Ternopil

Ternopil
—  City  —
Тернопіль
Street in Ternopil City Centre

Coat of arms
Ternopil is located in Ukraine
Ternopil
Location within Ukraine
Coordinates:
Country  Ukraine
Oblast Ternopil Oblast
Raion Ternopil Raion
Government
 - Mayor Roman Zastavnyi
Area
 - Total 59 km2 (22.8 sq mi)
Population (2010)
 - Total 217,600
 - Density 3,831/km2 (9,922.2/sq mi)
Time zone CET (UTC+2)
 - Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+3)
Area code(s) +380 352

Ternopil (Ukrainian: Тернопіль, translit. Ternopil’, Polish: Tarnopol, Russian: Тернополь, translit. Ternopol’), is a city in western Ukraine, located on the banks of the Seret River. Ternopil is one of the major cities of Eastern Galicia. It is located approximately 132 kilometres (82 mi) east of Lviv. It is served by Ternopil Airport.

In 2004, the population was 221,300.

Contents

Administrative status

The city is the administrative center of the Ternopil Oblast (province), as well of the surrounding Ternopil Raion (district) within the oblast. However, Ternopil is a city of oblast subordinance, thus being subject directly to the oblast authorities rather to the raion administration housed in the city itself.

History

The Ternopil Castle rebuilt in the 19th century as a palace
The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception of The Blessed Virgin Mary (former Dominican Church)

The city was founded in 1540 by Jan Amor Tarnowski as a Polish military stronghold and a castle. In 1544 the Ternopil Castle was constructed and repelled its first Tatar attacks. In 1548 Ternopil was granted city rights by king Sigismund I of Poland. In 1567 the city passed to the Ostrogski family. In 1575 it was plundered by Tatars. In 1623 the city passed to the Zamoyski family.

In the 17th century the town was almost wiped from the map in the Khmelnytsky Uprising which drove out or killed most of its Jewish residents. Ternopil was almost completely destroyed by Turks and Tatars in 1675 and rebuilt by Aleksander Koniecpolski but did not recover its previous glory until it passed to Marie Casimire, the wife of king Jan III Sobieski in 1690. The city was later sacked for the last time by Tatars in 1694, and twice by Russians in the course of the Great Northern War in 1710 and the War of the Polish Succession in 1733. In 1747 Józef Potocki invited the Dominicanes and founded the beautiful late baroque Dominican Church (today the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception of The Blessed Virgin Mary of the Ternopil-Zboriv eparchy of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church). The city was thrice looted during the confederation of Bar (1768–1772), by the confederates themselves, by the kings army and by Russians. In 1770 it was further devastated by an outbreak of smallpox.

Tarnopol Voivodeship before 17 September 1939

In 1772 the city came under Austrian rule after the First Partition of Poland. At the beginning of the 19th century the local population put great hope in Napoleon Bonaparte, in 1809 the city came under Russian rule, which created Ternopol krai there. In 1815 the city (then with 11,000 residents) returned to Austrian rule in accordance with the Congress of Vienna. In 1820 Jesuits expelled from Polatsk by Russians established a gymnasium in the town. In 1870 a rail line connected Tarnopol with Lviv, accelerating the city's growth. At that time Ternopil had a population of about 25,000.

A ship "Heroy Tantsorow" on the Ternopil Lake

During World War I the city passed from German and Austrian forces to Russia several times. In 1917 it was burnt down by fleeing Russian forces. After the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the city was proclaimed part of the West Ukrainian People's Republic on 11 November 1918. During the Polish-Ukrainian War it was the country's capital from 22 November to 30 December after Lviv was captured by Polish forces.[1] After the act of union between Western-Ukrainian Republic and the Ukrainian People's Republic (UPR), Ternopil formally passed under the UPR's control. On 15 July 1919 the city was captured[1] by Polish forces. In 1920 the exiled Ukrainian government of Symon Petlura accepted Polish control of Ternopil and of the entire area in exchange for Polish assistance in restoration of Petlura's government in Kyiv. This effort ultimately failed, and in July and August 1920 Ternopil was captured by the Red Army in the course of the Polish-Soviet War and served as the capital of the Galician Soviet Socialist Republic. By the terms of the Riga treaty that ended the Polish-Soviet war, the Soviet Russia recognized the Polish control of the area.

