops of the 2nd Ukrainian Front liberated the city in 1944.

In 1954, the Zhdanov and Lenin collective farms in the city were merged to form the Rossiya collective. In Spring of 1968, construction began on one of the largest power plants in the country at the time. The Ladyzhyn TPP [uk] was finally established in 1970, the same year that a concrete plant was opened in the town.

By a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian SSR of March 21, 1973, Ladyzhyn, in the Trostianets Raion, was classified as a city under district authority.[5]

Post-Soviet era

Aerial photo of Ladyzhyn

In 2000, Ladyzhyn was declared a city of regional significance.

In 2010, Myronivsky Hliboproduct started construction of the Vinnytsia Broiler poultry farm with a capacity of 400,000 tons of chicken per year and the Ladyzhyn feed mill with a total cost of $750 million, which was scheduled to be completed in 2013–2014. Ladyzhyn was chosen because of the significant amount of agricultural land MHP leases in the area and its proximity to the Ladyzhyn TTP plant, which provides sufficient power for such a project.

In modern times, the city is home to attractions such as the Korostovets Nature Reserve [uk], Zelenoklyniv Rapids [uk], and Ladyzhyn Grove [uk],

Jewish community

Bohdan Khmelnytsky and Colonel Ivan Hanzha [uk] invaded the city during the Khmelnytsky Uprising of 1648. The Cossack troops occupied the area, and massacred the Polish population. The Cossacks then rounded up the Jews, tied them up, and demanded that they convert to Orthodoxy. Those who refused were killed in mass shootings.

Transportation

A bus service regularly carries passengers to the Oblast capital, Vinnytsia, and to other nearby villages and towns. There are also regular bus routes to Kyiv and Odesa.

Ladyzhyn is also home to a railway station on the Vapniarka Ziatkivtsi [uk] Khrystynivka line. The station has passenger trains that travel to Lviv and Cherkasy, as well as to the Vapniarka Khrystynivka Uman line. There are also trains travelling to Chernivtsi, Uzhhorod, Kryvyi Rih, Zaporizhzhia, Izmail, and Kovel.[6]

Religion

In 1904, a brick Byzantine-style Orthodox church with a dome and bell tower was built using church funds. It was consecrated on 4 November 1909 in honor of the icon of Our Lady of Kazan.

On April 24, 1998, on the feast of the Life-giving Spring Icon, the construction of the church in honor of St. George the Victorious began.

In 1999, in honor of the Annunciation of the Mother, a chapel was consecrated on August 28, a part of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in the town. In 2011, the Catholic community resumed its activities and returned the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary (Ladyzhyn) [uk] to the town. In addition to churches, there are also communities of Adventists, Baptists, Evangelicals, and other minor denominations of Christianity in Ladyzhyn.

In modern times, although the town once had a large population of Jews, is now nearly entirely Eastern Orthodox with a minority of Catholics.

References

  1. ^ a b Чисельність наявного населення України на 1 січня 2022 [Number of Present Population of Ukraine, as of January 1, 2022] (PDF) (in Ukrainian and English). Kyiv: State Statistics Service of Ukraine. Archived (PDF) from the original on 4 July 2022.
  2. ^ Провільська, Марія (2001). Ладижин древній та сучасний (in Ukrainian). Ладижин: Незалежна інформаційна компанія "Нове місто". p. 18.
  3. ^ Mušketyk, Jurij Mychajlovyč (2012). Jasa. T. 1: Razdily 1 – 17. Škilʹna biblioteka Ukraïnsʹkoï ta svitovoï literatury (in Ukrainian). Charkiv: Folio. p. 416. ISBN 978-966-03-6095-2.
  4. ^ Ladyzhyn. Geographic information system of places "Holodomor of 1932–1933 in Ukraine". Ukrainian Institute of National Memory.
  5. ^ Відомості Верховної Ради Української PCP № 14 (in Ukrainian). Vinnytsia. 1973. p. 115.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. ^ "Розклад руху пасажирських поїздів: Розклад по станції Ладижин (Україна)". UZ GOV (in Ukrainian). Archived from the original on 2014-02-02. Retrieved 10 Jul 2023.

Media related to Ladyzhyn at Wikimedia Commons