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Sloviansk

Sloviansk[a] is a city in Donetsk Oblast, northern part of the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine. The city was known as Tor until 1784.[6] While it did not actually belong to the raion itself, Sloviansk served as the administrative center of the Sloviansk Raion (district) until its abolition on 18 July 2020.

Sloviansk
Слов'янськ
Sloviansk
Sloviansk
Coordinates: 48°51′12″N 37°37′30″E / 48.85333°N 37.62500°E / 48.85333; 37.62500
Country Ukraine
Oblast Donetsk Oblast
RaionKramatorsk Raion
HromadaSloviansk urban hromada
Founded1645
City status1784
Government
 • MayorVadym Liakh [uk; ru][1] (Opposition Bloc[1])
Area
 • Total58.9 km2 (22.7 sq mi)
Elevation
74 m (243 ft)
Population
 (1 January 2022)[2]
 • Total105,141
 • Density1,800/km2 (4,600/sq mi)
 In June 2022, the population was estimated less than 24,000.[3]
Postal code
84100—84129
Area code+380-6262
ClimateWarm summer subtype
KATOTTHUA14120210010032554
Websitehttp://www.slavrada.gov.ua/

Sloviansk was one of the focal points in the early stages of the war in Donbas, in 2014, as it was one of the first cities to be seized and controlled by Russian-backed rebels (separatists), in mid-April 2014.[7][8] Ukrainian forces then retook control of the city in July 2014, and since then, Sloviansk has been under Ukrainian control.

The 2001 population of Sloviansk was 141,066. Largely due to the ongoing war in Donbass, by early 2022 this was down to 105,141.[9] Following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the city's population fell markedly, to around 24,000 by July 2022, due to shelling, and ongoing war, according to Ukrainian authorities.[10]In April 2023, The Financial Times estimated the population to have recovered to 40-50,000.[11]

History edit

Founding and early history edit

The history of Sloviansk dates back to 1645 when Russian Tsar Alexei Romanov founded a border fortress named Tor[12] against the Crimean attacks and slave raids on the southern suburbs of modern Ukraine and Russia.[13] In 1664, the first salt plant for the extraction of salt was built, and workers began to settle in the area.[14] In 1676, a fortress named Tor was built at the confluence of the Kazenyy Torets and Sukhyy Torets River, where they form the Torets River, a tributary of Donets River.[15] Shortly thereafter, the town of Tor grew up next to the fortress.[13]

 
Sloviansk in the late 19th century

As several salt lakes were located close by, the town soon became a major producer of salt. During the sixteenth century, salt production was the principal local industry. In 1784, the city was renamed Slovenske, and a decade later, Sloviansk (Slavyansk). [16]

In 1827, military doctor A. Yakovlev was the first to use mud treatment and bathing in Lake Ropne to treat sick soldiers. Four years later, a military hospital of 200 beds was opened near the lake, where mud therapy was used. In 1832, the first resort was established on the shores of Lake Ropne.[17] With the construction of a railway line in 1869, the town grew rapidly, from a population of 5,900 in 1847 to 15,700 by 1897.[16]

20th century edit

 
Sloviansk in the early 20th century

In April 1918, troops loyal to the Ukrainian People's Republic briefly took control of Sloviansk.[18] Sloviansk was then, along with the rest of Ukraine, incorporated into the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.

In World War II, the city was occupied by Nazi Germans on 28 October 1941. In December 1941, the SS Einsatzkommando 4b murdered more than a thousand Jews who lived in Sloviansk.[19] The Red Army temporarily expelled the Nazi occupiers on 17 February 1943. Germans retook it on 1 March 1943. The Red Army finally liberated Sloviansk on 6 September 1943.

Salt extraction in Sloviansk in turn gave rise to salt refining and packaging, soda and other chemical manufacturing. By 1972 there were 18 related enterprises in the city, including plastics and the making of vinyl records.[16] Sloviansk reached its peak population of 143,000 in 1987. Sloviansk would remain as part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic until its dissolution in 1991, after which the city became part of an independent Ukraine.[16]

Siege of Sloviansk edit

The 2014 Ukrainian revolution for the most part passed Sloviansk by, with no large-scale gatherings or events in the city, and polls showing people in the east of Ukraine to be largely opposed to the Maidan movement in Kyiv.[20] However, Sloviansk would quickly become the epicentre of events following the fallout of the revolution. On 12 April 2014, in the crisis and chaos which gripped the country following the revolution's installing of the First Yatsenyuk government, a reported 55 armed men, led by Russian military veteran Igor Girkin, known as 'Igor Strelkov' stormed Sloviansk, quickly capturing the executive committee building, the police department, and the SBU office of the city.[21][22][23] Ukrainian Interior Minister Arsen Avakov described the gunmen as "terrorists" and vowed to use the Ukrainian special forces to retake the buildings.[24][25] On 13 April 2014, there were reports of fighting between the gunmen and Ukrainian troops, with casualties reported on both sides.[26][27] The BBC's David Stern described the pro-Russian forces as carrying Russian weapons and resembling the soldiers that took over Crimean installations at the start of the 2014 Crimean crisis.[26][28]

