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Drohobych

Drohobych (Ukrainian: Дрого́бич, pronounced [droˈɦɔbɪtʃ] ; Polish: Drohobycz [drɔˈxɔ.bɨt͡ʂ] ; Yiddish: דראָהאָבּיטש) is a city in the south of Lviv Oblast, Ukraine. It is the administrative center of Drohobych Raion and hosts the administration of Drohobych urban hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine.[1] In 1939–1941 and 1944–1959 it was the center of Drohobych Oblast.

Drohobych
Дрогобич
Drohobych
Location of Drohobych
Drohobych
Drohobych (Ukraine)
Coordinates: 49°21′00″N 23°30′00″E / 49.35000°N 23.50000°E / 49.35000; 23.50000
Country Ukraine
OblastLviv Oblast
RaionDrohobych Raion
HromadaDrohobych urban hromada
First mentioned1387
Government
 • MayorTaras Kuchma
Area
 • Total41.0 km2 (15.8 sq mi)
Population
 (2022)
 • Total73,682
 • Density1,800/km2 (4,700/sq mi)
Websitehttp://www.drohobych-rada.gov.ua/

Drohobych was founded at the end of the eleventh century as an important trading post and transport node between Kyiv Rus' and the lands to the West of Rus'. After extinction of the local Ruthenian dynasty and subsequent incorporation of the Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia into the Polish Kingdom by 1349, from the fifteenth century the city developer as a mercantile and saltworks centre. Drohobych became part of the Habsburg Empire in 1772 after the first partition of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. In the mid-nineteenth century it became Europe's largest oil extraction center, which significantly contributed to its rapid development. In the renascent, interwar Poland it was the center of a county within the Lwów Voivodeship. As an outcome of World War II, the city was incorporated into the Ukrainian part of the Soviet Union, which in 1991 became the independent Ukraine.

The city was the birthplace of such well-known personalities as Elisabeth Bergner, Yuriy Drohobych (Kotermak), Ivan Franko and Bruno Schulz. The city has several oil refineries. The Drohobych saltworks are considered to be the oldest in Europe. The estimated population of Drohobych is 73,682 (2022 estimate)[2], making it the second largest city in Lviv region.

History edit

 
St-George Orthodox Church

While there are only legendary accounts of it, Drohobych probably existed in the Kievan Rus' period. According to a legend, there was a settlement, called Bych, of salt-traders. When Bych was destroyed in a Cumanian raid, survivors rebuilt the settlement in a nearby location under its current name which means a Second Bych. In the time of Kievan Rus', the Tustan fortress was built near Drohobych. However, scholars perceive this legend with skepticism, pointing out that Drohobych is a Polish pronunciation of Dorogobuzh, a common East Slavic toponym applied to three different towns in Kievan Rus'.[3]

The city was first mentioned in 1387 in the municipal records of Lviv, in connection with a man named Martin (or Marcin) of Drohobych.[3] Furthermore, the same chronicler's List of all Ruthenian cities, the farther and the near ones[4] in Voskresensky Chronicle (dated 1377–82) mentions "Другабець" (Druhabets') among other cities in Volhynia that existed at the same time such as Холмъ (Kholm), Лвовъ Великій (Lviv the Great).

In 1392 Polish king Vladislav II ordered the construction of the first Roman Catholic municipal parish church (Polish: Kosciół farny), using the foundations of older Ruthenian buildings. In the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, the city was the center of large rural starostvo (county within the Ruthenian Voivodeship).

Drohobych received Magdeburg rights some time in the 15th century (sources differ as to the exact year, some giving 1422 or 1460,[3] or 1496[5] but in 1506 the rights were confirmed by King Alexander the Jagiellonian). The salt industry was significant in the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries.

 
Yuriy Drohobych Monument

From the early seventeenth century, a Ukrainian Catholic brotherhood existed in the city. In 1648, during the Khmelnytsky Uprising, the Cossacks stormed the city and its cathedral. Most of the local Poles, as well as the Greek Catholics and the Jews, were murdered at the time, while some managed to survive in the Bell tower not taken in the raid. The 1772 partition of Poland gave the city to the Habsburg monarchy. In the 19th century, significant oil resources were discovered in the area, making the city an important center of the oil and natural gas industries.

