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Wikipedia

Kropyvnytskyi

Kropyvnytskyi (Ukrainian: Кропивницький, IPA: [kropɪu̯ˈnɪtsʲkɪj] ) is a city in central Ukraine, situated on the Inhul River. It is the administrative center of Kirovohrad Oblast. Population: 219,676 (2022 estimate).[2]

Kropyvnytskyi
Кропивницький
City
Nickname: 
Little Paris (used in historical context)
Motto(s): 
With peace and goodness
Kropyvnytskyi
Location of Kropyvnytskyi
Kropyvnytskyi
Kropyvnytskyi (Ukraine)
Coordinates: 48°30′0″N 32°16′0″E / 48.50000°N 32.26667°E / 48.50000; 32.26667
Country Ukraine
Oblast Kirovohrad Oblast
Raion Kropyvnytskyi Raion
Founded1754
City rights1765, 1782
Government
 • MayorAndriy Raykovych[1] (Proposition[1])
Area
 • City103 km2 (40 sq mi)
Elevation
124 m (407 ft)
Population
 (2022)
 • City219,676
 • Density2,100/km2 (5,500/sq mi)
 • Metro
233,820
Postal code
25000-490
Area code+380 522
Sister cities (Bulgaria)Dobrich
Websitekr-rada.gov.ua

Over its history, Kropyvnytskyi has changed its name several times. The settlement was known as Yelysavethrad (Єлисаветград, IPA: [jɛlʲɪsɑvʲɛtˈɦrɑd]) after Empress Elizabeth of Russia from 1752 to 1924, or simply Elysavet.[3] In 1924, as part of the Soviet Union, it became known as Zinovievsk (Зінов'євськ, IPA: [zʲinɔu̯ˈjɛu̯sʲk]) in honour of the revolutionary Grigory Zinoviev, who was born there. Following the assassination of Sergei Kirov in 1934, the town was renamed Kirovo (Кірово, IPA: [ˈkʲirɔwɔ]) in his honour.

Concurrently with the formation of Kirovohrad Oblast on 10 January 1939, and to distinguish it from Kirov Oblast in central Russia, Kirovo was renamed Kirovohrad (Кіровоград, IPA: [kirɔwɔˈɦrɑd]).[4] As part of independent Ukraine, the name of the city was then changed to Kropyvnytskyi in 2016 due to decommunization laws, in honour of Marko Kropyvnytskyi, who was born near the city.[4] However, Kirovohrad Oblast was not renamed because it is mentioned in the Constitution of Ukraine – only a constitutional amendment could change the name of the oblast.[5]

During the Ukrainian presidential election of 2004 the city achieved country-wide notoriety due to mass election fraud committed by local authorities and after that became known as District 100 (its community number according to the Central Elections Committee).[6] Notable figures born in the city include Grigory Zinoviev, Volodymyr Vynnychenko, Arseny Tarkovsky, Afrikan Spir, Marko Kropyvnytskyi, and others.

Name origins edit

Yelisavetgrad edit

 
Theatre square in Yelisavetgrad

The name "Yelisavetgrad" (usually spelled Elisavetgrad or Elizabethgrad in English language publications) is believed to have evolved as the amalgamation of the fortress name and the common Eastern Slavonic element "-grad" (Old/Church Slavonic "градъ", "a settlement encompassed by a wall"). Its first documented usage dates back to 1764, when Yelisavetgrad Province was organized together with the Yelisavetgrad Lancer Regiment.

Presenting a letter of grant on January 11, 1752, to Major-General Jovan Horvat, the organizer of New Serbia settlements, Empress Elizabeth of Russia ordered "to found an earthen fortress and name it Fort St. Elizabeth" (see On the Historical Meaning of the Name Elizabeth for Our City 2007-12-27 at the Wayback Machine) (in Ukrainian). Thus simultaneously the future city was named in honour of its formal founder, the Russian empress, and also in honor of her heavenly patroness, St. Elizabeth.

Zinovievsk edit

Following the Russian Revolution and founding of the Soviet Union, in 1924 the city was renamed Zinovievsk, after Grigory Zinoviev, a Soviet statesman and one of the leaders of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks).[7] He was born in Yelisavetgrad on September 20 (September 8 O.S.), 1883. At the time he was honored by the name, he was a member of the Politburo and the Chairman of the Comintern's Executive Committee.

Kirovo and Kirovograd edit

On December 27, 1934, after the assassination of Sergei Kirov, Zinovievsk and other Soviet cities was renamed again - this time as Kirovo, and then as Kirovohrad.[7] The latter name appeared simultaneously with the creation of Kirovograd Oblast, on January 10, 1939[7] and was aimed at differentiating the region from Kirov Oblast in present-day Russia.

After Ukraine regained independence, the name of the city started to be spelled according to Ukrainian pronunciation as Kirovohrad. The previous Russified orthography remains widely used on account of the widespread use of the Russian language in the region.

Kropyvnytskyi edit

Since 1991 numerous discussions had been held on the city's name. A number of activists supported returning the city to its original name, Yelisavetgrad (or now Yelysavethrad in Ukrainian transcription). Other suggestions for contemporary Ukraine included Tobilevychi (in honour of the Tobilevych family, the Coryphaei of the classic Ukrainian drama established in Yelysavethrad in 1882); Zlatopil, from Ukrainian "золоте поле", literally "golden field"; and Stepohrad, Ukrainian for "city of steppes" (in recognition of the agricultural status of the city); Ukrayinsk or Ukrayinoslav, i.e. "the glorifying Ukraine one;" and Novokozachyn (to commemorate the semi-famous Cossack regiment which could have been quartered at the present-day city location).

The President of Ukraine, Petro Poroshenko, signed the bill banning Communist symbols on May 15, 2015, which required places associated with communism to be renamed within a six-month period.[8] On 25 October 2015 (during local elections) 76.6% of the Kirovohrad voters voted for renaming the city to Yelisavetgrad.[9] A draft law at the time before the Ukrainian parliament would prohibit any names associated with Russian history since the 14th century, which would make the name Yelisavetgrad inadmissible as well.[10] A committee of the Verkhovna Rada (Ukraine's parliament) chose the name Inhulsk on 23 December 2015. This name is a reference to the nearby Inhul river.[11] On 31 March 2016 the State Construction, Regional Policy and the Local help committee of the Verkhovna Rada recommended to parliament to rename Kirovohrad to Kropyvnytskyi.[12] This name is a reference to writer, actor and playwright Marko Kropyvnytskyi, who was born near the city.[12] On 14 July 2016, the name of the city was finally changed to Kropyvnytskyi.[7][13][14]

Administrative status edit

 
Kropyvnytskyi railway station
 
City main post office

Kropyvnytskyi serves as administrative center of Kropyvnytskyi Raion and hosts the administration of Kropyvnytskyi urban hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine.[15]

Until 18 July 2020, Kropyvnytskyi was designated as a city of oblast significance and belonged to Kropyvnytskyi Municipality but not to Kropyvnytskyi Raion even though it was the center of the raion. It is divided into two districts — Fortechnyi and Podilskyi. The urban-type settlement of Nove is part of the Fortechnyi district. As part of the administrative reform of Ukraine, which reduced the number of raions of Kirovohrad Oblast to four, Kropyvnytskyi Municipality was merged into Kropyvnytskyi Raion.[16][17]

History edit

18th and 19th century: from military settlement to trade centre edit

 
Walls of St. Elizabeth fortress

The history of the city beginnings dates back to the year 1754 when Fort St. Elizabeth was built on the lands of former Zaporizka Sich in the upper course of the Inhul, Suhokleya and Biyanka Rivers. The fort was built in 1754 by the will of the empress Elizabeth of Russia and it played a pivotal role in the new lands added to Russia by the Belgrad Peace Treaty of 1739. In 1764 the settlement received status of the center of the Elizabeth province, and in 1784 the status of chief town of a district, when it was renamed after the fort as Yelyzavethrad.

