Yezupil Єзупіль |
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Town | |||
Yezupil main road
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Coordinates: 49°02′N 24°47′E / 49.033°N 24.783°ECoordinates: 49°02′N 24°47′E / 49.033°N 24.783°E | |||
Country | Ukraine | ||
Oblast | Ivano-Frankivsk | ||
Founded | 1435 | ||
urban-type settlement | 1940 | ||
Government | |||
• Mayor | Hanna Kushnir | ||
Area | |||
• Total | 28.220 km2 (10.896 sq mi) | ||
Elevation | 260 m (850 ft) | ||
Population (2016) | |||
• Total | 2,845 | ||
• Density | 100/km2 (260/sq mi) | ||
Postal code | 77411 | ||
Area code(s) | +380 3436 | ||
Website | Ukrainian Parliament website |
Yezupil (Ukrainian: Єзупіль, Polish: Jezupol) is an urban-type settlement in western Ukraine. It is located in Tysmenytsia Raion (district) of Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast (region), approximately 14 km north of the oblast capital, Ivano-Frankivsk. Population: 2,845 (2016 est.)
Yezupil was previously referred to as part of the Halych Powiat (county). It is also a part of the historic region of Pokuttya in Galicia.
Turn of the century town Jezupol (former Zhovten) was a fair size town (with its own Jewish Kahil and Roman Catholic Church and Greek Catholic Church) in Galicia/Halychyna in Austro-Hungarian Empire.
It is approximately 7 km from Halych, the former capital of the Principality of Halych Volhynia in the 10/12th centuries. In 1352 – 1772 it was a part of Ruthenia Voivodeship in the Kingdom of Poland. First written in 1435. Up until the 16th century it was a village named Tzaishibesi, which had a wooden fortress. When the fort was destroyed during one of the Tatar incursions, Jakub Potocki, the voivode of Wroclaw and private owner of the town, renamed it Jesupol, after Jesus in 1597. In 1598, a fortress and Dominican monastery was erected, and the town developed next to it. The monastery had a rich and famous library of ancient scriptures and prints.
Upon the partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1772 the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, or simply Galicia, became the largest, most populous, and northernmost province of the Austrian Empire, where it remained until the dissolution of Austria-Hungary at the end of World War I.