Buryn
Buryn
Буринь | |
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| |
Buryn Location of Buryn | |
Coordinates: 51°11′45″N 33°49′36″E / 51.19583°N 33.82667°ECoordinates: 51°11′45″N 33°49′36″E / 51.19583°N 33.82667°E | |
Country region area | Ukraine Sumy Oblast Buryn Raion |
Established | 14th Century |
Population (2021) | |
• Total | 8,359 |
Postal code | 41700-708 |
Area code(s) | +38 (05454) |
Buryn (Ukrainian: Буринь) is a city in Sumy Oblast, Ukraine. It is the administrative center of Buryn Raion. The population estimate is 8,359 (2021 est.)[1].
Geography[]
Buryn is a relatively small, cozy town/small city situated on the banks of the . A dam across the Chasha has created a substantial lake, which is now surrounded by specially planted yew trees.
Buryn is home to of Southwestern Railways. Roads , , and pass through the city.
Etymology[]
The origin of the name of the city of Buryn is unknown, although there are some assumptions. Some associate the ancient Russian city of Byrin, which is mentioned in the "List of Rus Cities Distant and Near" of the XIV century, with Buryn, but this theory is not confirmed by archaeological finds. There is also a version that Buryn was inhabited in the XVII century by migrants from the village of Borinya (now a town in The Turka district of the Lviv region), because even now in Borinya and Buryn live representatives of ancient families: Haiduky (Gaidukov), Siplyvy, Boyko, etc.
History[]
The first written mention of the village of Borin (in some other handwritten sources also known as Barin) is dated to 1688, as evidenced by the "Heographic Encyclopedic Word" edited by A. F. Trosnikov (Moscow, publishing house "Svetskaya incyclopedia", 1989, p.88). It was settled by free Cherkasians (so then Muscovites called Ukrainians) on the lands of the lands of The Chaskyi and Osletskyi towns, which were called "wild fields" and belonged to the popes of Church of Nicholas the Wonderworker Velykoretsky in Putyvl.
According to the 6th revision, 1,080 males lived in the church settlement.
Subsequently, Buryn became the sloboda and the center of the Putyvl Volost district of Kursk Province. For 80 years in the XVII century, the village was in the possession of the church, and since 1769 belonged to different landowners.
As of 1862, there were 2,893 people (1,412 men and 1,481 women) living 360 farms, and there was an Orthodox Church and a school.[2]
In 1869 was built, then called Krasne.
At least 90 residents died during the Soviet-organized Holodomor of 1932-1933.[3]
Economy[]
Among the leading enterprises of the city is , whose products are known not only in Ukraine, but also in Russia, Georgia, and Armenia. 124 thousand tons of products can be placed on the Buryn scale. This is one of the largest enterprises of the district, which works steadily.
Gallery[]
City park
Streets in Buryn'
Railway station
Locomotive monument at
References[]
- ^ "Чисельність наявного населення України (Actual population of Ukraine)" (PDF) (in Ukrainian). State Statistics Service of Ukraine. Retrieved 11 July 2021.
- ^ XX. Kursk Governorate. List of populated areas dating back to 1862. Published by the Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. St. Petersburg. 1868. LXXV + 175 stor.,
- ^ Holodomor in Ukraine by Ukrainian Institute of National Memory
- Cities in Sumy Oblast
- Kursk Governorate
- Cities of district significance in Ukraine
- Ukraine geography stubs