 
aerial photograph

The Fort of St. Elizabeth was on a crossroads of trade routes, and it eventually became a major trade center. The city has held regular fairs four times a year. Merchants from all over the Russian Empire have visited these fairs. Also, there were numerous foreign merchants, especially from Greece. Developed around the military settlement, the city rose to prominence in the 19th century when it became an important trade centre, as well as a Ukrainian cultural leader with the first professional theatrical company in either Central or Eastern Ukraine being established here in 1882,[7] founded by Mark Kropyvnytsky,[7] Tobilevych brothers and Maria Zankovetska.[7]

Early 20th century: famine and pogroms edit

Elizabethgrad was ravaged by famine in 1901 and its residents suffered more due to poor government response.

 
tram in the city

The region is extremely fertile. However, a drought in 1892 and poor farming methods which never allowed the soil to recover, prompted a large famine that plagued the region. According to a 1901 New York Times article, the Ministry of the Interior denied the persistence of famine in the region and blocked non-State charities from bringing aid to the area. The reporter wrote, "The existence of famine was inconvenient at a time when negotiations were pending for foreign loans." The governor of the Kherson region, Prince Oblonsky, refused to acknowledge this famine. One non-resident and non-State worker entered Elizabethgrad and provided The New York Times with an eyewitness account.[18] He observed: general and acute destitution; deaths from starvation; widespread typhus (shows poverty), and little to no work to be found in the region.

Elizabethgrad was located in the Pale of Settlement and, during the 19th century, had a substantial Jewish population.

Elizabethgrad was subjected to several violent pogroms in the late 19th and early 20th century. In 1905 another riot flared, with Christians killing Jews and plundering the Jewish quarter.[19] A contemporary account was reported in The New York Times on December 13, 1905.[20]

Ukrainian War of Independence and Ukrainian–Soviet War edit

During the Ukrainian revolution, the government in the city changed several times

 
Stamp of the Elysavet Governing Council of Ukrainian People's Republic , 11 April 1918

On 7 May 1919, paramilitary leader, and former divisional general in the Red Army, Nykyfor Hryhoriv, launched an anti-Bolshevik uprising. On 8 May 1919, he issued a proclamation "To the Ukrainian People" (До Українського народу), in which he called upon the Ukrainian people to rise against the "Communist imposters", singling out the "Jewish commissars"[21] and the Cheka. In only a few weeks, Hryhoriv's troops perpetrated 148 pogroms, the deadliest of which resulted in the massacre of upwards of 1,000 Jewish people in Yelisavetgrad, from 15 to 17 May 1919.[21] In total, about 3,000 Jews died in the city.[22]

The Soviet Red Army eventually reconquered the city in 1920.

Soviet rule edit

During Soviet rule, the city economy was dominated by such enterprises as Chervona Zirka Agricultural Machinery Plant (current name Elvorti; which once provided more than 50% of the USSR need in tractor seeders), Hydrosila Hydraulic Units Plant, , Pishmash Typewriter Plant (de facto defunct nowadays) and others.

In World War II Kropyvnytskyi was occupied by Nazi Germany from 5 August 1941. It was subsequently recaptured by Soviet forces on 8 January 1944.

Russian invasion of Ukraine edit

With the beginning of Russia's large-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the city began to suffer from rocket attacks by the Russian army. On the morning of March 1 2022, the Russian occupiers fired at the Kanatove airfield near Kropyvnytskyi, trying to destroy infrastructure facilities. On March 12 2022 , Russian troops attacked the airfield near the Kanatove railway station, as a result of which 7 soldiers were killed . On the morning of July 23 2022 , 13 missiles arrived (8 Kalibr sea-based missiles and 5 Kh-22 missiles from the TU-22M3 aircraft). The enemy fired at a military airfield and a railway facility. Result - 19 wounded and 3 dead. Air alarms sounded almost daily in the city.

As of May 24 2022 , there were more than 40,000 forcibly displaced people from regions of active hostilities in the city and region. According to data on August 29 2022 , this figure increased to 85,000 people. Also, during the war, various institutions and enterprises moved to Kropyvnytskyi, including Donetsk State University of Internal Affairs from Mariupol (originally Donetsk), Kharkiv Research Institute of Prosthetics, Donetsk National Medical University from Kramatorsk (originally Donetsk) and Kherson State Agrarian - economical University.

 
mural "Ukraine is Freedom" on one of the residential buildings
 
photos of fallen heroes in the center of city, September 2023

Geography edit

The city is in the center of Ukraine and within the Dnieper Upland. The Inhul river flows through Kropyvnytskyi. Within the city, several other smaller rivers and brooks runs in the Inhul; they include the Suhoklia and the Biyanka.

 
embankment in the city

Urban layout edit

The city began as a settlement built in adjustment to a fortress called "Yelizaveta Fortress". At the end of 1757, the earthen fortifications were almost ready. Only the internal layout has changed, retaining its dimensions (55x55 sazhens). North of the fortress of St. Elizabeth, behind a small ravine on the banks of the Ingul, a soldier's settlement arose under the name of Grechesky or Bykovo, named after captain Bykov who was the commandant of the fortress. The main streets of Bykovo were Nizhne-Bykovskaya (Pushkin St.). Verkhne-Bykovaya (Chapaeva), Ostrovskaya, Vasilievskaya, Andreevskaya (retained its original name), Artem, Kakhovskaya, Tobilevich, Pushkina Lane, Znamensky, and Sibirskaya. [23]

To the east of the fortress, the Permskoye suburb appeared. It got its name from the camp of the Perm (Carabinieri) Regiment (Russian: Пермский карабинерный полк), called in 1754 to cover the working people and eradicate the Gaidamaks. Permskoye was located between the river and the esplanade zone, it was a small residential area, numbering a dozen blocks with straight streets and lanes. The main streets of Perm were - (Bolshaya Permskaya), Fisanovich, Sverdlov, Bobrinetskaya, Gorky, International, lanes Krepostnoy, Postal, Ogorodny.

Soon, buildings appeared on the other side of the Ingul. This part of the settlement was called Podil and is today forming the central part of the city. The drawings of 1762 indicate that a large residential area arose here, cut by streets 10-12 sazhens wide into a grid of square and rectangular quarters. It became the core of a rapidly growing village. The main streets on Podil were Marksa Street (Bolshaya Perspektivnaya, Nikolaevsky Prospekt), Dzerzhinskya (Moskovskaya), Lenina (Dvortsovaya, Verkhne-Donskaya), Timiryazeva (Nizhne-Donskaya), Gogola (Uspenskaya), K. Liebknecht (Preobrazhenskaya, Merchant ), R. Luxembourg, (Pokrovskaya), Kalinina (Mirgorodskaya), Decembrists (Ingulskad), Company (Nevskaya, Pashutinskaya), Volodarsky (Aleksandrovskaya), Kirov (Mikhailovskaya), Krasnogvardeiskaya (Arkhangelskaya), Karabinernaya (retained its original name).[23]

While Bykovo and Permsky quarters were built up by the headquarters department for soldiers and officers, then in Podil they are occupied by houses of merchants and artisans. The settlements of Kovalevka and Balka, apparently founded by the Cossacks, adjoined the outskirts (in the territory of the modern part of the Balka, there is still a lane called Cossack). These settlements, which eventually merged with the suburban development into a single planning structure, initially had a picturesque, free tracing of the street network. But, if over time the layout of the Balka was subjected to only partial regulation, then only small fragments remained of the original layout of Kovalevka (Bebel St., Transportnaya St., Molodezhny Lane).[23]

Almost simultaneously with the appearance of the suburb, the following were built: the city market (on the site of an existing shopping center), the wooden Assumption Church (on the site of the regional committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine), the wooden Vladimirskaya (Greek Church), the wooden Znamenskaya Church (on Bykovo), the schismatic prayer house. These objects with ordinary, mainly wooden manor buildings, as well as with fortress structures, determined the appearance of the city in the first ten years of its development.

