Leta i den här bloggen

söndag 25 januari 2026

SRTYI kaupunki ja joki

https://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/display.asp?linkpath=pages%5CS%5CT%5CStryiRiver.htm 

Stryi joki on Dnjestrin oikeanpuolinen sivuhaara. Stryi on 232 km pitkä ja yläjuoksua on provinsin eteläisessä osassa. Sen vesistöalue kattaa 3055 neliökilometria. Alkulähteet ovat Karpaateilla

Stryi River [Стрий; Stryj]. (Map: Stryi River.) A right-bank tributary of the Dnister River that flows for 232 km through southern Lviv oblast and drains a basin area of 3,055 sq km. The river originates in the High Beskyd and initially has a mountainous character. It is 30–50 m wide in its upper reaches and up to 150 m wide downstream. The river is fed by meltwater and has been known to flood. It is used for industrial and water-supply purposes. A hydroelectric station and water reservoir (200 million cu m) have been built on the waterway. Some major centers located along the river are TurkaStryi, and Zhydachiv.

High Beskyd [Високий Бескид; Vysokyi Beskyd]. (Map: Carpathian Mountains, Division.) Name of that part of the Beskyds—the outer flysch belt of the Ukrainian Carpathian Mountains—lying between the imaginary line joining Turka and Boryslav in the west and the Mizunka River valley in the east, and between the limits of the Carpathians in the north and the Middle-Carpathian Depression in the south.

The High Beskyd has an area of about 2,000 sq km and begins rising from an elevation of 300–400 m. It is lowest in its northern part—the highest peak there is Mount Tsukhovyi Dil (942 m)—where a banded structure has been created by longitudinal sandstone ridges and parallel valleys, wide depressions, and small hollows (Verkhnie Syniovydne and Mizunka) carved out of soft schists and clays. The rounded and uniform mountains there are quite densely populated (60 inhabitants per sq km) and deforested (24 percent of the land area is cultivated, 38 percent is pasture and hayfields, and only 35 percent is forest).

South of the longitudinal Stryi River valley the High Beskyd attains elevations of 1,100 m and up. There the highest peaks are Mount Parashka (1,271 m), Mount Zelemianka (1,267 m), and Magura Ridge (1,368 m) (see Magura mountains). Narrow and deep transverse valleys (such as the Opir, Sukil, and Mizunka river valleys), which intersect the longitudinal valleys, predominate. The mountain tops have a sharper definition and are often denuded. Forests consisting mostly of spruce still cover 70 percent of the area, and the population density is lower (30 inhabitants per sq km).

The High Beskyd has long been inhabited by the ethnographic group of the Boikos. (Until 1941 Poles and Jews each constituted 10 percent of the population.) The main occupations are crop cultivation (rye, potatoes, and oats) and animal husbandry, logging and woodworking industry, and, in the Boryslav region, petroleum extraction (see Petroleum industry). Cities (Boryslav, Bolekhiv) lie on the mountains’ periphery. In the interior the main centers are Skole (woodworking), Skhidnytsia (petroleum), Verkhnie Syniovydne (woodworking), and the resorts of the Opir Valley—Hrebeniv, Tukhlia, Slavske, and Zelemianka.

  • STRYIN KAUPUNKI. MITÄ TAPAHTUI JUUTALAISELLE VÄESTÖLLE?

https://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/display.asp?linkpath=pages%5CS%5CT%5CStryi.htm

https://www.holocausthistoricalsociety.org.uk/contents/ghettoss-z/stryj.html

ENTÄ STRYI-joen alkulähteiden juutalaisväestö? 

  • MATKIV,,(LUKIV nyk) MACIEJOW . 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matkiv

https://myshtetl.org/volyn/lukiv_matseiv.html

  • SKOLE- kaupunki LVIVIN provinssissa STRYI joen varrella.  https://grokipedia.com/page/skole_urban_hromada
  • Jewish history

    Skole was the site of many horrendous atrocities against the Jewish people living there. Some local residents such as married couple Mykhailo Svystun and Polaho Svystun who saved the lives of a Jewish friend and his family.[6]

    Mykhailo and Polaho Svystun

    Mykhailo and Polaho Svystun were farmers in Skole during the German occupation. They have been recognised as Righteous Gentiles who saved Aaron Wilf, Chaya Wilf, Rose Wilf, Moshy Wilf and two other boys lives. They paid with their lives as Ukrainian neighbours burnt them alive in their house.[7] They were given this honor in 1974 and are on the official list stored by Yad Vashem as Svistun, 'Mikhailo & Polaha and son Vasily'.[8]

Inga kommentarer:

Skicka en kommentar