 
Pro-Russia rebels in Sloviansk

Initially, the pro-Russia rebels enjoyed strong support, with the New York Times reporting: "Thousands of residents thronged a large square in front of City Hall to welcome the pro-Russian putsch, chanting “Russia, Russia” and posing for photographs with gunmen they hailed as their saviors from the fascists who had seized power in Kiev with the February ouster of President Victor F. Yanukovych, a Russian-speaker from Donetsk."[29]

 
Victory Day 2014 in Sloviansk

Elected mayor of Sloviansk Nelya Shtepa gave a series of contradictory statements on her support for the pro-Russia side, and was then taken captive by the pro-Russia side. Shtepa would be one of several high-profile detainments during rebel control of Sloviansk. [30] On April 14 the pro-Russia side installed their own 'people's mayor' Vyacheslav Ponomarev, to deal with civilian matters, and press, while Strelkov / Girkin took charge of military matters.[31] Throughout April, and May, Ponomarev would hold near daily press conferences in the city's admininstrative building.[32] On May 9, Victory Day, there was a parade, and large gathering of people in the central Square of Sloviansk. Nelya Shtepa appeared, the first time she had been seen in public since mid-April, and gave a pro-Russian speech on stage, urging people to vote in the referendum scheduled for May 11. Recently freed rebel leader Pavel Gubarev also appeared on stage.[33] Referendums went ahead across Donbas on May 11, including Sloviansk, with the pro-Russia side reporting a turnout of near 75%, with over 90% vosting for self rule as part of the Donetsk/Luhansk People's Republics. However, the referendums were not monitored, or endorsed, by any international observers, or organisations, and their results almost universally unrecognised in the west. Russia issued a statement saying they 'respected' the results of the referendums, but stopped short of recognising them.[34][35]

Fighting intensified throughout May, as Ukrainian forces escalated their 'ATO' (Anti-Terror Operation) to retake the city, with a Ukrainian military helicopter shot down at the start of the month, and multiple casualties reported in fighting on both sides.[36] May would also see escalating civilian casualties in Sloviansk, as Ukrainian forces began their assault on the city. On May 5, 30-year-old Irina Boevets was killed by a stray Ukrainian bullet, as she stepped out on her balcony. The Guardian at the time reported these civilian deaths as "fuelling pro-Russian sentiment".[37] Fighting between sides would wage on May, with increasing intensity. A follow-up referendum to the referendum on May 11 had been planned for May 18th, giving voters the option of joining Russia, however this was abandoned due to the escalation of fighting. On 29 May 2014, a Ukrainian helicopter carrying fourteen Ukrainian special service soldiers, including General Serhiy Kulchytskiy – the head of combat and special training for Ukraine's National Guard, crashed after being shot down by militants near Sloviansk. Ukraine's outgoing President Olexander Turchynov described the downing as a "terrorist attack," and blamed pro-Russian militants.[38]

As June went on, it became clear that the pro-Russia side were losing the battle for Sloviansk, beset by a number of problems, including infighting, with enmity between 'people's mayor' Ponomarev, and Strelkov/Girkin, resulting in Strelkov/Girkin having Ponomarev arrested, and dismissed from his duties, on June 12.[31] Ukrainian forces further stepped up their shelling of Sloviansk in June.[39] Sloviansk was ultimately held by Russian-backed rebels for nearly three months, from mid-April until 5 July 2014, during which time fighting between the rebels and the Ukrainian army escalated, along with shelling of civilian areas of the city, with both military and civilian casualties.[40] In late June, the Ukrainian army started advancing on Sloviansk, taking strategically significant locationed, including the Karachun Mountains. This, combined with Strelkov's videos decrying a lack of support, made the rebel retreat an inevitability.[41][42] A 10-day ceasefire, not entirely observed by either side, ended on June 30, and in early July, faced with a full-on Ukrainian offensive, Strelkov co-ordinated the retreat of his forces from Sloviansk.[43] Initially they had planned to go to nearby Kramatorsk, however when it became clear that the Ukrainian army would also take Kramatorsk, which they duly did, most headed to Donetsk, which would then become their stronghold.[44]

Sloviansk was one of several territories taken by Ukrainian forces at this time, including the nearby cities of Kramatorsk, and Kostiantynivka.[45] Although Sloviansk's capture was a military victory for Ukrainian forces, the successful co-ordinated retreat of the rebel forces, and fall back to a fortified Donetsk, led to accusations, and recriminations, from the Ukrainian side.[46]

General Serhiy Krivonos, Deputy Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine, said in 2020 that the Ukrainian Army was aware of the movement of Girkin's columns out of Sloviansk but did not attack the columms:

Having some information from our sources from Sloviansk and Kramatorsk, we understood that they [the separatists] would come out. This understanding was clearly formed between July 2 and 3. And already on the 4th it was clear that they would leave that night from 4 to 5 July. We actively conducted reconnaissance and gave coordinates directly on the night movement of the column, and on the daytime location of the enemy in Kramatorsk, and then on the exit of Girkin's columns from Kramatorsk. These coordinates were given. There was no implementation of [an attack on] these coordinates.[47]

