Rodatychi

Rodatychi (Ukrainian: Родатичі) is a village in Horodok Raion, Lviv Oblast, in the western part of Ukraine.

Abandoned catholic church in Rodatychi

The Zakhid music festival is held near Rodatychi.

Rodatycze ( Ukrainian: Родатичі, Rodatyczi , formerly Городятичі, Horodiatyczi) is a village located in the Gródecki section in the Lviv region in Ukraine, and lies on the Tarnogród Plateau. In the Second Polish Republic, the town was the seat of the rural commune of Rodatycze.

Rodatycze

Родатичі

Arms
State Ukraine
Circuit Lviv
Area Grodecka
Population

• population

1912
Area code +380 03231
Postal Code 81521
Location on the map of Lviv region

Rodatychi

Location on the map of Ukraine

Rodatychi

49 ° 47′56 ″ N  23 ° 31′07 ″ E
Multimedia at Wikimedia Commons
Ukraine portal

The first mention of the village is in 1445. The village belonged to the estate of the Gródek eldership. The owners were the Austrian government, Jan Machan, and Antonina Mirska, who in 1890 transferred the property to the Congregation of the Sisters of Providence that he founded in Lviv. This partnered ownership was maintained until September 1939. The village had a railroad from the second half of the 19th century.

In 1929 , the village was inhabited by 2561 inhabitants. There was a Roman Catholic church there. St. Church of the Holy Trinity and the Greek Catholic church were also churches in the village. The landowners were: Józef Habuda and Władysław Ostrowski, a cattle trader - H. Egort, the blacksmith - J. Kaliciak, the miller - L. Biernat, the Agricultural Circle, and the shoemaker, J. Kaniak. In the interwar period, only the Roman Catholic church remained, the Uniate parish ceased to exist.

In September 1939 , German planes bombed a railway station, in the battle of Jaworów. After the village was invaded by the USSR , a prisoner camp was created for NKVD prisoners.

"The village of Rodatycze is located a little in the back, on the left side of the main road from Sądowa Wisznia to Gródek Jagielloński and then to Lviv. [...] "

Bibliography

  1. Poland Address Book from 1929.
  2. Z. Schneigert - NKVD camps of Polish prisoners of war from 1939-1941 in Eastern Lesser Poland [in:] Semper Fidelis 3-4 1992

See also


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