After World War I, the area became part of the short-lived independent West Ukrainian People's Republic (Zakhidnoukrayins’ka Narodna Respublika; ZUNR). The ZUNR was taken over by the Second Polish Republic after the Polish–Ukrainian War and Drohobych became part of the Lwów Voivodeship in 1919. In 1928 the still extant Ukrainian private gymnasium (academically oriented secondary school) opened in the center of the city. The population reached some 40,000 in the late 1920s, and its oil refinery at Polmin became one of the biggest in Europe, employing 800 people. Numerous visitors came there to view the wooden Greek Catholic churches, among them the Church of St. Yur, which was regarded as the most beautiful such construction in the Second Polish Republic, with frescoes from 1691. Drohobych was also a major sports center (see: Junak Drohobycz).

In September 1939, after the German and Soviet invasion of Poland and according to the Ribbentrop-Molotov agreement, the city was annexed to Soviet Ukraine. After the invasion Nazi Germany wanted to incorporate the city into its General Government due to its oil fields, but the USSR refused and annexed it.[6] In Soviet Ukraine, Drohobych became the center of the Drohobych Oblast (region). Its local Polish boy scouts created the White Couriers organization, which in late 1939 and early 1940 smuggled hundreds of people from the Soviet Union to Hungary across the Soviet-Hungarian border in the Carpathian Mountains. In early July 1941, during the first weeks of the Nazi invasion of the USSR, the city was occupied by Nazi Germany.

Pre-war Drohobych had a significant Jewish community of about 15,000 people, 40% of the total population. Immediately after the Germans entered the city, Ukrainian nationalists started a pogrom which lasted for three days, supported by the Wehrmacht. During 1942 there were several selections, deportations, and murders in the streets, again led by German troops and Ukrainian Auxiliary Police. In October 1942, Drohobych ghetto was established with approximately 10,000 prisoners, including Jews brought from neighboring localities. In June 1943, the German administration and troops liquidated the ghetto. Only 800 Jews from Drohobych survived.[7][8] On 6 August 1944, the German occupation ended and the Red Army entered the city. Despite the large Jewish population prior to the war, a current resident has stated that he was one of only two Jews who came back to his village to live after 1945.[9] After the war, the city remained an oblast center until the Drohobych Oblast was incorporated into the Lviv Oblast in 1959. In Soviet times, Drohobych became an important industrial center of Western Ukraine, with highly developed oil-refining, machine building, woodworking, food, and light industries.

Until 18 July 2020, Drohobych was designated as a city of oblast significance and belonged to Drohobych Municipality but not to Drohobych Raion, even though it was the center of the raion. As part of the administrative reform of Ukraine which reduced the number of raions of Lviv Oblast to seven, Drohobych Municipality was merged into Drohobych Raion.[10][11]

Demographics edit

The population of Drohobych over the years was:

  • 1931 – 32,300
  • 1959 – 42,000
  • 1978 – 65,998
  • 1989 – 77,571
  • 2001 – 79,119
  • 2010 – 78,368
  • 2022 – 73,682
Religious and national splits[12][5]
Mid-18th century
By religion
1869
By religion
1939
By religion
1959
By nationality
total 3,737 total 16,880 total 34,600 total 42,000
2,200 (58.8%) Jewish 47.7% Jewish 39.9% Jewish 2% Jews
1,274 (34%) Roman Catholic 23.2% Roman Catholic 33.2% Roman Catholic 3% Poles
263 (7%) Greek Catholic 28.7% Greek Catholic
or Orthodox
26.3% Greek Catholic
or Orthodox
70% Ukrainians
22% Russians

Drohobych district edit

In 1931, the total population of the Drohobych district was 194,456, distributed among various languages:[13]

  • Polish: 91,935 (47.3%)
  • Ukrainian: 79,214 (40.7%)
  • Yiddish: 20,484 (10.5%)

In January 2007, the total population of the metropolitan area was over 103,000 inhabitants.

