Deliatyn (Ukrainian: Деля́тин, pronounced [deˈlʲɑtɪn]), previously called Diliatyn (Ukrainian: Діля́тин) until October 2, 1989,[1] is an urban-type settlement in Nadvirna Raion (district) of Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast (region) of Ukraine. It is located 101 kilometers (63 miles) west of Chernivtsi and 294.6 miles (474.1 kilometers) west-southwest of Kyiv.[2] Together with Yaremche and Lanchyn it is part of a small agglomeration that runs along the Prut River valley between the Carpathian Mountains. Deliatyn hosts the administration of Deliatyn settlement hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine.[3] The population is 8,276 (2021 est.)[4].
Deliatyn
Делятин | |
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Urban-type settlement | |
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![]() ![]() Deliatyn ![]() ![]() Deliatyn | |
Coordinates: 48°31′43″N 24°37′25″E | |
Country | ![]() |
Oblast (province) | ![]() |
Raion (district) | Nadvirna Raion |
Founded | 1400 |
Population (2021) | |
• Total | 8,276 |
Deliatyn is also known as Delatyn (in Polish and German), and Deliatin (in Hungarian).
Deliatyn became part of Poland (together with Red Ruthenia) in the 15th century. In 1772, it was seized by the Austro-Hungarian Empire together with the province of Galicia (see: Partitions of Poland). After World War I, the town was in the Second Polish Republic, in the Stanisławów Voivodeship. Located in the picturesque area, it was a popular spa, with around 1000 visitors yearly (in the late 1920s). Delatyn was captured by the Red Army in 1939 (see: Polish September Campaign).
After World War II, it was in the USSR; today it is in Ukraine.[2] During the Soviet times, Deliatyn was famous by the Kovpak's Oak, which symbolizes the uncompromised hatred of Ukrainians towards Nazi Germany.[citation needed]
Delatyn was home to a Jewish community until autumn 1941.[2] German archives record mass executions of Jews in the town, carried out by an Einsatzgruppen. On 16 October 1941, the SS, accompanied by the Ukrainian militia and Hungarian Border Guards units shot 1,950 Jews in a forest. [Lemberg Mosaic, Jakob Weiss, Alderbrook Press (2010)] Later, around 200 Jews were killed in the cemetery. During spring 1942, 3,000 Jews were shot. The remaining 2,000 Jews were deported from Deliatyn to the Bełżec extermination camp at the end of 1942. According to the archives, there was no ghetto in Deliatyn, although according to a witness there was one in the center, surrounded with a fence.[5]
On 17 August 2017 Deliatyn Amalgamated Hromada was formed by merging the urban municipality of Deliatyn Settlement Council and the rural municipalities of Zarichchia, Chorni Oslavy, and Chornyi Potik of Nadvirna Raion.
On 19 March 2022 during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Russian Armed Forces claim to have used the Kinzhal hypersonic missiles for the first time in world combat history to target a military storage site in Deliatyn.[6][7]
The 1992 documentary film Return to My Shtetl Delatyn depicts filmmaker Willy Lindwer's travels with his father Berl Nuchim and his daughter Michal to Delatyn to "retrace the route his father had taken six decades earlier, escaping from the Nazis and to see how the area and its inhabitants had changed."[8]
Delatynite is a variety of amber found in Deliatyn.[9][10]
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Administrative center: Nadvirna | ||
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Administrative center: Ivano-Frankivsk | ||
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