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Lviv Oblast

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Lviv Oblast
Львівська область

L’vivs'ka oblast’

Flag Coat of arms
Map of Ukraine with Lviv Oblast highlighted
Capital>Administrative center Lviv
Governor Petro Oliynyk (?)
Oblast>Oblast council
 - Chairperson
 - Council seats

? (?)
?
Raions
 City raions
 City>Cities
 Towns
 Villages
20
9
44
34
1,849
Area
Total
 - Land
 - Water (% of total) 
Ranked 17th
21,833 km²
? km²
? km² (?%)
Population
 - Total (2006)
 - Density
 - Annual Growth
Ranked ?
2,555,834
119.54/km²
?%
Average Salary (?)
 - Annual Growth
List of Ukrainian oblasts and territories by salary>Ranked ?
$? ?%
Abbreviations
 - Ukrainian postal codes>Postal code
 - ISO 3166-2
 - FIPS 10-4 region code
 - Phone code

?


+380-32
Web site [www.loda.gov.ua]
Lviv Oblast (Ukrainian: Львівська область, translit. L’vivs’ka oblast’; also referred to as L’vivshchyna - Ukrainian: Львівщина) is an oblast (province) in western Ukraine. The administrative center of the oblast is the city of Lviv.

History

The oblast was created as part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic on December 4, 1939. The territory of the former Drohobych Oblast was incorporated into the Lviv Oblast in 1959.

The oblast's strategic position at the heart of central Europe and as the gateway to the Carpathians has caused it to change hands many times over the centuries. It was ruled variously by Great Moravia, Kievan Rus', and by one of its successors, the state of Halych-Volynia (circa 1200 to 1400), then by the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (circa 1400 to 1795), the Austro-Hungarian Empire (1795 to 1918), and Poland (1918 to 1939), when it was part of the Lwów Voivodship of the Second Republic of Poland. The region's historically dominant Ukrainian population declared the area to be a part of an independent Western Ukrainian Republic in 1918 but this endured only briefly. Local autonomy was provided in international treaties but later on those were not honoured by the Polish government and the area experienced much ethnic tension between the Polish and Ukrainian population.

The region only became part of the Soviet Union under the terms of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact in 1939, when it was annexed to the Ukrainian SSR. It was occupied by Nazi Germany from 1941 to 1944 and remained in Soviet hands after World War II as was arranged during the conferences Teheran and Yalta. Thanks to its historical development, Lviv Oblast is one of the least Russified and Sovietized parts of Ukraine, with much of its Habsburg heritage still visible today.

The region and its capital city take their name from the time of Halych-Volynia, when Danylo, the King of Rus' founded Lviv, naming the city after his son, Lev (Leo). During this time, the general region around Lviv was known as Red Ruthenia (Cherven' Rus').

Geography

The terrain of L'viv Oblast is highly varied, ranging from open steppes to dense forests, with intensively cultivated river basins and forested mountains.

Subdivisions

Districts of Lviv Oblast
Enlarge
Districts of Lviv Oblast

The Lviv Oblast is subdivided into 20 raions (administrative districts), and 9 of its cities are designated as separate raions within the oblast.

The districts of the Lviv Oblast include: Boryslav City
Brodivsky Raion
Busky Raion
Chervonohrad City
Drohobych City
Drohobytsky Raion
Horodotsky Raion
Kamyanka-Buzky Raion
Lviv City
Morshyn City
Mostysky Raion
Mykolaivsky Raion
Novyi Rozdil City
Peremyshliansky Raion
Pustomytivsky Raion
Radekhivsky Raion
Sambir City
Sambirsky Raion
Skolivsky Raion
Sokalsky Raion
Starosambirsky Raion
Stryi City
Stryisky Raion
Truskavets City
Turkivsky Raion
Yavorivsky Raion
Zhovkivsky Raion
Zhydachivsky Raion
Zolochivsky Raion

Principal Cities and Towns

Economy

The chief industries are agriculture, cattle and sheep farming and forestry. Significant mineral extraction also occurs, and the region also possesses oil and natural gas deposits which are piped to the city of Lviv and used locally. Numerous factories were built in the Soviet times, including the Lvovskiy Avtomobilnyi Zavod which produced buses. Significant amount of smaller factories exist.