Geography edit

Climate edit

Climate data for Drohobych (1981–2010)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 1.1
(34.0)
2.7
(36.9)
7.4
(45.3)
14.3
(57.7)
19.8
(67.6)
22.4
(72.3)
24.4
(75.9)
24.0
(75.2)
19.0
(66.2)
14.0
(57.2)
7.2
(45.0)
2.2
(36.0)
13.2
(55.8)
Daily mean °C (°F) −2.4
(27.7)
−1.3
(29.7)
2.7
(36.9)
8.5
(47.3)
13.8
(56.8)
16.7
(62.1)
18.6
(65.5)
17.9
(64.2)
13.3
(55.9)
8.5
(47.3)
3.2
(37.8)
−1.1
(30.0)
8.2
(46.8)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) −5.9
(21.4)
−5.1
(22.8)
−1.5
(29.3)
3.0
(37.4)
7.5
(45.5)
11.0
(51.8)
13.0
(55.4)
12.1
(53.8)
8.2
(46.8)
3.9
(39.0)
−0.3
(31.5)
−4.4
(24.1)
3.5
(38.3)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 27.8
(1.09)
34.4
(1.35)
38.8
(1.53)
55.7
(2.19)
92.2
(3.63)
105.8
(4.17)
107.7
(4.24)
85.2
(3.35)
73.9
(2.91)
51.6
(2.03)
38.0
(1.50)
35.9
(1.41)
747.0
(29.41)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 7.7 8.4 8.3 9.0 11.3 12.4 11.5 9.2 8.8 7.8 8.1 8.7 111.2
Average relative humidity (%) 80.0 78.9 75.5 72.2 75.3 76.6 76.7 78.2 80.3 80.4 82.5 82.4 78.3
Source: World Meteorological Organization[14]

Economy edit

Industries currently based in the city include salt mining, oil-refineries, chemicals, machinery, metallurgy, and food processing. Drohobych has rich salt deposits and for that reason salt is one of the most popular symbols of the city and is depicted on its emblem.

Education edit

Universities edit

Colleges edit

Sport edit

The city was home to one of Poland's best pre-war football clubs; Junak Drohobycz. It was disbanded in 1939 due to the Soviet invasion of Poland.

Halychyna Drohobych, founded in 1989 as Naftovyk Drohobych currently represents the city.

Sights edit

 
A former castle tower
  • St. George's Church, Drohobych (c. 1500)
  • St. Bartholomew Church, Drohobych (1392–16th century)
  • its bell tower, former castle tower (late 13th century and 15th century)
  • Ascension Church, Drohobych (late 15th century)
  • Holy Cross Church, Drohobych (early 16th century)
  • Choral Synagogue (1842–1865)
  • Progressive Synagogue, Drohobych
  • City Hall, Drohobych (1920s)
  • St. Peter's and Paul's Monastery, Drohobych
  • Drohobych Museum

Notable people edit

Politics edit

  • Zenon Kossak, Ukrainian military and political leader (born here)
  • Andriy Melnyk, Ukrainian military and political leader (born near Drohobych)
  • David Horowitz (economist), Israeli economist and the first Governor of the Bank of Israel.
  • Leon Reich (1879–1929), lawyer and member of the Sejm of Poland (born here)

Arts edit

Other fields edit

Twin towns and sister cities edit

Drohobych is twinned with:

City Country Since
Bytom   Poland
Buffalo, New York   USA
Dębica[15]   Poland
Legnica   Poland
Muscatine, Iowa   USA
Olecko   Poland
Smiltene   Latvia

References edit

  1. ^ "Дрогобычская городская громада" (in Russian). Портал об'єднаних громад України.
  2. ^ 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. (PDF) from the original on 4 July 2022.
  3. ^ a b c [History of Drohobych] (in Ukrainian). drohobych.net. Archived from the original on 16 January 2006.
  4. ^ А СЕ ИМЕНА ГРАДОМЪ ВСЂМЪ РУССКЫМЪ, ДАЛНИМЪ И БЛИЖНИМЪ in PSRL, Т. VII. Летопись по Воскресенскому списку. — СПб, 1856. — с. 240–41.
  5. ^ a b Kubijovyč, Volodymyr (2016). "Drohobych". Online Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
  6. ^ Weinberg, Gerhard L. (2005-03-28). A World at Arms: A Global History of World War II (2 ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 60–61. ISBN 978-0-521-61826-7.
  7. ^ Israel Gutman u. a. (Hrsg.): Enzyklopädie des Holocaust. München und Zürich 1995, ISBN 3-492-22700-7, vol. 1, p. 371.
  8. ^ [Nazis crimes in the territory of the USSR] (in Russian). holocaust.ioso.ru. Archived from the original on 2 September 2006.
  9. ^ "Execution Sites of Jewish Victims Investigated by Yahad-In Unum: Execution of Jews in Drogobych". yahadmap.org. 2005. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
  10. ^ "Про утворення та ліквідацію районів. Постанова Верховної Ради України № 807-ІХ". Голос України (in Ukrainian). 2020-07-18. Retrieved 2020-10-03.
  11. ^ "Нові райони: карти + склад" (in Ukrainian). Міністерство розвитку громад та територій України.
  12. ^ Motylewicz, Jerzy (2005). "Ethnic Communities in the Towns of the Polish-Ukrainian Borderland in the Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth Centuries". In C. M. Hann; Paul R. Magocsi (eds.). Galicia: A Multicultured Land. University of Toronto Press. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-8020-3781-7. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
  13. ^ Bielawa, Matthew (2002). "Genealogy of Halychyna/Eastern Galicia: 1931 Polish Statistics: Population by language". halgal.com. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
  14. ^ . World Meteorological Organization. Archived from the original on 17 July 2021. Retrieved 17 July 2021.
  15. ^ [Local Government Partnerships as the Power of Europe]. Europa Miast (in Polish). Archived from the original on 2016-08-09. Retrieved 2013-08-13.