The planning architectural and spatial composition of the central part of the settlement consisted in the hierarchical subordination of its main street (B. Perspektivnaya, K. Marksa) with the square on it and ordinary low-rise buildings. Among this development, public houses and shops were sharp accents, and the Assumption and Vladimir churches served as dominants. The street served as the main axis of the entire composition. It divided the suburb into two equal parts and the direction of its route almost coincided with the center of the fortress. Thus, the fortress with the church in it turned into the third main dominant of the street, although it was located outside its boundaries.

In plan, the area was rectangular with an aspect ratio of 1:3 (50x150 m.). On one of the smaller sides, it adjoined the main street (Bolshaya Perspektivnaya), and on the wide side it adjoined the market and a small quarter, like the square, which is now included in the territory of the market.

From the side of the market on the square there were a gostiny dvor and butcher shops, and on the opposite and smaller sides - public buildings. Within the retranchement, the city occupied an area of 2.3 sq. km. (1.8 x 1.5 km.). From the period of the formation of the city the fortress of St. Elizabeth was the town-planning core of the settlement, the place of concentration or attraction of all its main functions. The central administrative function was concentrated in the fortress. This is the administrative management of the fortress, the subordination of the chiefs of the suburbs and settlements to the commandant of the fortress, the presence in it of the regimental office of the Cossack regiment. The religious center was also located in the fortress of St. Elizabeth, the Trinity Cathedral Church (ruined in 1813).[24] The central trading function also gravitated towards the fortress. Its place of concentration is the main square. The trade function developed with the settlement of lands by artisans and merchants. And their appearance was due to the need to service military units inside a large fortress.[23]

Soviet period edit

Prallel to the Biayanka river, new streets were formed in the settlement of Balka. New quarters have grown in the village. Kushchevka, Novo-Alekseevka. Former village Balashovka merged with the city and organically entered its planning structure. In 1930, a general plan for the development of the city was developed. According to this plan, on the site of the square in front of the former town hall, the main square of the city was formed with a monument to Kirov in its center. In the 50s, The construction of 2-storey buildings began in the areas of Lunacharskogo and Mira streets. Also in the late 40s - early 50s. 3, 5-storey houses are being built on the Marksa Street. From the 60s, construction of massive housing estates was commenced, with Cheryomushki located in the south-west of the city being first such district, designed according to the plan of architect A.A. Sidorenko. Such housing estate was constructed also in Novo-Nikolaevka District. New master plan for the city was developed by the Kharkiv Institute Ukrgorstroyproekt, taking into account the placement of a residential multi-storey buildings in the new territories of the south-west. New residential areas were built along Heroyev Ukrainy Street (formerly Volkova Street). In the 60s, the industrial district along Balashovsky district was developed.[23]

Architecture edit

From 1878 to 1905 Oleksandr Pashutin served as mayor of the city. Under his administration, advances were made in the areas of education and medicine, construction of the water-supply system and several public buildings, the introduction of the first tram and the establishment of numerous marketplaces. Kropyvnytskyi is noted for the quality of its architecture, with European-style sculptures and antique windows. A range of classical and modern monuments, Moorish and Baroque palaces, and buildings that combine Gothic, Rococo and Renaissance motives are extant to this day. Today[when?] a high level of building technology of Kropyvnytskyi's masters encourages further construction and restoration.

Symbols edit

Three blue stripes crossed in the middle of the fortress plan symbolize the fortification location at the confluence of the Inhul, Suhukleya and Biyanka rivers. The crimson colour favoured by Cossacks refers to the fortress being situated on the lands of the Zaporozhian Cossacks. Golden ears together with a golden field on the shield are symbols of the fertile lands and notable agricultural wealth of the region.

The shield is held by storks, which symbolizes happiness, fertility, and love for the native land. The golden tower in the form of a crown expresses that the city is a regional centre. The motto "With peace and good" placed on the azure stripe emphasizes that same idea. All the features of the flag correlate with the principal elements of the escutcheon on the coat of arms of the city.

Demography edit

2001 Ukrainian census[25]

According to a survey conducted by the International Republican Institute in April-May 2023, 77 % of the city's population spoke Ukrainian at home, and 20 % spoke Russian.[26]

Historical dynamic edit

1897[27] 1926[28] 1939[29] 1959[30] 1989[31] 2001[31]
Ukrainians  23,6%  44,6%  72,0%  75,0%  76,9%  85,8%
Russians  34,6%  25,0%  10,9%  18,6%  19,5%  12,0%
Belarusians  0,1%  0,2%  0,4%  0,8%  0,8%  0,5%
Moldavians  0,03%  0,2%  0,7%  0,4%  0,5%  0,3%
Jews  37,8%  27,7%  14,6%  4,4%  1,9%  0,1%

Notable people edit

The history of Kropyvnytskyi boasts memorable events and appearances in the biographies of famous people. One of the unsurpassed creators of the modern architectural ensemble of the historical centre of the city of Kropyvnytskyi, Y. Pauchenko [uk] was born and lived here. Such noted architects as A. Dostoyevskyi and O. Lishnevskyi [ru] worked there as well. P. Kalnyshevsky fought for the freedom of the local cossacks, M. Pirohov laid the foundation of field surgery and M. Kutuzov planned his military operations from the city. Natives listened to the lectures of the outstanding slavist V. Hryhorovych [uk], and inherited the knowledge of the land from the ethnographer, historian and archeologist V. Yastrebov [uk].


In different periods of time the history of the region was connected with the names of the famous Ukrainian writer, playwright, publicist and statesman Volodymyr Vynnychenko, the poet, literary and cultural critic Y. Malanyuk, the physicist-theoretician, the Nobel Prize laureate Igor Tamm, the scientist and inventor, one of the creators of the legendary "Katyusha" G. Langeman, the composer Yuliy Meitus, the pianist and pedagogue G. Neigauz, the artist and painter O. Osmiorkin, the poet and translator Arseny Tarkovsky, the public and cultural figure, memoirist, patron of the arts Y. Chykalenko, the composer, pianist, pedagogue, musician and publicist K. Shymanovskyi and the Ukrainian writer, dramatist and scriptwriter Y. Yanovskyi.


 
Israel Fisanovich, 1943

Sport edit

 
Yevhen Konoplyanka, 2016

Climate edit

Kropyvnytskyi is in the central region of Ukraine. Kropyvnytskyi's climate is moderate continental: cold and snowy winters, and hot summers. The seasonal average temperatures are not too cold in winter, not too hot in summer: −4.8 °C (23.4 °F) in January, and 20.7 °C (69.3 °F) in July. The average precipitation is 534 mm (21 in) per year, with the most in June and July.