A series of incidents, and a difficult ongoing living situation had resulted in support for the pro-Russian rebels eroding in the near three months that Sloviansk was under their control. The New York Times reported that 'many of the same people' who had once supported the pro-Russia rebels 'rushed into the same square to greet Ukrainian military trucks as soldiers handed out free food. Virtually nobody now admits to having supported the separatists.' Konstantin Batozsky, an aide to the Kyiv-appointed governor of the Donetsk region, which included Sloviansk, stated of the people of Sloviansk: “They are happy to welcome whoever gives them food.” [29]

Aftermath of the siege and decommunization edit

Following Ukraine's recapture of Sloviansk in July 2014, Ukrainian authorities began a 'hunt' for collaborators, setting up a hotline encouraging residents of the city to inform on those who had 'collaborated with pro-Russian rebels'. There were further discoveries of 'mass graves'. The New York Times reported at this time "There is no mood of joyous celebration at what Ukrainian officials trumpet as the city’s “liberation.” Anger and animosity bubbles just below the calm surface. In each workplace, everyone knows who did what during rebel rule, creating poisonous currents of suspicion."[29] The population of Sloviansk had fallen to around 80,000 at this time.

In 2015, as part of Ukraine's process of decommunization, the fate of Sloviansk's statue of Lenin, in the city's central square, became a topic of heated debate at council meetings. Large factions from Ukrainian ultra-national groups Svoboda and the Right Sector attended these meetings, in support of the removal / destruction of the statue. There were also locals in favour of keeping the statue, with a petition of 4,500 signatures supporting the Lenin statue remaining. No consensus had been reached, when in the early hours of June 3, Right Sector militants tore the statue down.[48] Also in 2015, a plaque to the memory of Volodymyr Rybak, a Ukrainian politician killed by pro-Russian rebels in 2014, was placed in the town center.[49]

Although war continued in parts of Donbas, there were no notable incidents in Sloviansk following its recapture by Ukrainian forces in July of 2014, until 2022. In 2016, the city was visited by Orlando Bloom in his role as a UNICEF goodwill ambassador.[50] The population of Sloviansk would recover in the years up to 2022, to pre-2014 level.[16]

Russian invasion of Ukraine edit

 
Damage to a residential building in Sloviansk after the April 2023 airstrike by Russia

Sloviansk has been affected from the start of the 2022 Invasion of Ukraine, without becoming a central theatre of war.[11] Sloviansk has been described as being a "crucial part Moscow’s objective of capturing all of the Donbas region".[51]

The city has several times fallen under shelling, with the loss of civilian life.[52][53][54] An April 2023 profile of Sloviansk by the Financial Times described the city as being like a 'ghost town', with mayor Vadym Lyakh having given an order to evacuate. The population of Sloviansk at this time was estimated at 40-50,000, up from 2022's estimate of 24,000, but significantly down from the pre-Russian invasion population of over 100,000.[11] In September 2023, The Guardian reported from a Sloviansk still on a war footing.[55]

Demographics edit

According to the 2001 Ukrainian Census:[56]

Ethnicity
Ukrainians 104,423 73.1%
Russians 33,649 23.6%
Turks 829 0.6%
Belarusians 766 0.5%
Armenians 592 0.4%
Greeks 320 0.2%
Roma people 279 0.2%
Azerbaijanis 208 0.1%

Total 2001 population: 141,066

Geography edit

Sloviansk is in the valley of the Kazennyi Torets River, a right tributary of the Donets, in the Donbas region.

Karachun Mountains are the highest point of Sloviansk, situated to the south of the city.[57]

Climate edit

The climate in Sloviansk is a mild to warm summer subtype (Köppen: Dfb) of the humid continental climate.

Climate data for Sloviansk
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Daily mean °C (°F) −5.9
(21.4)
−5.4
(22.3)
−0.2
(31.6)
9.4
(48.9)
16.2
(61.2)
20.0
(68.0)
21.7
(71.1)
20.8
(69.4)
15.5
(59.9)
8.4
(47.1)
1.8
(35.2)
−2.5
(27.5)
8.3
(46.9)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 45
(1.8)
34
(1.3)
27
(1.1)
39
(1.5)
42
(1.7)
57
(2.2)
51
(2.0)
40
(1.6)
39
(1.5)
30
(1.2)
42
(1.7)
44
(1.7)
490
(19.3)
Source: Climate-Data.org[58]

Economy and Industry edit

 
The Sloviansk Balneological Institute
  • Before the war in 2014, Sloviansk was an important industrial and health resort center, providing spa treatments and mud baths using mud from the bottom of salt lakes located nearby, and attracting tourists from across Ukraine and beyond. After sustaining damage in 2014, some of the city's resort facilities were repaired, and operated until active war broke out in Sloviansk again in 2022. As of 2023, none of Sloviansk's spa resorts or tourist facilities are in operation.[59]
  • The Slovvazhmash heavy-machinery production plant, specialised in chemical equipment for coke production.[16]
  • The Betonmash machine-building factory, specialised in concrete mixing plants, spare parts for mining equipment and metal works, parts for coke ovens.[60]
  • The Sloviansk mechanical plant, specialised in coke production as well as overhead cranes and other machinery.[61]

Transport edit

 
Sloviansk Railway Station

Sloviansk is a nexus of a number of railways and roads. The city is served by three railway passenger stations: Slovianskyi Resort (in the northeast), ‘Mashchormet’ (at the junction), and 'Sloviansk' (the main station, west of the junction, on the southwest side of the city). Three railway lines leave the city in directions of Lozova, Lyman and Kramatorsk. The local population is served by a trolleybus network consisting of two permanent routes and one summer route. Marshrutkas are widely used.

