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Lychakiv Cemetery

Lychakiv Cemetery (Ukrainian: Личаківський цвинтар, romanizedLychakivs’kyi tsvyntar; Polish: Cmentarz Łyczakowski we Lwowie), officially State History and Culture Museum-Preserve "Lychakiv Cemetery" (Ukrainian: Державний історико-культурний музей-заповідник «Лича́ківський цви́нтар»), is a historic cemetery in Lviv, Ukraine.

Lychakiv Cemetery
Ukrainian: Личаківський цвинтар
Polish: Cmentarz Łyczakowski
One of the cemetery alleys, 2007.
Details
Established1787
Location
CountryUkraine
Coordinates49°49′59″N 24°03′22″E / 49.833°N 24.056°E / 49.833; 24.056
TypePublic (restricted)
Size40 ha
No. of gravesmore than 300,000

History Edit

 
Grave of Józefina Markowska by Julian Markowski [uk]

Since its creation in 1787 as Łyczakowski Cemetery, it has been the main necropolis of the city's (at the time named Lemberg[1]) intelligentsia, middle and upper classes. Initially the cemetery was located on several hills in the borough of Lychakiv, following the imperial Austro-Hungarian (the city was located in Austria-Hungary at the time[1]) edict ordering that all cemeteries be moved outside of the city limits. The original project was prepared by Karol Bauer [pl], the head of the Lviv University botanical garden.

In mid-1850s the cemetery was expanded significantly by Tytus Tchórzewski, who created the present network of alleys and round-abouts. It then became the main city cemetery, and soon most other cemeteries were closed. The two largest that remained were the Yanivskiy Cemetery (Polish: cmentarz Janowski), with many working class graves and the adjacent New Jewish Cemetery. Lychakivskiy Cemetery was used by all Christian sects in the city: in addition to Roman Catholics, it also included Eastern Rite Catholics, Protestants and Orthodox.

After World War II the city (at the time named Lwów[1]) was annexed (from the Second Polish Republic[1]) by the Soviet Union to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. The majority of the surviving pre-war inhabitants of the city were expelled to the former German areas awarded to Poland after the Yalta Conference. This started a period of devastation of historical monuments located at the cemetery. Up to 1971 many of the sculptures were destroyed. However, in 1975 the cemetery was declared a historical monument and the degradation ended. Since the late 1980s, the cemetery has seen constant rebuilding and refurbishment and continues to be one of the principal tourist attractions of Lviv.

In late 2006 the city administration announced plans to transfer the tombs of Stepan Bandera, Yevhen Konovalets, Andriy Melnyk and other key leaders of Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) / Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) to a new area of the cemetery dedicated to the Ukrainian national liberation struggle.[2]

Cemetery sections Edit

Lychakiv Cemetery plan
Plan legend:
1 — Field of Mars
2 — NKVD victims' graves (1941 г.)
3 — Outstanding Poles Pantheon
4 — The eldest graves
5 — Main gates
6 — 1863 January rebels' quarter
7 — 1830−1831 November rebels' quarter
8 — Ukrainian National Army Memorial
9 — Lwów Defenders' Cemetery (Cemetery of Lwów Eaglets)
 
Members of the National Scout Organization of Ukraine «Plast» near the Monument to the SS-Division «Galicia», 2008.

Ukrainian National Army Memorial Edit

The Ukrainian National Army Memorial (Number 8 on the plan) is devoted to the Ukrainian National Army soldiers buried in the cemetery, including soldiers of the SS Division "Galicia". It was established due to the efforts of Ukrainian national-patriotic organizations and the Ukrainian emigrant veterans' movement. It was established with the special effort of Ferentsevich Yuri [uk], a division veteran, Ukrainian emigrant veterans' movement social activist and Plast (National Scout Organization of Ukraine) veteran who took an active part in the creation of memorials to the SS Division Galicia on the mountain Zhbyr [uk] and near the village of Chervone [uk].[3]