Climate data for Kropyvnytskyi, Ukraine (1991–2020, extremes 1948–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 11.1
(52.0)
18.7
(65.7)
22.8
(73.0)
30.5
(86.9)
35.8
(96.4)
35.5
(95.9)
38.1
(100.6)
39.4
(102.9)
37.1
(98.8)
28.9
(84.0)
21.0
(69.8)
15.7
(60.3)
39.4
(102.9)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) −1.0
(30.2)
0.6
(33.1)
6.8
(44.2)
15.7
(60.3)
21.9
(71.4)
25.5
(77.9)
28.0
(82.4)
27.7
(81.9)
21.5
(70.7)
13.9
(57.0)
5.8
(42.4)
0.7
(33.3)
13.9
(57.0)
Daily mean °C (°F) −3.6
(25.5)
−2.7
(27.1)
2.3
(36.1)
9.9
(49.8)
15.8
(60.4)
19.6
(67.3)
21.7
(71.1)
21.0
(69.8)
15.4
(59.7)
8.8
(47.8)
2.6
(36.7)
−1.8
(28.8)
9.1
(48.4)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) −6.2
(20.8)
−5.6
(21.9)
−1.6
(29.1)
4.3
(39.7)
9.7
(49.5)
13.7
(56.7)
15.4
(59.7)
14.5
(58.1)
9.6
(49.3)
4.5
(40.1)
−0.1
(31.8)
−4.2
(24.4)
4.5
(40.1)
Record low °C (°F) −30.0
(−22.0)
−31.1
(−24.0)
−25.0
(−13.0)
−8.0
(17.6)
−2.8
(27.0)
2.2
(36.0)
6.4
(43.5)
3.0
(37.4)
−5.0
(23.0)
−10.0
(14.0)
−21.2
(−6.2)
−26.1
(−15.0)
−31.1
(−24.0)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 29.4
(1.16)
29.7
(1.17)
31.1
(1.22)
33.8
(1.33)
43.8
(1.72)
74.2
(2.92)
66.5
(2.62)
48.7
(1.92)
47.6
(1.87)
35.3
(1.39)
36.1
(1.42)
32.2
(1.27)
508.4
(20.02)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 6.7 6.1 6.8 6.4 7.1 8.6 6.8 5.3 5.7 5.2 6.2 6.6 77.5
Average relative humidity (%) 85.9 88.3 78.1 66.5 61.9 67.4 66.4 63.4 69.6 77.3 86.5 87.8 74.5
Source 1: Pogoda.ru[33]
Source 2: World Meteorological Organization (precipitation and humidity 1981–2010)[34]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Ковбасний магнат, який всім догодив: хто такий Андрій Райкович [Sausage tycoon who pleased everyone: who is Andriy Raykovych]. 24 Kanal (in Ukrainian). 30 November 2020. Retrieved 30 November 2020.
  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. ^ Mikhail Levchenko. Hanshchyna (Ганьщина Україна). Opyt russko-ukrainskago slovari︠a︡. Tip. Gubernskago upravlenii︠a︡, 1874.
  4. ^ a b Goodbye, Lenin: Ukraine moves to ban communist symbols, BBC News (14 April 2015)
    (in Ukrainian) Verkhovna Rada renamed Kirovograd, Ukrayinska Pravda (14 July 2016)
  5. ^ Ukraine, The World Factbook.
  6. ^ КИУ: В Днепропетровске и Кировограде – серьезные нарушения, 20 Minutes.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Sweeping out Soviet past: Kirovohrad renamed Kropyvnytsky, UNIAN (14 July 2016)
  8. ^ "Poroshenko signs laws on denouncing Communist, Nazi regimes". Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  9. ^ "77% of Kirovograd residents favor return of city's name of Yelisavetgrad - media". Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 December 2015. Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  11. ^ "Комитет Рады предлагает переименовать Кировоград в Ингульск, - Вятрович". Censor. 23 December 2015.
  12. ^ a b (in Ukrainian) Profile Committee of the Council decided on a new name for Kirovohrad, Ukrayinska Pravda (31 March 2016)
  13. ^ (in Ukrainian) Verkhovna Rada renamed Kirovograd, Ukrayinska Pravda (14 July 2016)
  14. ^ "Офіційний портал Верховної Ради України". Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  15. ^ "Кропивницкая городская громада" (in Russian). Портал об'єднаних громад України.
  16. ^ "Про утворення та ліквідацію районів. Постанова Верховної Ради України № 807-ІХ". Голос України (in Ukrainian). 2020-07-18. Retrieved 2020-10-03.
  17. ^ "Нові райони: карти + склад" (in Ukrainian). Міністерство розвитку громад та територій України.
  18. ^ "Famine and Disease in South Russia Province" New York Times, 5 Aug. 1901. New York Times. 26 June 2009 [1].
  19. ^ Rosenthal, Herman. Broyde, Isaac. Janovsy, S. Jewish Encyclopedia.com "Yelisavetgrad:Elisavetgrad", accessed June 20, 2009
  20. ^ "Russian City Burning; Jews Being Massacred," NY Times, 12 Dec. 1905, accessed 25 June 2009 [2].
  21. ^ a b Werth, Nicolas (2019). "Chap. 5: 1918-1921. Les pogroms des guerres civiles russes". Le cimetière de l'espérance. Essais sur l'histoire de l'Union soviétique (1914-1991) [Cemetery of Hope. Essays on the History of the Soviet Union (1914–1991)]. Collection Tempus (in French). Perrin. ISBN 978-2-262-07879-9.
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-11-20. Retrieved 2015-11-20.
  23. ^ a b c d e (in Russian). Kropyvnytskyi: Oblast University Library. Archived from the original on 2016-11-07.
  24. ^ "Церкви, соборы - Кировограда" (in Russian). elisavetgrad.ho.ua. from the original on 2013-04-27.
  25. ^ "Всеукраїнський перепис населення 2001 - Результати - Основні підсумки - Національний склад населення - Кіровоградська область". Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  26. ^ https://ratinggroup.ua/files/ratinggroup/reg_files/municipal_survey_may_2023_ua_-_final.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  27. ^ "Демоскоп Weekly - Приложение. Справочник статистических показателей". Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  28. ^ Population census, 1926 year
  29. ^ "Демоскоп Weekly - Приложение. Справочник статистических показателей". Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  30. ^ . Archived from the original on December 31, 2014.
  31. ^ a b "Всеукраїнський перепис населення 2001 - Результати - Основні підсумки - Національний склад населення". Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  32. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 April 2015. Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  33. ^ Погода и Климат – Климат Кропивницкий [Weather and Climate – The Climate of Kropyvnytskyi] (in Russian). Weather and Climate (Погода и климат). Retrieved 29 October 2021.
  34. ^ . World Meteorological Organization. Archived from the original on 17 July 2021. Retrieved 17 July 2021.

External links edit

  • "Elizabethgrad" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. VIII (9th ed.). 1878. p. 146.
  • "Elisavetgrad" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 9 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 279–280.
  •   Kropyvnytskyi travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Kropyvnytskyi Daily News (in Ukrainian and Russian)
  • Bez Kupur - News of Kropyvnytskyi and Kirovohrad region without limits on the truth (in Ukrainian)
  • Online magazine for young people - "Grechka". News about the cultural life of Kropyvnytskyi young people and Kropyvnytskyi region young people.
  • Kropyvnytskyi's portal: photos, news, information, etc. (in Russian)
  • Kropyvnytskyi news, history of the city, photos, science. 2022-05-30 at the Wayback Machine (in Ukrainian)
  • Kropyvnytskyi events, history of the city, photos, news and chats with citizen (in Ukrainian)
  • SKY - News of Kropyvnytskyi and Kirovohrad region (in Ukrainian)