The M03 goes by the edge of Sloviansk. In early 2015, Ukraine lost control of the section of this from Debaltsevo on, then in early 2023 Ukraine lost control of the section from Soledar to Debaltsevo. H20 leaves from the city toward Mariupol, via Kramatorsk, Kostiantynivka, Donetsk, and Volnovakha. Ukraine lost control of part of this highway, around Donetsk, in 2014. The first part of 2022 saw fierce fighting on or around the highway, and by summer of 2022, Ukraine had lost control of the H20 highway, from around Donetsk onto Mariupol.

Religious organizations edit

 
The Church of the Resurrection of Christ

Christian churches:

  • Cathedral of New Martyrs and Confessors of the Russian Orthodox Church
  • Church of the Resurrection of Christ
  • Church of the Andrew the Apostle
  • Church of Oleksandr Nevskyi
  • Church of Seraphim Sarovsky
  • The "Kind New" Christian Center Church
  • Church of Jesus Christ of the Protestant Church of Ukraine

Notable people edit

See also edit

External links edit

  • (in Russian, Ukrainian, and English) Official website
  • (in Russian) Unofficial website of Slavjansk Trolleybus system
  • Marble sculpture of Nicolai Shmatko

Sources edit

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References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Ukrainian: Слов'янськ, IPA: [slou̯ˈjɑnʲsʲk] ; Russian: Славянск, romanizedSlavyansk,[4] IPA: [slɐˈvʲansk] or [ˈslavʲɪnsk][5]