External links edit

  • Drohobych Info - biggest news site (in Ukrainian)
  • Drohobych - city portal (in Ukrainian)
  • Drohobych.com - Drohobych city administration website (in Ukrainian)
  • in Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine database (in Ukrainian)
  • (in Ukrainian)
  • (in Ukrainian)
  • Stories by Irene Frisch, a Drohobych-born Holocaust Survivor
  • Drohobych in Encyclopedia of Ukraine
  • Seminary of Blessed Martyrs Severyn, Yakym and Vitalij of Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, in Drohobych
  • Drohobych, Ukraine at JewishGen

drohobych, ukrainian, Дрого, бич, pronounced, droˈɦɔbɪtʃ, polish, drohobycz, drɔˈxɔ, bɨt, yiddish, דרא, הא, יטש, city, south, lviv, oblast, ukraine, administrative, center, raion, hosts, administration, urban, hromada, hromadas, ukraine, 1939, 1941, 1944, 1959. Drohobych Ukrainian Drogo bich pronounced droˈɦɔbɪtʃ Polish Drohobycz drɔˈxɔ bɨt ʂ Yiddish דרא הא ב יטש is a city in the south of Lviv Oblast Ukraine It is the administrative center of Drohobych Raion and hosts the administration of Drohobych urban hromada one of the hromadas of Ukraine 1 In 1939 1941 and 1944 1959 it was the center of Drohobych Oblast Drohobych DrogobichCityFlagCoat of armsDrohobychLocation of DrohobychShow map of Lviv OblastDrohobychDrohobych Ukraine Show map of UkraineCoordinates 49 21 00 N 23 30 00 E 49 35000 N 23 50000 E 49 35000 23 50000Country UkraineOblastLviv OblastRaionDrohobych RaionHromadaDrohobych urban hromadaFirst mentioned1387Government MayorTaras KuchmaArea Total41 0 km2 15 8 sq mi Population 2022 Total73 682 Density1 800 km2 4 700 sq mi Websitehttp www drohobych rada gov ua Drohobych was founded at the end of the eleventh century as an important trading post and transport node between Kyiv Rus and the lands to the West of Rus After extinction of the local Ruthenian dynasty and subsequent incorporation of the Kingdom of Galicia Volhynia into the Polish Kingdom by 1349 from the fifteenth century the city developer as a mercantile and saltworks centre Drohobych became part of the Habsburg Empire in 1772 after the first partition of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth In the mid nineteenth century it became Europe s largest oil extraction center which significantly contributed to its rapid development In the renascent interwar Poland it was the center of a county within the Lwow Voivodeship As an outcome of World War II the city was incorporated into the Ukrainian part of the Soviet Union which in 1991 became the independent Ukraine The city was the birthplace of such well known personalities as Elisabeth Bergner Yuriy Drohobych Kotermak Ivan Franko and Bruno Schulz The city has several oil refineries The Drohobych saltworks are considered to be the oldest in Europe The estimated population of Drohobych is 73 682 2022 estimate 2 making it the second largest city in Lviv region Contents 1 History 2 Demographics 2 1 Drohobych district 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 4 Economy 5 Education 5 1 Universities 5 2 Colleges 6 Sport 7 Sights 8 Notable people 8 1 Politics 8 2 Arts 8 3 Other fields 9 Twin towns and sister cities 10 References 11 External linksHistory edit nbsp St George Orthodox Church While there are only legendary accounts of it Drohobych probably existed in the Kievan Rus period According to a legend there was a settlement called Bych of salt traders When Bych was destroyed in a Cumanian raid survivors rebuilt the settlement in a nearby location under its current name which means a Second Bych In the time of Kievan Rus the Tustan fortress was built near Drohobych However scholars perceive this legend with skepticism pointing out that Drohobych is a Polish pronunciation of Dorogobuzh a common East Slavic toponym applied to three different towns in Kievan Rus 3 The city was first mentioned in 1387 in the municipal records of Lviv in connection with a man named Martin or Marcin of Drohobych 3 Furthermore the same chronicler s List of all Ruthenian cities the farther and the near ones 4 in Voskresensky Chronicle dated 1377 82 