From 1922 to September 1939, it was the capital of the Tarnopol Voivodeship that consisted of 17 powiats. The policies of the Polish authorities, especially the assimilationist ethnic policies, affected all spheres of public life. Ukrainians, who according to the 1939 Statistical Yearbook of Poland, made up less than half of voivodship's population, were restricted in their rights and prosecuted for any attempts to oppose the Polonization. This created a strong backlash and strengthened the position of the militant Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists whose local Ternopil branch was led by Roman Paladiychuk and Taras Stetsko, the future leader of OUN,

In 1939 it was a city of 40,000; 50% of the population was Polish, 40% Jewish and 10% Ukrainian.

During the Polish Defensive War it was annexed by the Soviet Union and attached to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. The Soviets continued the campaign against the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists aided by the information given to them by the former Polish authorities.[2] The Soviets also carried out mass deportations of the Polish part of the population to Kazakhstan. In 1941 the city was occupied by the Germans who continued exterminating the population by murdering the Jews and sending others to forced labour in Germany. In April 1944 the city was retaken by the Red Army, the remaining Polish population having been previously expelled. During the Soviet reoccupation in March and April 1944, the city was encircled and completely destroyed. In March 1944 the city was declared a fortified place by Adolf Hitler, to be defended until the last round was shot. The stiff German resistance caused extensive use of heavy artillery by the Red Army, resulting in the complete destruction of the city and killing of nearly all German defenders. (55 survivors out of 4,500) Unlike many other occasions, where the Germans had practised a scorched earth policy during their withdrawal from territories of the Soviet Union, the devastation was caused directly by the hostilities.[3] After the war, Ternopil was rebuilt in typically Soviet style. Only a few buildings were reconstructed.

Since 1991 Ternopil has been a part of independent Ukraine, along with other cities of Western Ukraine. Ternopil has became an important center of Ukrainian national revival.

Jewish Ternopil

Polish Jews settled in Ternopil beginning at its founding and soon formed a majority of the population. During the 16th and 17th centuries there were 300 Jewish families in the city. The Great Synagogue of Ternopil was built in Gothic Survival style between 1622 and 1628.[4] Among the towns destroyed by Bohdan Khmelnytsky during his march of devastation from Zolochiv through Galicia was Tarnopol, the large Jewish population of which carried on an extensive trade. Shortly afterward, however, when the Cossacks had been subdued by John III of Poland, the town began to prosper anew, and its Jewish population exceeded all previous figures. It may be noted that Hasidism at this time dominated the community, which opposed any introduction of Western culture. During the troubled times in the latter part of the eighteenth century, the city was stormed (1770) by the adherents of the Confederacy of Bar, who massacred many of its inhabitants, especially the Jews.

After the second partition of Poland, Ternopil came under Austrian domination and Joseph Perl was able to continue his efforts to improve the condition of the Jews there, which he had begun under Russian rule. In 1813 he established a Jewish school which had as its chief object the instruction of Jewish youth in German as well as in Hebrew and various other subjects. Controversy between the traditional Hasidim and the modernising Maskilim which this school caused, resulted four years later in a victory for the latter, whereupon the institution received official recognition and was placed under communal control. Starting in 1863, the school policy was gradually modified by Polish influences, and very little attention was given to instruction in German. The Tempel für Geregelten Gottesdienst, opened by Perl in 1819, also caused dissensions within the community, and its rabbi, S. J. Rapoport, was forced to withdraw. This dispute also was eventually settled in favour of the Maskilim. As of 1905, the Jewish community numbered 14,000 in a total population of 30,415. The Jews were engaged principally in an active import and export trade with Russia through the border city of Podwoloczyska.