Demographics

Religion

Fifty-six percent of the religious organisations active in the Lviv Oblast adhere to the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church. The Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church is the second largest religious body. The followers of the Roman Catholic Church and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchy) are mostly from the Polish, and Russian or non-Galician Ukrainian minorities respectively.

Historical and Cultural Sites

Detailed map of Lviv Oblast
Enlarge
Detailed map of Lviv Oblast

The city of Lviv contains a well-preserved main square (Rynok) and numerous historical and beautiful churches. Other sites of interest are the historic Lychakivskiy Cemetery, the local museum of folklore, and the high castle ruins. There is also a museum of military artifacts, the "Arsenal".

Well-preserved local wooden churches can be found in the surrounding countryside, as can the Olesky Zamok (castle). A local museum of Ukrainian art and an institution of higher learning (Ivan Franko State University) are also present.

Nomenclature

Most of Ukraine's oblasts are named after their capital cities, officially referred to as "oblast centers" (Ukrainian: обласний центр, translit. oblasnyi tsentr). The name of each oblast is a relative adjective, formed by adding a feminine suffix to the name of respective center city: L'viv is the center of the L'vivs'ka oblast' (Lviv Oblast). Most oblasts are also sometimes referred to in a feminine noun form, following the convention of traditional regional place names, ending with the suffix "-shchyna", as is the case with the Lviv Oblast, Lvivshchyna.

See also

References

External links


>
Subdivisions of Lviv Oblast, Ukraine

Raions: Boryslav City | Brodivsky Raion | Busky Raion | Chervonohrad City | Drohobych City | Drohobytsky Raion | Horodotsky Raion | Kamyanka-Buzky Raion | Lviv City | Morshyn City | Mostysky Raion | Mykolaivsky Raion | Novyi Rozdil City | Peremyshliansky Raion | Pustomytivsky Raion | Radekhivsky Raion | Sambir City | Sambirsky Raion | Skolivsky Raion | Sokalsky Raion | Starosambirsky Raion | Stryi City | Stryisky Raion | Truskavets City | Turkivsky Raion | Yavorivsky Raion | Zhovkivsky Raion | Zhydachivsky Raion | Zolochivsky Raion |

Cities: Belz | Bibrka | Boryslav | Brody | Busk | Chervonohrad | Dobromyl | Drohobych | Dublyany | Hlynyany | Horodok | Kamyanka-Buzka | Khodoriv | Khyriv | Komarno | Lviv | Morshyn | Mostyska | Mykolayiv | Novoyavorivske | Novyi Kalyniv | Novyi Rozdil | Peremyshliany | Pustomyty | Radekhiv | Rava Ruska | Rudky | Sambir | Skole | Sokal | Sosnivka | Staryi Sambir | Stebnyk | Stryi | Sudova Vyshnya | Truskavets | Turka | Ugniv | Velyki Mosty | Vynnyky | Yavoriv | Zhovkva | Zhydachiv

Towns: Zolochiv


Ukraine

Subdivisions of Ukraine:
Cherkasy Oblast | Chernihiv Oblast | Chernivtsi Oblast | Autonomous Republic of Crimea | Dnipropetrovsk Oblast | Donetsk Oblast | Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast | Kharkiv Oblast | Kherson Oblast | Khmelnytskyi Oblast | Kiev City | Kiev Oblast | Kirovohrad Oblast | Luhansk Oblast | Lviv Oblast | Mykolaiv Oblast | Odessa Oblast | Poltava Oblast | Rivne Oblast | Sevastopol City | Sumy Oblast | Ternopil Oblast | Vinnytsia Oblast | Volyn Oblast | Zakarpattia Oblast | Zaporizhia Oblast | Zhytomyr Oblast
Administrative centers of subdivision units:
Cherkasy | Chernihiv | Chernivtsi | Dnipropetrovsk | Donetsk | Ivano-Frankivsk | Kharkiv | Kherson | Khmelnytskyi | Kiev | Kirovohrad | Luhansk | Lutsk | Lviv | Mykolaiv | Odessa | Poltava | Rivne | Sevastopol | Simferopol | Sumy | Ternopil | Uzhhorod | Vinnytsia | Zaporizhia | Zhytomyr

 


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