kropyvnytskyi, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, ukrainian, july, 2022, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, translation, like, deepl, google, translate, useful, starting, point, translati. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Ukrainian July 2022 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Ukrainian Wikipedia article at uk Kropivnickij see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated uk Kropivnickij to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Kropyvnytskyi Ukrainian Kropivnickij IPA kropɪu ˈnɪtsʲkɪj is a city in central Ukraine situated on the Inhul River It is the administrative center of Kirovohrad Oblast Population 219 676 2022 estimate 2 Kropyvnytskyi KropivnickijCityFlagCoat of armsNickname Little Paris used in historical context Motto s With peace and goodnessKropyvnytskyiLocation of KropyvnytskyiShow map of Ukraine Kirovohrad OblastKropyvnytskyiKropyvnytskyi Ukraine Show map of UkraineCoordinates 48 30 0 N 32 16 0 E 48 50000 N 32 26667 E 48 50000 32 26667Country UkraineOblast Kirovohrad OblastRaionKropyvnytskyi RaionFounded1754City rights1765 1782Government MayorAndriy Raykovych 1 Proposition 1 Area City103 km2 40 sq mi Elevation124 m 407 ft Population 2022 City219 676 Density2 100 km2 5 500 sq mi Metro233 820Postal code25000 490Area code 380 522Sister cities Bulgaria DobrichWebsitekr rada wbr gov wbr uaOver its history Kropyvnytskyi has changed its name several times The settlement was known as Yelysavethrad Yelisavetgrad IPA jɛlʲɪsɑvʲɛtˈɦrɑd after Empress Elizabeth of Russia from 1752 to 1924 or simply Elysavet 3 In 1924 as part of the Soviet Union it became known as Zinovievsk Zinov yevsk IPA zʲinɔu ˈjɛu sʲk in honour of the revolutionary Grigory Zinoviev who was born there Following the assassination of Sergei Kirov in 1934 the town was renamed Kirovo Kirovo IPA ˈkʲirɔwɔ in his honour Concurrently with the formation of Kirovohrad Oblast on 10 January 1939 and to distinguish it from Kirov Oblast in central Russia Kirovo was renamed Kirovohrad Kirovograd IPA kirɔwɔˈɦrɑd 4 As part of independent Ukraine the name of the city was then changed to Kropyvnytskyi in 2016 due to decommunization laws in honour of Marko Kropyvnytskyi who was born near the city 4 However Kirovohrad Oblast was not renamed because it is mentioned in the Constitution of Ukraine only a constitutional amendment could change the name of the oblast 5 During the Ukrainian presidential election of 2004 the city achieved country wide notoriety due to mass election fraud committed by local authorities and after that became known as District 100 its community number according to the Central Elections Committee 6 Notable figures born in the city include Grigory Zinoviev Volodymyr Vynnychenko Arseny Tarkovsky Afrikan Spir Marko Kropyvnytskyi and others Contents 1 Name origins 1 1 Yelisavetgrad 1 2 Zinovievsk 1 3 Kirovo and Kirovograd 1 4 Kropyvnytskyi 2 Administrative status 3 History 3 1 18th and 19th century from military settlement to trade centre 3 2 Early 20th century famine and pogroms 3 3 Ukrainian War of Independence and Ukrainian Soviet War 3 4 Soviet rule 3 5 Russian invasion of Ukraine 4 Geography 4 1 Urban layout 4 1 1 Soviet period 4 2 Architecture 5 Symbols 6 Demography 6 1 Historical dynamic 7 Notable people 7 1 Sport 8 Climate 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksName origins editYelisavetgrad edit nbsp Theatre square in YelisavetgradThe name Yelisavetgrad usually spelled Elisavetgrad or Elizabethgrad in English language publications is believed to have evolved as the amalgamation of the fortress name and the common Eastern Slavonic element grad Old Church Slavonic grad a settlement encompassed by a wall Its first documented usage dates back to 1764 when Yelisavetgrad Province was organized together with the Yelisavetgrad Lancer Regiment Presenting a letter of grant on January 11 1752 to Major General Jovan Horvat the organizer of New Serbia settlements Empress Elizabeth of Russia ordered to found an earthen fortress and name it Fort St Elizabeth see On the Historical Meaning of the Name Elizabeth for Our City Archived 2007 12 27 at the Wayback Machine in Ukrainian Thus simultaneously the future city was named in honour of its formal founder the Russian empress and also in honor of her heavenly patroness St Elizabeth Zinovievsk edit Following the Russian Revolution and founding of the Soviet Union in 1924 the city was renamed Zinovievsk after Grigory Zinoviev a Soviet statesman and one of the leaders of the Russian Communist Party Bolsheviks 7 He was born in Yelisavetgrad on September 20 September 8 O S 1883 At the time he was honored by the name he was a member of the Politburo and the Chairman of the Comintern s Executive Committee Kirovo and Kirovograd edit On December 27 1934 after the assassination of Sergei Kirov Zinovievsk and other Soviet cities was renamed again this time as Kirovo and then as Kirovohrad 7 The latter name appeared simultaneously with the creation of Kirovograd Oblast on January 10 1939 7 and was aimed at differentiating the region from Kirov Oblast in present day Russia After Ukraine regained independence the name of the city started to be spelled according to Ukrainian pronunciation as Kirovohrad The previous Russified orthography remains widely used on account of the widespread use of the Russian language in the region Kropyvnytskyi edit Since 1991 numerous discussions had been held on the city s name A number of activists supported returning the city to its original name Yelisavetgrad or now Yelysavethrad in Ukrainian transcription Other suggestions for contemporary Ukraine included Tobilevychi in honour of the Tobilevych family the Coryphaei of the classic Ukrainian drama established in Yelysavethrad in 1882 Zlatopil from Ukrainian zolote pole literally golden field and Stepohrad Ukrainian for city of steppes in recognition of the agricultural status of the city Ukrayinsk or Ukrayinoslav i e the glorifying Ukraine one and Novokozachyn to commemorate the semi famous Cossack regiment which could have been quartered at the present day city location The President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko signed the bill banning Communist symbols on May 15 2015 which required places associated with communism to be renamed within a six month period 8 On 25 October 2015 during local elections 76 6 of the Kirovohrad voters voted for renaming the city to Yelisavetgrad 9 A draft law at the time before the Ukrainian parliament would prohibit any names associated with Russian history since the 14th century which would make the name Yelisavetgrad inadmissible as well 10 A committee of the Verkhovna Rada Ukraine s parliament chose the name Inhulsk on 23 December 2015 This name is a reference to the nearby Inhul river 11 On 31 March 2016 the State Construction Regional Policy and the Local help committee of the Verkhovna Rada recommended to parliament to rename Kirovohrad to Kropyvnytskyi 12 This name is a reference to writer actor and playwright Marko Kropyvnytskyi who was born near the city 12 On 14 July 2016 the name of the city was finally changed to Kropyvnytskyi 7 13 14 Administrative status edit nbsp Kropyvnytskyi railway station nbsp City main post officeKropyvnytskyi serves as administrative center of Kropyvnytskyi Raion and hosts the administration of Kropyvnytskyi urban hromada one of the hromadas of Ukraine 15 Until 18 July 2020 Kropyvnytskyi was designated as a city of oblast significance and belonged to Kropyvnytskyi Municipality but not to Kropyvnytskyi Raion even though it was the center of the raion It is divided into two districts Fortechnyi and Podilskyi The urban type settlement of Nove is part of the Fortechnyi district As part of the administrative reform of Ukraine which reduced the number of raions of Kirovohrad Oblast to four Kropyvnytskyi Municipality was merged into Kropyvnytskyi Raion 16 17 History edit18th and 19th century from military settlement to trade centre edit nbsp Walls of St Elizabeth fortressThe history of the city beginnings dates back to the year 1754 when Fort St Elizabeth was built on the lands of former Zaporizka