Field of Mars Edit

On the north side of the Cemetery is situated Field of Mars (No. 1 on the plan), a war memorial built in 1974. This war memorial contains the graves of 3,800 Soviet soldiers who died in the battles against the Nazi occupiers during World War II) (named Great Patriotic War in Soviet ideology[4]) and against units of Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) (acting up to the mid-1950s). On the wall of the memorial was written a verses:

At the middle of the planet
in the storm clouds thunder
deads are watching the sky
believing in the wisdom of livings

Poetic writing in honor of the Soviet soldiers was eliminated at the direction of urban authorities in 1990s.[5]

 
Cemetery of the Defenders of Lwów
 
Tombs of Stefan Stec, Stefan Bastyr and Władysław Toruń

Lwów Defenders' Cemetery Edit

The Cemetery of the Defenders of Lwów (Cemetery of Eaglets, Polish: Cmentarz Orląt Lwowskich) is a memorial and a burial place for the Poles and their allies who died in Lviv during the hostilities of the Polish-Ukrainian War (1918−1919) and Polish-Soviet War (1919−1921).

The complex is a part of the city's historic Lychakiv Cemetery. There are about 3000 graves in that part of the cemetery; some from the Lwów Eaglets young militia volunteers, after whom that part of the cemetery is named. It was one of the most famous necropolises of the interwar Poland. Lviv was a city in interwar Poland and at the time named Lwów.[1]

In 1925, the ashes of one of the unknown defenders of Lwów were transferred to the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Warsaw. After that was built the «Polish mausoleum» (Lwów Eaglets Memorial).

After World War II the cemetery of Lwów Eaglets was completely destroyed and turned into a truck depot and at one time Eaglets Cemetery was damaged with a bulldozer.[6]

Due to the history of complex Polish-Ukrainian relations, the Polish Eaglets Cemetery was neglected because the Ukrainian authorities did not want to rebuild this monument of young Polish soldiers defending the city in 1920s. Though in the late 1980s, workers of a Polish company which were working in Khmelnytskyi started to redecorate and rebuild the necropolis from its ruins (which was not always legal according to Ukrainian law). Although the Ukrainian authorities tried to stop the works several times, the Poles managed to renovate this important memorial of great Lvovians.

Since 1999 there is also a monument to the Sich Riflemen located just outside the Polish mausoleum.

Since the fall of communism, the cemetery had been rebuilt and refurbished. It was finally reopened on 24 June 2005.

1863 January rebels' hill Edit

In the back part of the cemetery (No. 6 on the plan) on a separate field indicated original steel crosses, located «1863 rebels' hill». Buried here are members Polish January Uprising of 1863, of which a member of the Polish Central National Committee Bronisław Szwarce, the famous zoologist Benedykt Dybowski, cornet Vitebsk land, resting under the central monument rebels Shimon Vizunas Shidlovsky [pl], etc.

Other veterans' sections Edit

There are also numerous parts of the cemetery in which veterans of most wars of 19th and 20th centuries are buried, including the quarters of veterans of:

Notable people Edit

 
Tomb of Maria Konopnicka. Sculpture by Luna Drexlerówna.
 
Tomb of the poet Ivan Franko.
 
Lychakiv Cemetery (2011)

Poles Edit

Since the city for centuries used to be a centre of Polish culture, there are numerous famous Poles buried there. Among them are:

Ukrainians Edit

Among the notable Ukrainians buried there are:

Others Edit

Gallery Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Tong King Lee (2021), The Routledge Handbook of Translation and the City, New York City, New York and London, England: Routledge, ISBN 9781138348875
  2. ^ NKVD victims to be buried in Lviv on November 7 // «ForUm» (www.for-ua.com) 25 October 2006. 1 November 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Дяків М. Відійшов на Вічну Ватру пластун сеньйор керівництва Юрій Ференцевич з куреня «Ватага Бурлаків» // «Пластовий портал» (www.plast.org.ua) 15.02.2011.(in Ukrainian) 2014-10-06 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Friedrich Gorenstein (2019). Redemption. The Russian Library. Translated by Andrew Bromfield. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-023118515-8.
  5. ^ Lemko I.. Pogulyanka with Outskirts // «Lviv newspaper» – 13 Lipnya 2007.(in Ukrainian)
  6. ^ Symbolic Reconciliation, 20 July 2005, Warsaw Voice. Last accessed on 22 March 2006.