In 1941, 500 Jews were murdered on the grounds of Ternopil's Christian cemetery by local inhabitants using weapons borrowed from a German army camp.[5] According to interviews conducted by a Roman Catholic priest, Father Patrick Desbois, some of the bodies were decapitated. One woman described how her mother would "finish off" wounded Jews with a shovel blow to the head before burying them.[5]

Jewish history exhibit

In 2005, "Anne Frank: A Lesson from History" was mounted in Ternopil. This event, organized in part by the Jewish community of Ternopil, opened in collaboration with the Ukrainian Centre for Holocaust Studies and the Anne Frank Museum in Holland.[6]

Education

Universities include:

Notable residents

  • Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz
  • Józef Arkusz
  • Hermann Balck
  • Eugeniusz Baziak
  • Yosef Babad
  • Aleksander Brückner
  • Lubomyr Husar
  • Tomasz Chołodecki
  • Alter Kacyzne
  • Stanisław Koniecpolski
  • Nachman Krochmal
  • Władysław Langner
  • Mike Mazurki
  • Friedrich von Mellenthin
  • Kazimierz Michałowski
  • Soma Morgenstern
  • Józef Olszyna-Wilczyński
  • Kazimierz Orlik-Łukoski
  • Rudolf Pöch
  • Ivan Pulyui
  • Samuel Judah Löb Rapoport
  • Fritz von Scholz
  • Rudi Stephan
  • Julian Stryjkowski
  • Jan Tarnowski
  • Maksym Senyshyn

International relations

Twin towns — Sister cities

Ternopil is twinned with:

See also

References

Bibliography
Notes
  1. 1.0 1.1 The Jewish and German population accepted the new Ukrainian state, but the Poles started the military campaign against the Ukrainian authority. [...]. On November 11, 1918 following bloody fighting, the Polish forces captured Lviv. The government of the WUPR moved to Ternopil and from the end of December the Council and the Government of the WUPR were located in Stanislav (now Ivano-Frankivsk).
    (Ukrainian) West Ukrainian People's Republic in the "Dovidnyk z istoriï Ukraïny" (A hand-book on the History of Ukraine), 3-Volumes, Kyiv, 1993-1999, ISBN 5-7707-5190-8 (t. 1), ISBN 5-7707-8552-7 (t. 2), ISBN 966-504-237-8 (t. 3).
  2. A commander of the Polish Police personally transferred to NKVD the Police data about the activity of Ukrainian nationalists in Ternopil and pledged to add the comments on that
    Stepan Mechnyk, OUN i rozbudova ukrains'koi derzhavy, p. 12, Lviv, Kamenyar, 1993, ISBN 5-7745-0565-0
  3. Karl-Heinz Frieser (Ed.); Das Deutsche Reich und der Zweite Weltkrieg - Volume 8: Die Ostfront 1943/44 - Der Krieg im Osten und an den Nebenfronten; Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt München 2007; ISBN 978-3-421-06235-2
  4. Sergey R. Kravtsov, "Gothic Survival in Synagogue Architecture of Ruthenia, Podolia and Volhynia in the 17th - 18th Centuries," Architectura. Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Baukunst/ Journal of the History of Architecture, vol. 1 (2005), 70.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Talking with the willing executioners
  6. "FJC | News | Ternopol Exhibition Portraying Jews' Fate in Holocaust Concludes". Fjc.ru. 2005-06-21. http://www.fjc.ru/news/newsArticle.asp?aid=291695. Retrieved 2009-05-06. 
  7. "Radom Official Website - Partner Cities". Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Flag of Poland.svg (in English and Polish) © 2007 Urząd Miasta Radom. http://www.radom.pl/_portal/118786399846cd5dbe4a35e/Miasta_partnerskie.html. Retrieved 2008-10-23. 
  8. "Elbląg Official Website - Partner Towns". Flag of the United Kingdom.svg (in English) © 2008 Municipal Office in Elbląg ul. Łączności 1 82-300 Elbląg. http://www.umelblag.pl/en/urzad_m/miasta_partnerskie.htm. Retrieved 2008-10-26. 
  9. Hodara, Susan (Sunday, October 26, 2008). "Communities; Cities Find Sisters Abroad". © The New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F0DE2DD143FF932A3575AC0A9649C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all. Retrieved 2008-10-26. 

External links