Sich in the upper course of the Inhul Suhokleya and Biyanka Rivers The fort was built in 1754 by the will of the empress Elizabeth of Russia and it played a pivotal role in the new lands added to Russia by the Belgrad Peace Treaty of 1739 In 1764 the settlement received status of the center of the Elizabeth province and in 1784 the status of chief town of a district when it was renamed after the fort as Yelyzavethrad nbsp aerial photographThe Fort of St Elizabeth was on a crossroads of trade routes and it eventually became a major trade center The city has held regular fairs four times a year Merchants from all over the Russian Empire have visited these fairs Also there were numerous foreign merchants especially from Greece Developed around the military settlement the city rose to prominence in the 19th century when it became an important trade centre as well as a Ukrainian cultural leader with the first professional theatrical company in either Central or Eastern Ukraine being established here in 1882 7 founded by Mark Kropyvnytsky 7 Tobilevych brothers and Maria Zankovetska 7 Early 20th century famine and pogroms edit Elizabethgrad was ravaged by famine in 1901 and its residents suffered more due to poor government response nbsp tram in the cityThe region is extremely fertile However a drought in 1892 and poor farming methods which never allowed the soil to recover prompted a large famine that plagued the region According to a 1901 New York Times article the Ministry of the Interior denied the persistence of famine in the region and blocked non State charities from bringing aid to the area The reporter wrote The existence of famine was inconvenient at a time when negotiations were pending for foreign loans The governor of the Kherson region Prince Oblonsky refused to acknowledge this famine One non resident and non State worker entered Elizabethgrad and provided The New York Times with an eyewitness account 18 He observed general and acute destitution deaths from starvation widespread typhus shows poverty and little to no work to be found in the region Elizabethgrad was located in the Pale of Settlement and during the 19th century had a substantial Jewish population Elizabethgrad was subjected to several violent pogroms in the late 19th and early 20th century In 1905 another riot flared with Christians killing Jews and plundering the Jewish quarter 19 A contemporary account was reported in The New York Times on December 13 1905 20 Ukrainian War of Independence and Ukrainian Soviet War edit During the Ukrainian revolution the government in the city changed several times nbsp Stamp of the Elysavet Governing Council of Ukrainian People s Republic 11 April 1918On 7 May 1919 paramilitary leader and former divisional general in the Red Army Nykyfor Hryhoriv launched an anti Bolshevik uprising On 8 May 1919 he issued a proclamation To the Ukrainian People Do Ukrayinskogo narodu in which he called upon the Ukrainian people to rise against the Communist imposters singling out the Jewish commissars 21 and the Cheka In only a few weeks Hryhoriv s troops perpetrated 148 pogroms the deadliest of which resulted in the massacre of upwards of 1 000 Jewish people in Yelisavetgrad from 15 to 17 May 1919 21 In total about 3 000 Jews died in the city 22 The Soviet Red Army eventually reconquered the city in 1920 Soviet rule edit During Soviet rule the city economy was dominated by such enterprises as Chervona Zirka Agricultural Machinery Plant current name Elvorti which once provided more than 50 of the USSR need in tractor seeders Hydrosila Hydraulic Units Plant Radiy Radio Component Plant Pishmash Typewriter Plant de facto defunct nowadays and others In World War II Kropyvnytskyi was occupied by Nazi Germany from 5 August 1941 It was subsequently recaptured by Soviet forces on 8 January 1944 Russian invasion of Ukraine edit With the beginning of Russia s large scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 the city began to suffer from rocket attacks by the Russian army On the morning of March 1 2022 the Russian occupiers fired at the Kanatove airfield near Kropyvnytskyi trying to destroy infrastructure facilities On March 12 2022 Russian troops attacked the airfield near the Kanatove railway station as a result of which 7 soldiers were killed On the morning of July 23 2022 13 missiles arrived 8 Kalibr sea based missiles and 5 Kh 22 missiles from the TU 22M3 aircraft The enemy fired at a military airfield and a railway facility Result 19 wounded and 3 dead Air alarms sounded almost daily in the city As of May 24 2022 there were more than 40 000 forcibly displaced people from regions of active hostilities in the city and region According to data on August 29 2022 this figure increased to 85 000 people Also during the war various institutions and enterprises moved to Kropyvnytskyi including Donetsk State University of Internal Affairs from Mariupol originally Donetsk Kharkiv Research Institute of Prosthetics Donetsk National Medical University from Kramatorsk originally Donetsk and Kherson State Agrarian economical University nbsp mural Ukraine is Freedom on one of the residential buildings nbsp photos of fallen heroes in the center of city September 2023Geography editThe city is in the center of Ukraine and within the Dnieper Upland The Inhul river flows through Kropyvnytskyi Within the city several other smaller rivers and brooks runs in the Inhul they include the Suhoklia and the Biyanka nbsp embankment in the cityUrban layout edit The city began as a settlement built in adjustment to a fortress called Yelizaveta Fortress At the end of 1757 the earthen fortifications were almost ready Only the internal layout has changed retaining its dimensions 55x55 sazhens North of the fortress of St Elizabeth behind a small ravine on the banks of the Ingul a soldier s settlement arose under the name of Grechesky or Bykovo named after captain Bykov who was the commandant of the fortress The main streets of Bykovo were Nizhne Bykovskaya Pushkin St Verkhne Bykovaya Chapaeva Ostrovskaya Vasilievskaya Andreevskaya retained its original name Artem Kakhovskaya Tobilevich Pushkina Lane Znamensky and Sibirskaya 23 To the east of the fortress the Permskoye suburb appeared It got its name from the camp of the Perm Carabinieri Regiment Russian Permskij karabinernyj polk called in 1754 to cover the working people and eradicate the Gaidamaks Permskoye was located between the river and the esplanade zone it was a small residential area numbering a dozen blocks with straight streets and lanes The main streets of Perm were Bolshaya Permskaya Fisanovich Sverdlov Bobrinetskaya Gorky International lanes Krepostnoy Postal Ogorodny Soon buildings appeared on the other side of the Ingul This part of the settlement was called Podil and is today forming the central part of the city The drawings of 1762 indicate that a large residential area arose here cut by streets 10 12 sazhens wide into a grid of square and rectangular quarters It became the core of a rapidly growing village The main streets on Podil were Marksa Street Bolshaya Perspektivnaya Nikolaevsky Prospekt Dzerzhinskya Moskovskaya Lenina Dvortsovaya Verkhne Donskaya Timiryazeva Nizhne Donskaya Gogola Uspenskaya K Liebknecht Preobrazhenskaya Merchant R Luxembourg Pokrovskaya Kalinina Mirgorodskaya Decembrists Ingulskad Company Nevskaya Pashutinskaya Volodarsky Aleksandrovskaya Kirov Mikhailovskaya Krasnogvardeiskaya Arkhangelskaya Karabinernaya retained its original name 23 While Bykovo and Permsky quarters were built up by the headquarters department for soldiers and officers then in Podil they are occupied by houses of merchants and artisans The settlements of Kovalevka and Balka apparently founded by the Cossacks adjoined the outskirts in the territory of the modern part of the Balka there is still a lane called Cossack These settlements which eventually merged with the suburban development into a single planning structure initially had a picturesque free tracing of the street network But if over time the layout of the Balka was subjected to only partial regulation then only small fragments remained of the original layout of Kovalevka Bebel St