mentions Drugabec Druhabets among other cities in Volhynia that existed at the same time such as Holm Kholm Lvov Velikij Lviv the Great In 1392 Polish king Vladislav II ordered the construction of the first Roman Catholic municipal parish church Polish Kosciol farny using the foundations of older Ruthenian buildings In the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth the city was the center of large rural starostvo county within the Ruthenian Voivodeship Drohobych received Magdeburg rights some time in the 15th century sources differ as to the exact year some giving 1422 or 1460 3 or 1496 5 but in 1506 the rights were confirmed by King Alexander the Jagiellonian The salt industry was significant in the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries nbsp Yuriy Drohobych Monument From the early seventeenth century a Ukrainian Catholic brotherhood existed in the city In 1648 during the Khmelnytsky Uprising the Cossacks stormed the city and its cathedral Most of the local Poles as well as the Greek Catholics and the Jews were murdered at the time while some managed to survive in the Bell tower not taken in the raid The 1772 partition of Poland gave the city to the Habsburg monarchy In the 19th century significant oil resources were discovered in the area making the city an important center of the oil and natural gas industries After World War I the area became part of the short lived independent West Ukrainian People s Republic Zakhidnoukrayins ka Narodna Respublika ZUNR The ZUNR was taken over by the Second Polish Republic after the Polish Ukrainian War and Drohobych became part of the Lwow Voivodeship in 1919 In 1928 the still extant Ukrainian private gymnasium academically oriented secondary school opened in the center of the city The population reached some 40 000 in the late 1920s and its oil refinery at Polmin became one of the biggest in Europe employing 800 people Numerous visitors came there to view the wooden Greek Catholic churches among them the Church of St Yur which was regarded as the most beautiful such construction in the Second Polish Republic with frescoes from 1691 Drohobych was also a major sports center see Junak Drohobycz In September 1939 after the German and Soviet invasion of Poland and according to the Ribbentrop Molotov agreement the city was annexed to Soviet Ukraine After the invasion Nazi Germany wanted to incorporate the city into its General Government due to its oil fields but the USSR refused and annexed it 6 In Soviet Ukraine Drohobych became the center of the Drohobych Oblast region Its local Polish boy scouts created the White Couriers organization which in late 1939 and early 1940 smuggled hundreds of people from the Soviet Union to Hungary across the Soviet Hungarian border in the Carpathian Mountains In early July 1941 during the first weeks of the Nazi invasion of the USSR the city was occupied by Nazi Germany Pre war Drohobych had a significant Jewish community of about 15 000 people 40 of the total population Immediately after the Germans entered the city Ukrainian nationalists started a pogrom which lasted for three days supported by the Wehrmacht During 1942 there were several selections deportations and murders in the streets again led by German troops and Ukrainian Auxiliary Police In October 1942 Drohobych ghetto was established with approximately 10 000 prisoners including Jews brought from neighboring localities In June 1943 the German administration and troops liquidated the ghetto Only 800 Jews from Drohobych survived 7 8 On 6 August 1944 the German occupation ended and the Red Army entered the city Despite the large Jewish population prior to the war a current resident has stated that he was one of only two Jews who came back to his village to live after 1945 9 After the war the city remained an oblast center until the Drohobych Oblast was incorporated into the Lviv Oblast in 1959 In Soviet times Drohobych became an important industrial center of Western Ukraine with highly developed oil refining machine building woodworking food and light industries Until 18 July 2020 