External links Edit

  • Detailed history of the Cemetery (in Polish)
  • Pictures of the Cemetery. 288 photo. V.Yashchuk
  • Pictures of the Cemetery (in Polish)
  • More pictures of the Cemetery (captions in Polish)
  • Pictures of Defenders of Lwów Cemetery (in Polish)
  • Lychakivskiy Cemetery on ; Inter-war , Plan Lwowa, W. Horbay, 1938 (in Polish; reprinted Wrocław, 1986).
  • Review of Cemetery as tourist attraction
  • Lychakivskiy Cemetery at Find a Grave

lychakiv, cemetery, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, august, 2017, learn, when, remove, this, template, message. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Lychakiv Cemetery Ukrainian Lichakivskij cvintar romanized Lychakivs kyi tsvyntar Polish Cmentarz Lyczakowski we Lwowie officially State History and Culture Museum Preserve Lychakiv Cemetery Ukrainian Derzhavnij istoriko kulturnij muzej zapovidnik Licha kivskij cvi ntar is a historic cemetery in Lviv Ukraine Lychakiv CemeteryUkrainian Lichakivskij cvintar Polish Cmentarz LyczakowskiOne of the cemetery alleys 2007 DetailsEstablished1787LocationLvivCountryUkraineCoordinates49 49 59 N 24 03 22 E 49 833 N 24 056 E 49 833 24 056TypePublic restricted Size40 haNo of gravesmore than 300 000 Contents 1 History 2 Cemetery sections 2 1 Ukrainian National Army Memorial 2 2 Field of Mars 2 3 Lwow Defenders Cemetery 2 4 1863 January rebels hill 2 5 Other veterans sections 3 Notable people 3 1 Poles 3 2 Ukrainians 3 3 Others 4 Gallery 5 References 6 External linksHistory Edit nbsp Grave of Jozefina Markowska by Julian Markowski uk Since its creation in 1787 as Lyczakowski Cemetery it has been the main necropolis of the city s at the time named Lemberg 1 intelligentsia middle and upper classes Initially the cemetery was located on several hills in the borough of Lychakiv following the imperial Austro Hungarian the city was located in Austria Hungary at the time 1 edict ordering that all cemeteries be moved outside of the city limits The original project was prepared by Karol Bauer pl the head of the Lviv University botanical garden In mid 1850s the cemetery was expanded significantly by Tytus Tchorzewski who created the present network of alleys and round abouts It then became the main city cemetery and soon most other cemeteries were closed The two largest that remained were the Yanivskiy Cemetery Polish cmentarz Janowski with many working class graves and the adjacent New Jewish Cemetery Lychakivskiy Cemetery was used by all Christian sects in the city in addition to Roman Catholics it also included Eastern Rite Catholics Protestants and Orthodox After World War II the city at the time named Lwow 1 was annexed from the Second Polish Republic 1 by the Soviet Union to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic The majority of the surviving pre war inhabitants of the city were expelled to the former German areas awarded to Poland after the Yalta Conference This started a period of devastation of historical monuments located at the cemetery Up to 1971 many of the sculptures were destroyed However in 1975 the cemetery was declared a historical monument and the degradation ended Since the late 1980s the cemetery has seen constant rebuilding and refurbishment and continues to be one of the principal tourist attractions of Lviv In late 2006 the city administration announced plans to transfer the tombs of Stepan Bandera Yevhen Konovalets Andriy Melnyk and other key leaders of Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists OUN Ukrainian Insurgent Army UPA to a new area of the cemetery dedicated to the Ukrainian national liberation struggle 2 Cemetery sections Edit nbsp 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Lychakiv Cemetery plan Plan legend 1 Field of Mars 2 NKVD victims graves 1941 g 3 Outstanding Poles Pantheon 4 The eldest graves 5 Main gates 6 1863 January rebels quarter 7 1830 1831 November rebels quarter 8 Ukrainian National Army Memorial 9 Lwow Defenders Cemetery Cemetery of Lwow Eaglets