Transportnaya St Molodezhny Lane 23 Almost simultaneously with the appearance of the suburb the following were built the city market on the site of an existing shopping center the wooden Assumption Church on the site of the regional committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine the wooden Vladimirskaya Greek Church the wooden Znamenskaya Church on Bykovo the schismatic prayer house These objects with ordinary mainly wooden manor buildings as well as with fortress structures determined the appearance of the city in the first ten years of its development The planning architectural and spatial composition of the central part of the settlement consisted in the hierarchical subordination of its main street B Perspektivnaya K Marksa with the square on it and ordinary low rise buildings Among this development public houses and shops were sharp accents and the Assumption and Vladimir churches served as dominants The street served as the main axis of the entire composition It divided the suburb into two equal parts and the direction of its route almost coincided with the center of the fortress Thus the fortress with the church in it turned into the third main dominant of the street although it was located outside its boundaries In plan the area was rectangular with an aspect ratio of 1 3 50x150 m On one of the smaller sides it adjoined the main street Bolshaya Perspektivnaya and on the wide side it adjoined the market and a small quarter like the square which is now included in the territory of the market From the side of the market on the square there were a gostiny dvor and butcher shops and on the opposite and smaller sides public buildings Within the retranchement the city occupied an area of 2 3 sq km 1 8 x 1 5 km From the period of the formation of the city the fortress of St Elizabeth was the town planning core of the settlement the place of concentration or attraction of all its main functions The central administrative function was concentrated in the fortress This is the administrative management of the fortress the subordination of the chiefs of the suburbs and settlements to the commandant of the fortress the presence in it of the regimental office of the Cossack regiment The religious center was also located in the fortress of St Elizabeth the Trinity Cathedral Church ruined in 1813 24 The central trading function also gravitated towards the fortress Its place of concentration is the main square The trade function developed with the settlement of lands by artisans and merchants And their appearance was due to the need to service military units inside a large fortress 23 Soviet period edit Prallel to the Biayanka river new streets were formed in the settlement of Balka New quarters have grown in the village Kushchevka Novo Alekseevka Former village Balashovka merged with the city and organically entered its planning structure In 1930 a general plan for the development of the city was developed According to this plan on the site of the square in front of the former town hall the main square of the city was formed with a monument to Kirov in its center In the 50s The construction of 2 storey buildings began in the areas of Lunacharskogo and Mira streets Also in the late 40s early 50s 3 5 storey houses are being built on the Marksa Street From the 60s construction of massive housing estates was commenced with Cheryomushki located in the south west of the city being first such district designed according to the plan of architect A A Sidorenko Such housing estate was constructed also in Novo Nikolaevka District New master plan for the city was developed by the Kharkiv Institute Ukrgorstroyproekt taking into account the placement of a residential multi storey buildings in the new territories of the south west New residential areas were built along Heroyev Ukrainy Street formerly Volkova Street In the 60s the industrial district along Balashovsky district was developed 23 Architecture edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message From 1878 to 1905 Oleksandr Pashutin served as mayor of the city Under his administration advances were made in the areas of education and medicine construction of the water supply system and several public buildings the introduction of the first tram and the establishment of numerous marketplaces Kropyvnytskyi is noted for the quality of its architecture with European style sculptures and antique windows A range of classical and modern monuments Moorish and Baroque palaces and buildings that combine Gothic Rococo and Renaissance motives are extant to this day Today when a high level of building technology of Kropyvnytskyi s masters encourages further construction and restoration nbsp Great Choral Synagogue nbsp Craft school nbsp Mansion I M Marushchak nbsp Early 20th century Art Nouveau architecture nbsp Square in front of the city council nbsp Kropyvnytskyi city council nbsp Security service building nbsp Art Museum nbsp Osmyorkin museum nbsp Old court buildingSymbols editThree blue stripes crossed in the middle of the fortress plan symbolize the fortification location at the confluence of the Inhul Suhukleya and Biyanka rivers The crimson colour favoured by Cossacks refers to the fortress being situated on the lands of the Zaporozhian Cossacks Golden ears together with a golden field on the shield are symbols of the fertile lands and notable agricultural wealth of the region The shield is held by storks which symbolizes happiness fertility and love for the native land The golden tower in the form of a crown expresses that the city is a regional centre The motto With peace and good placed on the azure stripe emphasizes that same idea All the features of the flag correlate with the principal elements of the escutcheon on the coat of arms of the city Demography edit2001 Ukrainian census 25 85 8 Ukrainians 12 0 Russians 0 5 Belarusians 1 7 othersAccording to a survey conducted by the International Republican Institute in April May 2023 77 of the city s population spoke Ukrainian at home and 20 spoke Russian 26 Historical dynamic edit 1897 27 1926 28 1939 29 1959 30 1989 31 2001 31 Ukrainians 23 6 44 6 72 0 75 0 76 9 85 8 Russians 34 6 25 0 10 9 18 6 19 5 12 0 Belarusians 0 1 0 2 0 4 0 8 0 8 0 5 Moldavians 0 03 0 2 0 7 0 4 0 5 0 3 Jews 37 8 27 7 14 6 4 4 1 9 0 1 Notable people editThe history of Kropyvnytskyi boasts memorable events and appearances in the biographies of famous people One of the unsurpassed creators of the modern architectural ensemble of the historical centre of the city of Kropyvnytskyi Y Pauchenko uk was born and lived here Such noted architects as A Dostoyevskyi and O Lishnevskyi ru worked there as well P Kalnyshevsky fought for the freedom of the local cossacks M Pirohov laid the foundation of field surgery and M Kutuzov planned his military operations from the city Natives listened to the lectures of the outstanding slavist V Hryhorovych uk and inherited the knowledge of the land from the ethnographer historian and archeologist V Yastrebov uk In different periods of time the history of the region was connected with the names of the famous Ukrainian writer playwright publicist and statesman Volodymyr Vynnychenko the poet literary and cultural critic Y Malanyuk the physicist theoretician the Nobel Prize laureate Igor Tamm the scientist and inventor one of the creators of the legendary Katyusha G Langeman the composer Yuliy Meitus the pianist and pedagogue G Neigauz the artist and painter O Osmiorkin the poet and translator Arseny Tarkovsky the public and cultural figure memoirist patron of the arts Y Chykalenko the composer pianist pedagogue musician and publicist K Shymanovskyi and the Ukrainian writer dramatist and scriptwriter Y Yanovskyi nbsp Israel Fisanovich 1943Irina Belotelkin 1913 2009 a Russian American artist and fashion designer Felix Blumenfeld 1863 1931 a Russian and Soviet composer conductor and pianist Aaron Bodansky 1887 1960 a Russian born American biochemist Israel Fisanovich 1914 1944 a Soviet Navy submarine commander Moses Gomberg 1866 1947 a chemistry professor at the University of Michigan Boris Hessen 1893 1936 a Soviet physicist philosopher and historian of science Boris Kotlyarov 