sloviansk, ukrainian, naval, vessel, ukrainian, patrol, vessel, town, russia, slavyansk, kuban, city, donetsk, oblast, northern, part, donbas, region, eastern, ukraine, city, known, until, 1784, while, actually, belong, raion, itself, served, administrative, c. For the Ukrainian naval vessel see Ukrainian patrol vessel Sloviansk For the town in Russia see Slavyansk on Kuban Sloviansk a is a city in Donetsk Oblast northern part of the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine The city was known as Tor until 1784 6 While it did not actually belong to the raion itself Sloviansk served as the administrative center of the Sloviansk Raion district until its abolition on 18 July 2020 Sloviansk Slov yanskCityFlagCoat of armsSlovianskShow map of Donetsk OblastSlovianskShow map of UkraineCoordinates 48 51 12 N 37 37 30 E 48 85333 N 37 62500 E 48 85333 37 62500Country UkraineOblast Donetsk OblastRaionKramatorsk RaionHromadaSloviansk urban hromadaFounded1645City status1784Government MayorVadym Liakh uk ru 1 Opposition Bloc 1 Area Total58 9 km2 22 7 sq mi Elevation74 m 243 ft Population 1 January 2022 2 Total105 141 Density1 800 km2 4 600 sq mi In June 2022 the population was estimated less than 24 000 3 Postal code84100 84129Area code 380 6262ClimateWarm summer subtypeKATOTTHUA14120210010032554Websitehttp www slavrada gov ua Sloviansk was one of the focal points in the early stages of the war in Donbas in 2014 as it was one of the first cities to be seized and controlled by Russian backed rebels separatists in mid April 2014 7 8 Ukrainian forces then retook control of the city in July 2014 and since then Sloviansk has been under Ukrainian control The 2001 population of Sloviansk was 141 066 Largely due to the ongoing war in Donbass by early 2022 this was down to 105 141 9 Following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine the city s population fell markedly to around 24 000 by July 2022 due to shelling and ongoing war according to Ukrainian authorities 10 In April 2023 The Financial Times estimated the population to have recovered to 40 50 000 11 Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding and early history 1 2 20th century 1 3 Siege of Sloviansk 1 4 Aftermath of the siege and decommunization 1 5 Russian invasion of Ukraine 2 Demographics 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 4 Economy and Industry 5 Transport 6 Religious organizations 7 Notable people 8 See also 9 External links 9 1 Sources 10 References 10 1 NotesHistory editFounding and early history edit The history of Sloviansk dates back to 1645 when Russian Tsar Alexei Romanov founded a border fortress named Tor 12 against the Crimean attacks and slave raids on the southern suburbs of modern Ukraine and Russia 13 In 1664 the first salt plant for the extraction of salt was built and workers began to settle in the area 14 In 1676 a fortress named Tor was built at the confluence of the Kazenyy Torets and Sukhyy Torets River where they form the Torets River a tributary of Donets River 15 Shortly thereafter the town of Tor grew up next to the fortress 13 nbsp Sloviansk in the late 19th centuryAs several salt lakes were located close by the town soon became a major producer of salt During the sixteenth century salt production was the principal local industry In 1784 the city was renamed Slovenske and a decade later Sloviansk Slavyansk 16 In 1827 military doctor A Yakovlev was the first to use mud treatment and bathing in Lake Ropne to treat sick soldiers Four years later a military hospital of 200 beds was opened near the lake where mud therapy was used In 1832 the first resort was established on the shores of Lake Ropne 17 With the construction of a railway line in 1869 the town grew rapidly from a population of 5 900 in 1847 to 15 700 by 1897 16 20th century edit nbsp Sloviansk in the early 20th centuryIn April 1918 troops loyal to the Ukrainian People s Republic briefly took control of Sloviansk 18 Sloviansk was then along with the rest of Ukraine incorporated into the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic In World War II the city was occupied by Nazi Germans on 28 October 1941 In December 1941 the SS Einsatzkommando 4b murdered more than a thousand Jews who lived in Sloviansk 19 The Red Army temporarily expelled the Nazi occupiers on 17 February 1943 Germans retook it on 1 March 1943 The Red Army finally liberated Sloviansk on 6 September 1943 Salt extraction in Sloviansk in turn gave rise to salt refining and packaging soda and other chemical manufacturing By 1972 there were 18 related enterprises in the city including plastics and the making of vinyl records 16 Sloviansk reached its peak population of 143 000 in 1987 Sloviansk would remain as part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic until its dissolution in 1991 after which the city became part of an independent Ukraine 16 Siege of Sloviansk edit Main article Siege of Sloviansk The 2014 Ukrainian revolution for the most part passed Sloviansk by with no large scale gatherings or events in the city and polls showing people in the east of Ukraine to be largely opposed to the Maidan movement in Kyiv 20 However Sloviansk would quickly become the epicentre of events following the fallout of the revolution On 12 April 2014 in the crisis and chaos which gripped the country following the revolution s installing of the First Yatsenyuk government a reported 55 armed men led by Russian military veteran Igor Girkin known as Igor Strelkov stormed Sloviansk quickly capturing the executive committee building the police department and the SBU office of the city 21 22 23 Ukrainian Interior Minister Arsen Avakov described the gunmen as terrorists and vowed to use the Ukrainian special forces to retake the buildings 24 25 On 13 April 2014 there were reports of fighting between the gunmen and Ukrainian troops with casualties reported on both sides 26 27 The BBC s David Stern described the pro Russian forces as carrying Russian weapons and resembling the soldiers that took over Crimean installations at the start of the 2014 Crimean crisis 26 28 nbsp Pro Russia rebels in SlovianskInitially the pro Russia rebels enjoyed strong support with the New York Times reporting Thousands of residents thronged a large square in front of City Hall to welcome the pro Russian putsch chanting Russia Russia and