nbsp Members of the National Scout Organization of Ukraine Plast near the Monument to the SS Division Galicia 2008 Ukrainian National Army Memorial Edit The Ukrainian National Army Memorial Number 8 on the plan is devoted to the Ukrainian National Army soldiers buried in the cemetery including soldiers of the SS Division Galicia It was established due to the efforts of Ukrainian national patriotic organizations and the Ukrainian emigrant veterans movement It was established with the special effort of Ferentsevich Yuri uk a division veteran Ukrainian emigrant veterans movement social activist and Plast National Scout Organization of Ukraine veteran who took an active part in the creation of memorials to the SS Division Galicia on the mountain Zhbyr uk and near the village of Chervone uk 3 Field of Mars EditOn the north side of the Cemetery is situated Field of Mars No 1 on the plan a war memorial built in 1974 This war memorial contains the graves of 3 800 Soviet soldiers who died in the battles against the Nazi occupiers during World War II named Great Patriotic War in Soviet ideology 4 and against units of Ukrainian Insurgent Army UPA acting up to the mid 1950s On the wall of the memorial was written a verses At the middle of the planetin the storm clouds thunderdeads are watching the skybelieving in the wisdom of livingsPoetic writing in honor of the Soviet soldiers was eliminated at the direction of urban authorities in 1990s 5 nbsp Cemetery of the Defenders of Lwow nbsp Tombs of Stefan Stec Stefan Bastyr and Wladyslaw TorunLwow Defenders Cemetery Edit Main article Cemetery of the Defenders of Lwow The Cemetery of the Defenders of Lwow Cemetery of Eaglets Polish Cmentarz Orlat Lwowskich is a memorial and a burial place for the Poles and their allies who died in Lviv during the hostilities of the Polish Ukrainian War 1918 1919 and Polish Soviet War 1919 1921 The complex is a part of the city s historic Lychakiv Cemetery There are about 3000 graves in that part of the cemetery some from the Lwow Eaglets young militia volunteers after whom that part of the cemetery is named It was one of the most famous necropolises of the interwar Poland Lviv was a city in interwar Poland and at the time named Lwow 1 In 1925 the ashes of one of the unknown defenders of Lwow were transferred to the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Warsaw After that was built the Polish mausoleum Lwow Eaglets Memorial After World War II the cemetery of Lwow Eaglets was completely destroyed and turned into a truck depot and at one time Eaglets Cemetery was damaged with a bulldozer 6 Due to the history of complex Polish Ukrainian relations the Polish Eaglets Cemetery was neglected because the Ukrainian authorities did not want to rebuild this monument of young Polish soldiers defending the city in 1920s Though in the late 1980s workers of a Polish company which were working in Khmelnytskyi started to redecorate and rebuild the necropolis from its ruins which was not always legal according to Ukrainian law Although the Ukrainian authorities tried to stop the works several times the Poles managed to renovate this important memorial of great Lvovians Since 1999 there is also a monument to the Sich Riflemen located just outside the Polish mausoleum Since the fall of communism the cemetery had been rebuilt and refurbished It was finally reopened on 24 June 2005 1863 January rebels hill Edit In the back part of the cemetery No 6 on the plan on a separate field indicated original steel crosses located 1863 rebels hill Buried here are members Polish January Uprising of 1863 of which a member of the Polish Central National Committee Bronislaw Szwarce the famous zoologist Benedykt Dybowski cornet Vitebsk land resting under the central monument rebels Shimon Vizunas Shidlovsky pl etc Other veterans sections Edit There are also numerous parts of the cemetery in which veterans of most wars of 19th and 20th centuries are buried including the quarters of veterans of November