1913 1982 a Soviet ethnomusicologist and violinist Zevulun Zavel Kwartin 1874 1952 Jewish cantor and composer Heinrich Neuhaus 1888 1964 Russian pianist of German and Polish descent Yury Olesha 1899 1960 a Russian and Soviet writer and novelist Victor Orly born 1962 a contemporary French painter Platon Poretsky 1846 1907 Russian Imperial astronomer mathematician and logician Issachar Ber Ryback 1897 1935 a Jewish Ukrainian French painter and sculptor Afrikan Spir 1837 1890 a Russian neo Kantian philosopher of German Greek descent Arseny Tarkovsky 1907 1989 Russian poet Alexander Zaldostanov born 1963 leader of the Night Wolves Russia s largest motorcycle club Grigory Zinoviev 1883 1936 Bolshevik revolutionary and a prominent member of the CPSU Ivan Olinsky 1878 1962 a Jewish Ukrainian and American painter and art instructor in New York and ConnecticutSport edit nbsp Yevhen Konoplyanka 2016Olesya Dudnik born 1974 a gymnastics coach and former artistic gymnast Grigory Gamarnik 1929 2018 Soviet wrestler Greco Roman world champion 32 Andrei Kanchelskis born 1969 footballer with 456 club caps and 36 for Russia Boris Konfederat born 1943 footballer and referee Yevhen Konoplyanka born 1989 footballer with 275 club caps and 86 for Ukraine Dmytro Mykhaylenko born 1973 footballer with 376 club caps and 23 for Ukraine Serhiy Nazarenko born 1980 footballer with 375 club caps and 56 for Ukraine Maurice Podoloff 1890 1985 American Hockey League and National Basketball Association administrator Valeriy Porkujan born 1944 footballer with 240 club caps and 8 for the Soviet Union Andriy Rusol born 1983 footballer with 252 club caps and 49 for Ukraine Alexei Suetin 1926 2001 Russian chess grandmaster and authorClimate editKropyvnytskyi is in the central region of Ukraine Kropyvnytskyi s climate is moderate continental cold and snowy winters and hot summers The seasonal average temperatures are not too cold in winter not too hot in summer 4 8 C 23 4 F in January and 20 7 C 69 3 F in July The average precipitation is 534 mm 21 in per year with the most in June and July Climate data for Kropyvnytskyi Ukraine 1991 2020 extremes 1948 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 11 1 52 0 18 7 65 7 22 8 73 0 30 5 86 9 35 8 96 4 35 5 95 9 38 1 100 6 39 4 102 9 37 1 98 8 28 9 84 0 21 0 69 8 15 7 60 3 39 4 102 9 Mean daily maximum C F 1 0 30 2 0 6 33 1 6 8 44 2 15 7 60 3 21 9 71 4 25 5 77 9 28 0 82 4 27 7 81 9 21 5 70 7 13 9 57 0 5 8 42 4 0 7 33 3 13 9 57 0 Daily mean C F 3 6 25 5 2 7 27 1 2 3 36 1 9 9 49 8 15 8 60 4 19 6 67 3 21 7 71 1 21 0 69 8 15 4 59 7 8 8 47 8 2 6 36 7 1 8 28 8 9 1 48 4 Mean daily minimum C F 6 2 20 8 5 6 21 9 1 6 29 1 4 3 39 7 9 7 49 5 13 7 56 7 15 4 59 7 14 5 58 1 9 6 49 3 4 5 40 1 0 1 31 8 4 2 24 4 4 5 40 1 Record low C F 30 0 22 0 31 1 24 0 25 0 13 0 8 0 17 6 2 8 27 0 2 2 36 0 6 4 43 5 3 0 37 4 5 0 23 0 10 0 14 0 21 2 6 2 26 1 15 0 31 1 24 0 Average precipitation mm inches 29 4 1 16 29 7 1 17 31 1 1 22 33 8 1 33 43 8 1 72 74 2 2 92 66 5 2 62 48 7 1 92 47 6 1 87 35 3 1 39 36 1 1 42 32 2 1 27 508 4 20 02 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 6 7 6 1 6 8 6 4 7 1 8 6 6 8 5 3 5 7 5 2 6 2 6 6 77 5Average relative humidity 85 9 88 3 78 1 66 5 61 9 67 4 66 4 63 4 69 6 77 3 86 5 87 8 74 5Source 1 Pogoda ru 33 Source 2 World Meteorological Organization precipitation and humidity 1981 2010 34 See also editKropyvnytskyi Region Universal Research Library Remember about the Gas Do not buy Russian goods References edit a b Kovbasnij magnat yakij vsim dogodiv hto takij Andrij Rajkovich Sausage tycoon who pleased everyone who is Andriy Raykovych 24 Kanal in Ukrainian 30 November 2020 Retrieved 30 November 2020 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 Mikhail Levchenko Hanshchyna Ganshina Ukrayina Opyt russko ukrainskago slovari a Tip Gubernskago upravlenii a 1874 a b Goodbye Lenin Ukraine moves to ban communist symbols BBC News 14 April 2015 in Ukrainian Verkhovna Rada renamed Kirovograd Ukrayinska Pravda 14 July 2016 Ukraine The World Factbook KIU V Dnepropetrovske i Kirovograde sereznye narusheniya 20 Minutes a b c d e f g Sweeping out Soviet past Kirovohrad renamed Kropyvnytsky UNIAN 14 July 2016 Poroshenko signs laws on denouncing Communist Nazi regimes Retrieved 20 July 2016 77 of Kirovograd residents favor return of city s name of Yelisavetgrad media Retrieved 20 July 2016 Ukrainian Parliament introduced a bill to ban all Russian geographic names starting from the XIV century Archived from the original on 24 December 2015 Retrieved 20 July 2016 Komitet Rady predlagaet pereimenovat Kirovograd v Ingulsk Vyatrovich Censor 23 December 2015 a b in Ukrainian Profile Committee of the Council decided on a new name for Kirovohrad Ukrayinska Pravda 31 March 2016 in Ukrainian Verkhovna Rada renamed Kirovograd Ukrayinska Pravda 14 July 2016 Oficijnij portal Verhovnoyi Radi Ukrayini Retrieved 20 July 2016 Kropivnickaya gorodskaya gromada in Russian Portal ob yednanih gromad Ukrayini 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 Famine and Disease in South Russia Province New York Times 5 Aug 1901 New York Times 26 June 2009 1 Rosenthal Herman Broyde Isaac Janovsy S Jewish Encyclopedia com Yelisavetgrad Elisavetgrad accessed June 20 2009 Russian City Burning Jews Being Massacred NY Times 12 Dec 1905 accessed 25 June 2009 2 a b Werth Nicolas 2019 Chap 5 1918 1921 Les pogroms des guerres civiles russes Le cimetiere de l esperance Essais sur l histoire de l Union sovietique 1914 1991 Cemetery of Hope Essays on the History of the Soviet Union 1914 1991 Collection Tempus in French Perrin ISBN 978 2 262 07879 9 Mikola Pravda Otaman Grigor yev yakim vin buv naspravdi Molodizhne perehrestya 23 10 2008 Archived from the original on 2015 11 20 Retrieved 2015 11 20 a b c d e Istoriko gradostroitelnyj analiz razvitiya g Kirovograda in Russian Kropyvnytskyi Oblast University Library Archived from the original on 2016 11 07 Cerkvi sobory Kirovograda in Russian elisavetgrad ho ua Archived from the original on 2013 04 27 Vseukrayinskij perepis naselennya 2001 Rezultati Osnovni pidsumki Nacionalnij sklad naselennya Kirovogradska oblast Retrieved 20 July 2016 https ratinggroup ua files ratinggroup reg files municipal survey may 2023 ua final pdf bare URL PDF Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej Retrieved 20 July 2016 Population census 1926 year Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej Retrieved 20 July 2016 Kabuzan V M Archived from the original on December 31 2014 a b Vseukrayinskij perepis naselennya 2001 Rezultati Osnovni pidsumki Nacionalnij sklad naselennya Retrieved 20 July 2016 YIVO Sport Jews in Sport in the USSR Archived from the original on 29 April 2015 Retrieved 20 July 2016 Pogoda i Klimat Klimat Kropivnickij Weather and Climate The Climate of Kropyvnytskyi in Russian Weather and Climate Pogoda i klimat Retrieved 29 October 2021 World Meteorological Organization Climate Normals for 1981 2010 World Meteorological Organization Archived from the original on 17 July 2021 Retrieved 17 July 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kropyvnytskyi nbsp Look up kropyvnytskyi in Wiktionary the free dictionary Elizabethgrad Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol VIII 9th ed 1878 p 146 Elisavetgrad Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 9 11th ed 1911 pp 279 280 nbsp Kropyvnytskyi travel guide from Wikivoyage Kropyvnytskyi Daily News in Ukrainian and Russian Bez Kupur News of Kropyvnytskyi and Kirovohrad region without limits on the truth in Ukrainian Online magazine for young people Grechka News about the cultural life of Kropyvnytskyi young people and Kropyvnytskyi region young people Kropyvnytskyi s portal photos news information etc in Russian Kropyvnytskyi news history of the city photos science Archived 2022 05 30 at the Wayback Machine in Ukrainian Kropyvnytskyi events history of the city photos news and chats with citizen in Ukrainian SKY News of Kropyvnytskyi and Kirovohrad region in Ukrainian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kropyvnytskyi amp oldid 1182738547, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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