Drohobych was designated as a city of oblast significance and belonged to Drohobych Municipality but not to Drohobych Raion even though it was the center of the raion As part of the administrative reform of Ukraine which reduced the number of raions of Lviv Oblast to seven Drohobych Municipality was merged into Drohobych Raion 10 11 Demographics editThe population of Drohobych over the years was 1931 32 300 1959 42 000 1978 65 998 1989 77 571 2001 79 119 2010 78 368 2022 73 682 Religious and national splits 12 5 Mid 18th centuryBy religion 1869By religion 1939By religion 1959By nationality total 3 737 total 16 880 total 34 600 total 42 000 2 200 58 8 Jewish 47 7 Jewish 39 9 Jewish 2 Jews 1 274 34 Roman Catholic 23 2 Roman Catholic 33 2 Roman Catholic 3 Poles 263 7 Greek Catholic 28 7 Greek Catholicor Orthodox 26 3 Greek Catholicor Orthodox 70 Ukrainians 22 Russians Drohobych district edit In 1931 the total population of the Drohobych district was 194 456 distributed among various languages 13 Polish 91 935 47 3 Ukrainian 79 214 40 7 Yiddish 20 484 10 5 In January 2007 the total population of the metropolitan area was over 103 000 inhabitants Geography editClimate edit Climate data for Drohobych 1981 2010 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year Mean daily maximum C F 1 1 34 0 2 7 36 9 7 4 45 3 14 3 57 7 19 8 67 6 22 4 72 3 24 4 75 9 24 0 75 2 19 0 66 2 14 0 57 2 7 2 45 0 2 2 36 0 13 2 55 8 Daily mean C F 2 4 27 7 1 3 29 7 2 7 36 9 8 5 47 3 13 8 56 8 16 7 62 1 18 6 65 5 17 9 64 2 13 3 55 9 8 5 47 3 3 2 37 8 1 1 30 0 8 2 46 8 Mean daily minimum C F 5 9 21 4 5 1 22 8 1 5 29 3 3 0 37 4 7 5 45 5 11 0 51 8 13 0 55 4 12 1 53 8 8 2 46 8 3 9 39 0 0 3 31 5 4 4 24 1 3 5 38 3 Average precipitation mm inches 27 8 1 09 34 4 1 35 38 8 1 53 55 7 2 19 92 2 3 63 105 8 4 17 107 7 4 24 85 2 3 35 73 9 2 91 51 6 2 03 38 0 1 50 35 9 1 41 747 0 29 41 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 7 7 8 4 8 3 9 0 11 3 12 4 11 5 9 2 8 8 7 8 8 1 8 7 111 2 Average relative humidity 80 0 78 9 75 5 72 2 75 3 76 6 76 7 78 2 80 3 80 4 82 5 82 4 78 3 Source World Meteorological Organization 14 Economy editIndustries currently based in the city include salt mining oil refineries chemicals machinery metallurgy and food processing Drohobych has rich salt deposits and for that reason salt is one of the most popular symbols of the city and is depicted on its emblem Education editUniversities edit Drohobych State Pedagogical University of Ivan Franko Colleges edit Drohobych Mechanical Technological College Drohobych Petroleum and Gas CollegeSport editThe city was home to one of Poland s best pre war football clubs Junak Drohobycz It was disbanded in 1939 due to the Soviet invasion of Poland Halychyna Drohobych founded in 1989 as Naftovyk Drohobych currently represents the city Sights edit nbsp A former castle tower St George s Church Drohobych c 1500 St Bartholomew Church Drohobych 1392 16th century its bell tower former castle tower late 13th century and 15th century Ascension Church Drohobych late 15th century Holy Cross Church Drohobych early 16th century Choral Synagogue 1842 1865 Progressive Synagogue Drohobych City Hall Drohobych 1920s St Peter s and Paul s Monastery Drohobych Drohobych Museum nbsp St George s Church 16th 17th centuries nbsp Church of the Holy Cross 1613 1661 nbsp Brick Gothic St Bartholomew Church 14th 16th centuries and its bell tower nbsp Town Hall nbsp Basilian monastery of Saints Peter and Paul 1825 1828 nbsp A historic building in Drohobych nbsp Mazepy Street in Drohobych nbsp Osmomysla Street Drohobych nbsp Villa of Raymond Jarosz nbsp Bianchi Palace nbsp Shevska Street Drohobych nbsp Drohobych City Park HIH st nbsp Until 1918 Choral Synagogue had been the central synagogue of Galicia and Lodomeria nbsp Holy Trinity Cathedral nbsp A historic building in DrohobychNotable people editPolitics edit Zenon Kossak Ukrainian military and political leader born here Andriy Melnyk Ukrainian military and political leader born near Drohobych David Horowitz economist Israeli economist and the first Governor of the Bank of Israel Leon