posing for photographs with gunmen they hailed as their saviors from the fascists who had seized power in Kiev with the February ouster of President Victor F Yanukovych a Russian speaker from Donetsk 29 nbsp Victory Day 2014 in SlovianskElected mayor of Sloviansk Nelya Shtepa gave a series of contradictory statements on her support for the pro Russia side and was then taken captive by the pro Russia side Shtepa would be one of several high profile detainments during rebel control of Sloviansk 30 On April 14 the pro Russia side installed their own people s mayor Vyacheslav Ponomarev to deal with civilian matters and press while Strelkov Girkin took charge of military matters 31 Throughout April and May Ponomarev would hold near daily press conferences in the city s admininstrative building 32 On May 9 Victory Day there was a parade and large gathering of people in the central Square of Sloviansk Nelya Shtepa appeared the first time she had been seen in public since mid April and gave a pro Russian speech on stage urging people to vote in the referendum scheduled for May 11 Recently freed rebel leader Pavel Gubarev also appeared on stage 33 Referendums went ahead across Donbas on May 11 including Sloviansk with the pro Russia side reporting a turnout of near 75 with over 90 vosting for self rule as part of the Donetsk Luhansk People s Republics However the referendums were not monitored or endorsed by any international observers or organisations and their results almost universally unrecognised in the west Russia issued a statement saying they respected the results of the referendums but stopped short of recognising them 34 35 Fighting intensified throughout May as Ukrainian forces escalated their ATO Anti Terror Operation to retake the city with a Ukrainian military helicopter shot down at the start of the month and multiple casualties reported in fighting on both sides 36 May would also see escalating civilian casualties in Sloviansk as Ukrainian forces began their assault on the city On May 5 30 year old Irina Boevets was killed by a stray Ukrainian bullet as she stepped out on her balcony The Guardian at the time reported these civilian deaths as fuelling pro Russian sentiment 37 Fighting between sides would wage on May with increasing intensity A follow up referendum to the referendum on May 11 had been planned for May 18th giving voters the option of joining Russia however this was abandoned due to the escalation of fighting On 29 May 2014 a Ukrainian helicopter carrying fourteen Ukrainian special service soldiers including General Serhiy Kulchytskiy the head of combat and special training for Ukraine s National Guard crashed after being shot down by militants near Sloviansk Ukraine s outgoing President Olexander Turchynov described the downing as a terrorist attack and blamed pro Russian militants 38 As June went on it became clear that the pro Russia side were losing the battle for Sloviansk beset by a number of problems including infighting with enmity between people s mayor Ponomarev and Strelkov Girkin resulting in Strelkov Girkin having Ponomarev arrested and dismissed from his duties on June 12 31 Ukrainian forces further stepped up their shelling of Sloviansk in June 39 Sloviansk was ultimately held by Russian backed rebels for nearly three months from mid April until 5 July 2014 during which time fighting between the rebels and the Ukrainian army escalated along with shelling of civilian areas of the city with both military and civilian casualties 40 In late June the Ukrainian army started advancing on Sloviansk taking strategically significant locationed including the Karachun Mountains This combined with Strelkov s videos decrying a lack of support made the rebel retreat an inevitability 41 42 A 10 day ceasefire not entirely observed by either side ended on June 30 and in early July faced with a full on Ukrainian offensive Strelkov co ordinated the retreat of his forces from Sloviansk 43 Initially they had planned to go to nearby Kramatorsk however when it became clear that the Ukrainian army would also take Kramatorsk which they duly did most headed to Donetsk which would then become their stronghold 44 Sloviansk was one of several territories taken by Ukrainian forces at this time including the nearby cities of Kramatorsk and Kostiantynivka 45 Although Sloviansk s capture was a military victory for Ukrainian forces the successful co ordinated retreat of the rebel forces and fall back to a fortified Donetsk led to accusations and recriminations from the Ukrainian side 46 General Serhiy Krivonos Deputy Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine said in 2020 that the Ukrainian Army was aware of the movement of Girkin s columns out of Sloviansk but did not attack the columms Having some information from our sources from Sloviansk and Kramatorsk we understood that they the separatists would come out This understanding was clearly formed between July 2 and 3 And already on the 4th it was clear that they would leave that night from 4 to 5 July We actively conducted reconnaissance and gave coordinates directly on the night movement of the column and on the daytime location of the enemy in Kramatorsk and then on the exit of Girkin s columns from Kramatorsk These coordinates were given There was no implementation of an attack on these coordinates 47 A series of incidents and a difficult ongoing living situation had resulted in support for the pro Russian rebels eroding in the near three months that Sloviansk was under their control The New York Times reported that many of the same people who had once supported the pro Russia rebels rushed into the same square to greet Ukrainian military trucks as soldiers handed out free food Virtually nobody now admits to having supported the separatists Konstantin Batozsky an aide to the Kyiv appointed governor of the Donetsk region which included Sloviansk stated of the people of Sloviansk They are happy to welcome whoever gives them food 29 Aftermath of the siege and decommunization edit Following Ukraine s recapture of Sloviansk in July 2014 Ukrainian authorities began a hunt for collaborators setting up a hotline encouraging residents of the city to inform on those who had collaborated with pro Russian rebels There were further discoveries of mass graves The New York Times reported at this time There is