Uprising 1830 1831 World War I Polish Defensive War 1939 Victims of the NKVD 1941 World War IINotable people Edit nbsp Tomb of Maria Konopnicka Sculpture by Luna Drexlerowna nbsp Tomb of the poet Ivan Franko nbsp Lychakiv Cemetery 2011 Poles Edit Since the city for centuries used to be a centre of Polish culture there are numerous famous Poles buried there Among them are Roman Abraham general Stefan Banach mathematician Wladyslaw Belza writer Piotr Chmielowski philosopher Benedykt Dybowski soldier adventurer ethnologist and biologist Mieczyslaw Garsztka aviator Mieczyslaw Gebarowicz historian Tadeusz Rozwadowski Polish military leader and one of the founders of modern Poland Franciszek Ksawery Godebski historian Zygmunt Gorgolewski architect designer of the Lviv Opera Seweryn Goszczynski poet Artur Grottger artist Jan Nepomucen Kaminski pl founder of the first theatre in Lwow Wojciech Ketrzynski historian and name sake of the city of Ketrzyn Maria Konopnicka writer Juliusz Konstanty Ordon officer Ludwik Rydygier surgeon Wladyslaw Sadlowski architect Kazimierz Sichulski painter Karol Szajnocha historian Julian Zachariewicz architect Gabriela Zapolska novelist and playwrightUkrainians Edit Among the notable Ukrainians buried there are Oleksander Barvinsky academician politician Vasyl Barvinsky impressionist composer Yevheniya Barvinska pianist choral conductor singer Roman Bezpalkiv Ukrainian painter Ivan Franko poet and reformer of the Ukrainian language Yaroslav Halan playwright and publicist Jacques Hnizdovsky painter printmaker sculptor bookplate designer and illustrator of numerous books both in Ukrainian and English Volodymyr Ivasyuk composer Mykhaylo Kobryn uk theologian Solomiya Krushelnytska soprano opera star Lesya Kryvytska actress Stanyslav Lyudkevych composer Oleksander Ohonovsky lawyer civic leader Anthony Petrushevych historian and philologist Markiyan Shashkevych poet Yurii Shukhevych political prisoner and politician Oleksandr Tysowskyj alternately Alexander Tysovsky founder of Ukrainian Scouting Anatole Vakhnianyn composer and leading cultural figure Iryna Vilde Polotniuk Ukrainian writer Borys Voznytsky uk hero of Ukraine academician director of the Lviv National Gallery Yuriy Starosol skyi uk Chief Scout of Plast from 1972 to 1991Others Edit Edmund Pike Graves pilot and member of the Kosciuszko SquadronGallery Edit nbsp Lychakiv Cemetery main gate c a 1900 nbsp Mausoleum of Kiselka family by Filip Pokutynski pl nbsp Lychakiv Cemetery 2018 References Edit a b c d e Tong King Lee 2021 The Routledge Handbook of Translation and the City New York City New York and London England Routledge ISBN 9781138348875 NKVD victims to be buried in Lviv on November 7 ForUm www for ua com 25 October 2006 Archived 1 November 2006 at the Wayback Machine Dyakiv M Vidijshov na Vichnu Vatru plastun senjor kerivnictva Yurij Ferencevich z kurenya Vataga Burlakiv Plastovij portal www plast org ua 15 02 2011 in Ukrainian Archived 2014 10 06 at the Wayback Machine Friedrich Gorenstein 2019 Redemption The Russian Library Translated by Andrew Bromfield Columbia University Press ISBN 978 023118515 8 Lemko I Pogulyanka with Outskirts Lviv newspaper 13 Lipnya 2007 in Ukrainian Symbolic Reconciliation 20 July 2005 Warsaw Voice Last accessed on 22 March 2006 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lychakiv Cemetery category Detailed history of the Cemetery in Polish Pictures of the Cemetery 288 photo V Yashchuk Pictures of the Cemetery in Polish More pictures of the Cemetery captions in Polish Pictures of Defenders of Lwow Cemetery in Polish Lychakivskiy Cemetery on city plan F 9 Inter war cemetery list p 23 Plan Lwowa W Horbay 1938 in Polish reprinted Wroclaw 1986 Review of Cemetery as tourist attraction Article about Cemeteries Tourist Lychakivskiy Cemetery at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lychakiv Cemetery amp oldid 1176921720, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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