Reich 1879 1929 lawyer and member of the Sejm of Poland born here Arts edit Elisabeth Bergner Oscar nominated Austrian German stage and screen actress Ivan Franko Ukrainian poet and writer born in Nahuievychi near Drohobych Irene Frisch Jewish Polish writer and memoirist Leopold Gottlieb Jewish Polish painter Maurycy Gottlieb Jewish Polish painter Diana Reiter Jewish Polish architect victim of Holocaust Ephraim Moses Lilien Jewish Zionist painter Alfred Schreyer Jewish Polish vocalist and violinist Bruno Schulz Polish Jewish writer graphic artist and literary critic Kazimierz Wierzynski Polish poet and writer Other fields edit Tadeusz Chciuk Celt Polish war hero Yuriy Drohobych first doctor of medicine in Ukraine 1481 1482 rector of the University of Bologna Yaroslav Popovych cyclist born here Jozef Schreier Polish Jewish mathematician Viktor Vekselberg Russian oligarchTwin towns and sister cities editDrohobych is twinned with City Country Since Bytom nbsp Poland Buffalo New York nbsp USA Debica 15 nbsp Poland Legnica nbsp Poland Muscatine Iowa nbsp USA Olecko nbsp Poland Smiltene nbsp LatviaReferences edit Drogobychskaya gorodskaya gromada in Russian Portal ob yednanih gromad Ukrayini Chiselnist nayavnogo naselennya Ukrayini na 1 sichnya 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 a b c Istoriya Drogobicha History of Drohobych in Ukrainian drohobych net Archived from the original on 16 January 2006 A SE IMENA GRADOM VSЂM RUSSKYM DALNIM I BLIZhNIM in PSRL T VII Letopis po Voskresenskomu spisku SPb 1856 s 240 41 a b Kubijovyc Volodymyr 2016 Drohobych Online Encyclopedia of Ukraine Retrieved 19 December 2016 Weinberg Gerhard L 2005 03 28 A World at Arms A Global History of World War II 2 ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 60 61 ISBN 978 0 521 61826 7 Israel Gutman u a Hrsg Enzyklopadie des Holocaust Munchen und Zurich 1995 ISBN 3 492 22700 7 vol 1 p 371 Prestupleniya nacistov na territorii SSSR Nazis crimes in the territory of the USSR in Russian holocaust ioso ru Archived from the original on 2 September 2006 Execution Sites of Jewish Victims Investigated by Yahad In Unum Execution of Jews in Drogobych yahadmap org 2005 Retrieved 19 December 2016 Pro utvorennya ta likvidaciyu rajoniv Postanova Verhovnoyi Radi Ukrayini 807 IH Golos Ukrayini in Ukrainian 2020 07 18 Retrieved 2020 10 03 Novi rajoni karti sklad in Ukrainian Ministerstvo rozvitku gromad ta teritorij Ukrayini Motylewicz Jerzy 2005 Ethnic Communities in the Towns of the Polish Ukrainian Borderland in the Sixteenth Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries In C M Hann Paul R Magocsi eds Galicia A Multicultured Land University of Toronto Press p 37 ISBN 978 0 8020 3781 7 Retrieved 19 December 2016 Bielawa Matthew 2002 Genealogy of Halychyna Eastern Galicia 1931 Polish Statistics Population by language halgal com Retrieved 19 December 2016 World Meteorological Organization Climate Normals for 1981 2010 World Meteorological Organization Archived from the original on 17 July 2021 Retrieved 17 July 2021 Partnerstwo Samorzadow Sila Europy Local Government Partnerships as the Power of Europe Europa Miast in Polish Archived from the original on 2016 08 09 Retrieved 2013 08 13 External links editDrohobych at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity Drohobych Info biggest news site in Ukrainian Drohobych city portal in Ukrainian Drohobych com Drohobych city administration website in Ukrainian Drohobych in Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine database in Ukrainian Drohobych the King s city in Ukrainian Drohobych Net in Ukrainian Stories by Irene Frisch a Drohobych born Holocaust Survivor Drohobych in Encyclopedia of Ukraine Seminary of Blessed Martyrs Severyn Yakym and Vitalij of Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church in Drohobych Drohobych during the period of Nazism PHOTOS Drohobych Ukraine at JewishGen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Drohobych amp oldid 1219115463, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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