no mood of joyous celebration at what Ukrainian officials trumpet as the city s liberation Anger and animosity bubbles just below the calm surface In each workplace everyone knows who did what during rebel rule creating poisonous currents of suspicion 29 The population of Sloviansk had fallen to around 80 000 at this time In 2015 as part of Ukraine s process of decommunization the fate of Sloviansk s statue of Lenin in the city s central square became a topic of heated debate at council meetings Large factions from Ukrainian ultra national groups Svoboda and the Right Sector attended these meetings in support of the removal destruction of the statue There were also locals in favour of keeping the statue with a petition of 4 500 signatures supporting the Lenin statue remaining No consensus had been reached when in the early hours of June 3 Right Sector militants tore the statue down 48 Also in 2015 a plaque to the memory of Volodymyr Rybak a Ukrainian politician killed by pro Russian rebels in 2014 was placed in the town center 49 Although war continued in parts of Donbas there were no notable incidents in Sloviansk following its recapture by Ukrainian forces in July of 2014 until 2022 In 2016 the city was visited by Orlando Bloom in his role as a UNICEF goodwill ambassador 50 The population of Sloviansk would recover in the years up to 2022 to pre 2014 level 16 Russian invasion of Ukraine edit Main article Eastern Ukraine offensive nbsp Damage to a residential building in Sloviansk after the April 2023 airstrike by RussiaSloviansk has been affected from the start of the 2022 Invasion of Ukraine without becoming a central theatre of war 11 Sloviansk has been described as being a crucial part Moscow s objective of capturing all of the Donbas region 51 The city has several times fallen under shelling with the loss of civilian life 52 53 54 An April 2023 profile of Sloviansk by the Financial Times described the city as being like a ghost town with mayor Vadym Lyakh having given an order to evacuate The population of Sloviansk at this time was estimated at 40 50 000 up from 2022 s estimate of 24 000 but significantly down from the pre Russian invasion population of over 100 000 11 In September 2023 The Guardian reported from a Sloviansk still on a war footing 55 Demographics editAccording to the 2001 Ukrainian Census 56 EthnicityUkrainians 104 423 73 1 Russians 33 649 23 6 Turks 829 0 6 Belarusians 766 0 5 Armenians 592 0 4 Greeks 320 0 2 Roma people 279 0 2 Azerbaijanis 208 0 1 Total 2001 population 141 066Geography editSloviansk is in the valley of the Kazennyi Torets River a right tributary of the Donets in the Donbas region Karachun Mountains are the highest point of Sloviansk situated to the south of the city 57 Climate edit The climate in Sloviansk is a mild to warm summer subtype Koppen Dfb of the humid continental climate Climate data for SlovianskMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearDaily mean C F 5 9 21 4 5 4 22 3 0 2 31 6 9 4 48 9 16 2 61 2 20 0 68 0 21 7 71 1 20 8 69 4 15 5 59 9 8 4 47 1 1 8 35 2 2 5 27 5 8 3 46 9 Average precipitation mm inches 45 1 8 34 1 3 27 1 1 39 1 5 42 1 7 57 2 2 51 2 0 40 1 6 39 1 5 30 1 2 42 1 7 44 1 7 490 19 3 Source Climate Data org 58 Economy and Industry edit nbsp The Sloviansk Balneological InstituteBefore the war in 2014 Sloviansk was an important industrial and health resort center providing spa treatments and mud baths using mud from the bottom of salt lakes located nearby and attracting tourists from across Ukraine and beyond After sustaining damage in 2014 some of the city s resort facilities were repaired and operated until active war broke out in Sloviansk again in 2022 As of 2023 none of Sloviansk s spa resorts or tourist facilities are in operation 59 The Slovvazhmash heavy machinery production plant specialised in chemical equipment for coke production 16 The Betonmash machine building factory specialised in concrete mixing plants spare parts for mining equipment and metal works parts for coke ovens 60 The Sloviansk mechanical plant specialised in coke production as well as overhead cranes and other machinery 61 Transport edit nbsp Sloviansk Railway StationSloviansk is a nexus of a number of railways and roads The city is served by three railway passenger stations Slovianskyi Resort in the northeast Mashchormet at the junction and Sloviansk the main station west of the junction on the southwest side of the city Three railway lines leave the city in directions of Lozova Lyman and Kramatorsk The local population is served by a trolleybus network consisting of two permanent routes and one summer route Marshrutkas are widely used The M03 goes by the edge of Sloviansk In early 2015 Ukraine lost control of the section of this from Debaltsevo on then in early 2023 Ukraine lost control of the section from Soledar to Debaltsevo H20 leaves from the city toward Mariupol via Kramatorsk Kostiantynivka Donetsk and Volnovakha Ukraine lost control of part of this highway around Donetsk in 2014 The first part of 2022 saw fierce fighting on or around the highway and by summer of 2022 Ukraine had lost control of the H20 highway from around Donetsk onto Mariupol Religious organizations edit nbsp The Church of the Resurrection of ChristChristian churches Cathedral of New Martyrs and Confessors of the Russian Orthodox Church Church of the Resurrection of Christ Church of the Andrew the Apostle Church of Oleksandr Nevskyi Church of Seraphim Sarovsky The Kind New Christian Center Church Church of Jesus Christ of the Protestant Church of UkraineNotable people editMykhaylo Sokolovsky a Soviet footballer record holder of the games played for Shakhtar Donetsk Maksym Marchenko Ukrainian colonel former governor of Odesa Oblast March 2022 to March 2023 See also editMurder of Pentecostals in Slaviansk Sloviansk RaionExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sloviansk in Russian Ukrainian and English Official website in Russian Unofficial website of Slavjansk Trolleybus system Marble sculpture of Nicolai ShmatkoSources edit a b CEC names winners of mayoral elections in Uzhgorod Berdiansk Sloviansk Interfax Ukraine 23 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 80 of the population of Slovyansk have evacuated 7 June 2022 Slavyansk Ukraine Geographical Names Retrieved 15 April 2014 Slovar geograficheskih