Zolochiv

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Zolochiv
Золочів
City of district significance
Downtown Zolochiv
Downtown Zolochiv
Flag of Zolochiv
Coat of arms of Zolochiv
Zolochiv is located in Lviv Oblast
Zolochiv
Zolochiv
Coordinates: 49°48′26.97″N 24°54′11.02″E / 49.8074917°N 24.9030611°E / 49.8074917; 24.9030611Coordinates: 49°48′26.97″N 24°54′11.02″E / 49.8074917°N 24.9030611°E / 49.8074917; 24.9030611
Country Ukraine
Oblast Lviv Oblast
RaionZolochiv Raion
Founded1442
Area
 • Total11.64 km2 (4.49 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total23,986
 • Density2,100/km2 (5,300/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+02:00 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+03:00 (EEST)
Postal code
80700
Area codes+380 3265
Websitezolochiv-rada.org.ua

Zolochiv (Ukrainian: Золочів, Polish: Złoczów, Yiddish: זלאָטשאָוו‎, Zlotshov) is a small city of district significance in the Lviv Oblast of Ukraine, the administrative center of Zolochiv Raion. The city is located 60 kilometers east of Lviv along Highway H02 Lviv-Ternopil and the railway line Krasne-Ternopil. Its population is approximately 23,986 (2021 est.)[1], covering an area of 1,164 km2 (449 sq mi)

History[]

Medieval settlement, Tatar invasion[]

The site was occupied from AD 1180 under the name Radeche until the end of the 13th century when a wooden fort was constructed. This was burned in the 14th century during the invasion of the Crimean Tatars.

The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1442)[]

In 1442, the city was founded as Zolochiv, by John of Sienna, a Polish nobleman of the Dębno family although the first written mention of Zolochiv was in 1423.

By 1523, it was already a city of Magdeburg rights.

Zolochiv was incorporated as a town on 15 September 1523 by the Polish king Sigismund I the Old. Located in the Ruthenian Voivodship of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, it belonged to several noble families.

The Austro-Hungarian Imperial Period (1772–1918)[]

From the first partition of Poland in 1772 until 1918, the town was part of the Austrian monarchy (Austria side after the compromise of 1867), head of the district with the same name, one of the 78 Bezirkshauptmannschaften in Austrian Galicia province, or "Crown land", in 1900.[2]

Interbellum: the Western Ukrainian National Republic, the Second Polish Republic[]

On 9 November 1918, the Ukrainian National Rada convened in Lviv and declared the independence of the Western Ukrainian National Republic, the name of the state was later formalised on the 11th of November in the Constitution of the ZUNR, the constitution outlined the extent of the Ukrainian National Rada's jurisdiction and included Zolochiv.[3]

A Jewish division of the Ukrainian Galician Army, the general army of the Western Ukrainian National Republic, headed by N.Shapiro.

In August 1920, fierce fighting took place between the Soviets and Polish.

The fate of this province was then disputed between Poland and Soviet Union, until the Peace of Riga in 1921, attributing Galicia to the Second Polish Republic.

From 15 March 1923 until the Invasion of Poland in 1939, when the town was occupied by the Soviet Union, Zolochiv, still named Złoczów, belonged to the Tarnopol Voivodship of the second Polish Republic.

World War Two[]

First Soviet occupation[]

Zolochiv was occupied by the USSR from September 1939 to July 1941. At the Zolochiv prison they committed horrific atrocities against Ukrainian nationalists including priests.[4]

Nazi occupation[]

After July 1941, Zolochiv was occupied by Germany and incorporated into the General Government in the District of Galicia.

On 27 June, the town and its surrounding vicinity was bombed by the Germans, people ran in many different directions and panicked. In the weeks prior the Germans had parachuted into the area.[4]

On 1 July the Germans arrived in the town, rumours had been circulating of a massacre in the Old Polish Prison, a two-three storied building on Ternopil St. Many Ukrainian locals were able to identify their friends and love ones amongst the victims. Several rows of corpses were lined up in a pit in the prison yard that was encrusted with blood and human flesh. People repeated that the NKVD had been running tractor engines during the massacre to quiet the noise of those being tortured.[4]

Those clearing the yard had to work quickly as due to the summer heat the bodies were decomposing and there was a risk of disease spreading. Inside the prison cells, Greek-Catholic priests were found with crosses carved into their chests. In one cell a pool of coagulated blood lay with numerous corpses that had been severely tortured.[4]

One of the local Jews, named Shmulko, who had worked in the flour mill before the war but had joined the NKVD and worked at the prison upon the Soviet invasion, was captured near Sasiv. The individual was forced to show people the corpses of their relatives and friends and was then stoned to death. Before he died he confessed to a second burial pit, that people had suspected but could not find.[4]

The Germans forced local Jews to clear the prison and clean the bodies of those killed and place them outside of the prison for further identification. After that SS troops executed those Jewish people, no Ukrainians participated.[4]

