Ternopil Oblast

Ternopil Oblast'
Тернопільська область
Ternopil’s’ka oblast’
—  Oblast  —

Flag

Coat of arms
Nickname(s): Тернопільщина (Ternopilshchyna)
Location of Ternopil Oblast' (red) within Ukraine (blue)
Country  Ukraine
Admin. center Ternopil
Government
 • Governor Mykhaylo Tsymbalyuk[1]
 • Oblast council 120 seats
 • Chairperson Oleksiy Kaida[2] (Svoboda[2])
Area
 • Total 13,823 km2 (5,337.1 sq mi)
Area rank Ranked 22nd
Population (2006)
 • Total 1,107,294
 • Rank Ranked 23rd
 • Density 80.1/km2 (207.5/sq mi)
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
 • Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Postal code ?
Area code +380-35
ISO 3166 code UA-61
Raions 17
Cities of oblast subordinance 1
Cities (total) 14
Towns 17
Villages 1019
FIPS 10-4 UP22
Website www.adm.gov.te.ua

Ternopil Oblast' (Ukrainian: Тернопільська область, translit. Ternopil’s’ka oblast’; also referred to as Ternopilshchyna - Ukrainian: Тернопільщина) is an oblast' (province) of Ukraine. Its administrative center is Ternopil, through which flows the Seret River, a tributary of the Dnister.

Contents

Geography

The area of the oblast is 13,800 km². The Dnister forms the southern border with the Chernivtsi Oblast. Some of its tributaries flowing through the oblast are the Zbruch, the Seret and the Strypa Rivers. The Seret River, not to be confused with the Siret River nor the smaller Seret in Lviv Oblast, is a left tributary of the Dnister flowing through the oblast capital, i.e. Ternopil.

History

Before World War I, most of the current Ternopil oblast was part of Austro-Hungarian province Galicia. Only the northern-most section was within the borders of Russia. From 1918 until World War II, the area formed the Tarnopol Voivodeship in the newly independent country of Poland. As was common throughout the western Ukraine, the non-Ukrainian population was concentrated in the cities. Before World War II, the population of Ternopil was 40% Polish, 20% Ukrainian, and 40% Jewish. The oblast is sometimes associated with the Ukrainian nationalist movement, as during the Polish-Ukrainian War, Ukrainian nationalist forces launched the Chortkiv offensive to stop Polish attempts to topple the newly established West Ukrainian People's Republic. Later the local ethnically Ukrainian population was loyal to the revolutionary UPA.

During the Second World War, Ternopil was the object of conflict between Soviet and German forces because its importance as a rail transportation hub. After the war, a destroyed residential section of Ternopil, near the river, was turned into an artificial lake rather than being rebuilt. Additionally, upon annexation to the Soviet Union's Ukrainian SSR, most ethnic Poles in the region were forcibly relocated to Poland, whose national borders had shifted far to the west. The area of the former Polish voivoideship was expanded by adding territory in the north, though the western-most parts were transferred to the Lviv oblast. After 1945 Soviet authorities also encouraged ethnic Russians to settle in territories newly annexed to the Soviet Union, including the Ternopil oblast, though western Ukraine remained considerably less Russian than eastern Ukraine. As Ukraine achieved independence in the 1990s, western Ukraine remained the heartland of Ukrainian political and cultural nationalism, and the political affiliations of Ternopil voters reflected that viewpoint. In the first elections after independence, the People's Movement of Ukraine was the leading party in the oblast. A majority of oblast voters supported the Ukrainian nationalist-oriented Electoral Bloc Yuliya Tymoshenko in the Ukrainian parliamentary election, 2002. Over 88% of voters supported Yulia Tymoshenko of the All-Ukrainian Union "Fatherland" in the Ukrainian presidential election, 2010.

By 2005, the population of the oblast had grown to roughly 225,000, consisting primarily of ethnic Ukrainians with a large Russian or Russian-speaking minority. The religion of the majority is Eastern Rite Catholic (Uniate), though there is a notable Orthodox presence and a small Protestant minority. Many churches which were closed or destroyed under Soviet rule have rebuilt since independence. The local Jewish community, which was very large before 1939, was not reestablished after 1945. There are no active synagogues in the oblast and only a few isolated individuals affiliating with the Jewish faith. The city of Ternopil has important institutions of higher education, including two teacher's colleges, an international medical school with instruction in English, and one of three economics institutes in Ukraine.

Points of interest

The following historic-cultural sites were nominated for the Seven Wonders of Ukraine.

Population

The current estimated population is 1.1 million people (as of 2004).

Economy

Although the city continues to grow rapidly, heavily supported by remittances from workers abroad, many abandoned buildings in rural areas of the oblast and even in the city give mute evidence that the economy is uneven.

Subdivisions

The Ternopil Oblast is administratively subdivided into 17 raions (districts), as well as 1 city (municipality) which is directly subordinate to the oblast government: Ternopil, the administrative center of the oblast.

Raions of the Ternopil Oblast
In English In Ukrainian Administrative Center
Berezhanskyi Raion Бережанський район
Berezhans'kyi raion
Berezhany
(City)
Borshchivskyi Raion Борщівський район
Borshchivs'kyi raion
Borshchiv
(City)
Buchach Raion Бучацький район
Buchats'kyi raion
Buchach
(City)
Chortkiv Raion Чортківський район
Chortkivs'kyi raion
Chortkiv
(City)
Husiatyn Raion Гусятинський район
Husiatyns'kyi raion
Husiatyn
(Urban-type settlement)
Kozivskyi Raion Козівський район
Kozivs'kyi raion
Kozova
(Urban-type settlement)
Kremenetskyi Raion Кременецький район
Kremenets'kyi raion
Kremenets
(City)
Lanivtsi Raion Лановецький район
Lanovets'kyi raion
Lanivtsi
(City)
Monastyryska Raion Монастириський район
Monastyrys'kyi raion
Monastyryska
(City)
Pidhaietskyi Raion Підгаєцький район
Pidhayets'kyi raion
Pidhaitsi
(City)
Pidvolochysk Raion Підволочиський район
Pidvolochys'kyi raion
Pidvolochysk
(Urban-type settlement)
Shumsk Raion Шумський район
Shums'kyi raion
Shumsk
(City)
Terebovlya Raion Теребовлянський район
Terebovl'ans'kyi raion
Terebovlya
(City)
Ternopil Raion Тернопільський район
Ternopils'kyi raion
Ternopil
(City)
Zalishchytskyi Raion Заліщицький район
Zalishchyts'kyi raion
Zalishchyky
(City)
Zbarazkyi Raion Збаразький район
Zbaraz'kyi raion
Zbarazh
(City)
Zboriv Raion Зборівський район
Zborivs'kyi raion
Zboriv
(City)

See also

References

External links