nazvanij SSSR Dictionary of geographical names of the USSR in Russian SLOV YaNSK MISTO DONECKOYi OBL resource history org ua Retrieved 9 December 2018 Casualties in Ukraine gun battles BBC News 13 April 2014 Retrieved 9 December 2018 Semnadcat kilometrov my shli marshem cherez granicu Svpressa 11 November 2014 Archived from the original on 13 April 2022 Retrieved 18 April 2022 Sloviansk population in 2022 80 of the population of Slovyansk have evacuated a b c Like a ghost town Slovyansk locals live in fear of Russia s return Financial Times 26 April 2023 Retrieved 15 March 2024 Gorbunov Posadov M M 2020 BOLShAYa SOYuZNAYa ENCIKLOPEDIYa Proektirovanie cifrovogo budushego Nauchnye podhody AO RIC TEHNOSFERA 82 87 doi 10 22184 978 5 94836 575 6 82 87 ISBN 9785948365756 S2CID 226479750 a b Goroda i oblasti Ukrainy Spravochnik po Ukraine Ukrainian SU Archived from the original on 16 August 2014 Retrieved 12 October 2010 Slavyansk gorod Tor kurort i voin sotok net Archived from the original on 23 January 2019 Retrieved 22 January 2019 Slov yansk Ukraine Encyclopaedia Britannica Britannica com Retrieved 21 August 2014 a b c d e f Encyclopedia of Ukraine Retrieved 6 December 2023 Slavyansk Kurorty enciklopedicheskij slovar redkoll gl red E I Chazov M Sovetskaya enciklopediya 1983 str 313 in Ukrainian 100 years ago Bakhmut and the rest of Donbass liberated Ukrayinska Pravda 18 April 2018 Yahad in Unum 70 zhitelej Donbassa po prezhnemu schitayut Evromajdan gosudarstvennym perevorotom 70 of the residents of Donbass still think Euromaidan was an overthrow of government in Russian 20 November 2014 Retrieved 6 December 2023 Igor Girkin was one of three convicted of murder over the MH17 attack and is the elusive figure behind Vladimir Putin s war in Ukraine ABC Australia 19 November 2022 Retrieved 30 May 2023 Rachkevych Mark 12 April 2014 Armed pro Russian extremists launch coordinated attacks in Donetsk Oblast seize buildings and set up checkpoints Kyiv Post Where to go on Independence Weekend places where free Ukraine was being born Armed men seize police department in east Ukraine minister Reuters 12 April 2014 Retrieved 12 April 2014 Gunmen seize Ukraine police station in Sloviansk BBC News 12 April 2014 Retrieved 12 April 2014 a b Ukraine crisis Casualties in Sloviansk gun battles BBC News 13 April 2014 Ukraine Army Launches Anti Terror Operation Sky News via Yahoo News 13 April 2014 Ukraine crisis Rebels abandon Sloviansk stronghold BBC News 5 July 2014 Retrieved 25 May 2022 a b c A Test for Ukraine in a City Retaken From Rebels NY Times 1 August 2014 Retrieved 9 December 2023 In Ukraine s east mayor held hostage by insurgent Yahoo News Associated Press 22 April 2014 Retrieved 10 June 2023 a b Pro Russian mayor of Slavyansk sacked and arrested Guardian 12 June 2014 Retrieved 8 June 2023 Vyacheslav Ponomarev the people s mayor who runs Slavyansk Guardian 25 April 2014 Retrieved 11 June 2023 Na Parade v Slavyanske vystupila Shtepa i Gubarev At the Parade in Slavyansk Shtepa and Gubarev gave speeches in Russian 9 May 2023 Retrieved 10 June 2023 Ukraine rebels hold referendums in Donetsk and Luhansk BBC News 11 May 2014 Retrieved 10 June 2023 Russia respect decision to split from Ukraine 12 May 2014 Retrieved 10 June 2023 Ukraine soldiers killed in renewed Sloviansk fighting BBC News 5 May 2014 Retrieved 1 June 2023 Ukraine soldiers killed in renewed Sloviansk fighting Guardian 7 May 2014 Retrieved 3 June 2023 General 13 soldiers killed as militants down military helicopter Russia Herald Archived from the original on 31 May 2014 Retrieved 29 May 2014 Shelling in Slaviansk Reuters 18 June 2014 Retrieved 6 June 2023 Obama Ukraine Vulnerable To Russian Military Domination RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty 11 March 2016 Retrieved 22 January 2019 Tsvetkova Maria 5 July 2014 Ukraine government forces recapture separatist stronghold Reuters Archived from the original on 4 February 2016 Retrieved 8 December 2023 AFP 20 April 2011 Pro Russia rebels and commander flee Slavyansk Yahoo News Archived from the original on 15 July 2014 Retrieved 8 December 2023 Pushed from Slaviansk Ukraine rebels barricade Donetsk Reuters 8 July 2014 Retrieved 8 December 2023 Ukraine President Poroshenko hails turning point BBC Retrieved 6 July 2014 Ukraine marks 7th anniversary of Kramatorsk Sloviansk liberation Retrieved 2 June 2023 Svoboda Radio 6 July 2020 Buv shans zavershiti ATO raz i nazavzhdi Zabrodskij pro vtechu bojovikiv Girkina zi Slov yanska Radio Svoboda in Ukrainian Retrieved 8 December 2023 Svoboda Radio 6 July 2020 Mi davali koordinati kolon realizaciyi ne bulo Krivonos pro vihid bojovikiv Girkina zi Slov yanska Radio Svoboda in Ukrainian Retrieved 8 December 2023 Goodbye Lenin how a weighty symbol of the Soviet past divided a Ukrainian city 21 June 2015 Retrieved 2 June 2023 Remembering Volodymyr Rybak a year since the murder EMPR Russia Ukraine war news latest Ukraine updates 18 April 2015 Retrieved 18 April 2020 Orlando Bloom makes surprise visit to Ukraine 29 April 2016 Retrieved 21 November 2023 Rob Picheta 6 April 2022 The fight for Sloviansk may be the next pivotal battle of Russia s war in Ukraine CNN Retrieved 11 April 2022 At least 2 killed in Russian shelling of Sloviansk 5 July 2022 Retrieved 17 December 2023 v 27 March 2023 Retrieved 17 December 2023 Pfaffenbach Kai 15 April 2023 Eleven killed in Russian strike Ukraine rescue teams sift through wreckage Reuters Retrieved 15 April 2023 It felt like the beginning of the third world war It still does Mstyslav Chernov on 20 Days in Mariupol 29 September 2023 Retrieved 17 March 2024 Nacionalnij sklad ta ridna mova naselennya Doneckoyi oblasti Ethnic and linguistic composition of Donetsk Oblast in Ukrainian Archived from the original on 8 July 2012 Retrieved 4 February 2016 KARACHUN MOUNTAIN SLOVYANSK Retrieved 8 December 2023 Climate Sloviansk Climate Data org Retrieved 2 May 2014 Discover Ukraine Retrieved 8 December 2023 Betonmash Retrieved 8 December 2023 Kompass Retrieved 8 December 2023 References editNotes edit Ukrainian Slov yansk IPA slou ˈjɑnʲsʲk Russian Slavyansk romanized Slavyansk 4 IPA slɐˈvʲansk or ˈslavʲɪnsk 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sloviansk amp oldid 1216594238, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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