According to a German Einsatzgruppen report in Zolochiv "before the Russians fled . . . they arrested and killed in all about 700 Ukrainians. In retribution, the militia arrested several hundred Jews and shot them, on instructions from the Wehrmacht. The number of Jews killed was between 300 and 500." Then the killing spread beyond the fortress where the Ukrainians and Jews were shot. Within three to four days around 1400 Jews had been killed. Later the Germans shot another 300.[5]

Once they established their occupation administration, the Germans began to rob and persecute the Jews, including forcing them to do slave labor. The confiscated their homes and valuables. In August 1942, the Germans with the assistance of the Ukrainian and Jewish police,[5] rounded up about 2000 Jews and sent them to Belzec where they were immediately murdered. In November, the German and Ukrainian police rounded up another 2500 and sent them to be murdered in Belzec. Other Jews were shot in Zolochiv. After that, the Germans established a ghetto to which Zolochiv Jews were confined along with Jews from other villages who had been sent there. The ghetto, containing about 4000 people, was severely overcrowded and lacked sanitary facilities. Consequently, a typhus epidemic broke out. In April 1943, about 3500 Jews were taken by German, Ukrainian, and Jewish police to be shot at a pit near the village of Yelhovitsa.[6] One German official, Josef Meyer, tried to protect Jews, hiding several. After the war, Yad Vashem awarded him, his wife and two daughters the title Righteous Among the Nations.[7]

There are numerous recorded cases of local Ukrainians sheltering Jews within the town of Zolochiv and the surrounding provinces. The number of Jewish survivors is unknown.

In the spring of 1942, guerrillas from the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) ambushed a Nazi transportation of livestock to the Reich, killing one or more Nazis. There were immediate reprisals on local Ukrainian nationalists. The Gestapo was vigilant and focused on eliminating the OUN within and around Zolochiv. Numerous Ukrainian nationalists were imprisoned in the Gestapo headquarters in Zolochiv and were later transported to Lącki prison in Lviv, these included Ivan Lahola, Bohdan Kachur and Stepan Petelycky.[4]

On 1 December 1942 a ghetto was established, confined within the ghetto was a brewery where beer continued to be produced. The ghetto was guarded by Jewish police who were sometimes brutal and would beat those within the ghetto. Between 7,500–9,000 people were imprisoned there, as well as remnants of communities of the surrounding areas, including Olesko, Sasov, and Biali Kamen. The ghetto was liquidated on 2 April 1943, 6,000 people were murdered in a mass execution perpetrated by an Einsatzgruppen at a pit near the village of Yelhovitsa.[4]

Second Soviet occupation[]

From July 1944 to 16 August 1945, the town was occupied by the Red Army.

Soviet period[]

After the Yalta Conference (4–11 February 1945), drawn as a consequence of the findings of the interim Government of national unity signed on August 16, 1945, an agreement with the USSR, recognising the slightly modified Curzon line for the Eastern Polish border, on the basis of the agreement on the border between the Soviet Union and Polish Committee of National Liberation Government on 27 July 1944. In the Tarnopol voivodeship agreements, Zolochiv was included in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in the USSR, where it remained until 1991.

Independent Ukraine[]

Since 1991, Zolochiv has been part of independent Ukraine.

Architectural landmarks[]

  • Zolochiv Castle, built in the early 17th century by Jakub Sobieski (the king's father)
  • , 1730
  • , 16th century
  • , 17th century
  • , 19th century
  • , 15th century

Destroyed[]

  • Stone Synagogue, 1724[clarification needed] (destroyed during World War II)[8][9]

Notable people[]

Chronological list.

Picture gallery[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Чисельність наявного населення України (Actual population of Ukraine)" (PDF) (in Ukrainian). State Statistics Service of Ukraine. Retrieved 11 July 2021.
  2. ^ Klein, Wilhelm. Die postalischen Abstempelungen auf den österreichischen Postwertzeichen-Ausgaben 1867, 1883 und 1890. 1967, in German.
  3. ^ "Western Ukrainian National Republic". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2021-02-03.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Petelycky, Stefan (1999). Into Auschwitz for Ukraine (PDF). Kashtan Press.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b Megargee, Geoffrey (2012). Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos. Bloomington, Indiana: University of Indiana Press. p. Volume II 849–851. ISBN 978-0-253-35599-7.
  6. ^ JewishGen.org
  7. ^ "Meyer Josef & Elfriede ; Daughter: Hanne ; Daughter: Weber Herta (Meyer)". The Righteous Among the Nations Database. Yad Vashem. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  8. ^ Renata Hanynets, Zolochiv, The Ukrainian Jewish Encounter (UJE), 13 April 2014. Accessed 4 January 2021.
  9. ^ "Zolochiv (also Zloczow, Zolochev), Ukraine. Stone synagogue, built in the 17th century. Interior. Photo 1913". Boris Feldblyum Collection. Archived from the original on 15 October 2004.

External links[]

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