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Velyki Sorochyntsi

Village in Poltava Oblast, Ukraine

Velyki Sorochyntsi

Village in Poltava Oblast, Ukraine

FieldValue
official_nameVelyki Sorochyntsi
native_nameВеликі Сорочинці
settlement_typeVillage
image_skylinePloshad sorochinskoy yarmarki.JPG
image_captionLocation of Sorochyntsi Fair
image_flagVel soroch h.png
flag_borderno
image_shieldVel soroch2 s.png
pushpin_mapUkraine Poltava Oblast#Ukraine
pushpin_label_positionleft
pushpin_map_captionLocation of Velyki Sorochyntsi within Poltava Oblast
coordinates
subdivision_type1Oblast
subdivision_type2Raion
subdivision_type3Hromada
subdivision_name1Poltava Oblast
subdivision_name2Myrhorod Raion
subdivision_name3Velyki Sorochyntsi rural hromada
established_titleFounded
established_date1620s
leader_titleMayor
population_total4,231
population_as_of2001
postal_code_typePostal code
postal_code37645
area_code+380 5355
subdivision_name
subdivision_typeCountry

Velyki Sorochyntsi (; formerly referred to simply as Sorochyntsi) is a village in Myrhorod Raion, Poltava Oblast, central Ukraine. It formerly had town status. It hosts the administration of Velyki Sorochyntsi rural hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine. The village is famous as the birthplace of the writer Nikolai Gogol () and the location of the Sorochyntsi Fair. In 1925–1931, the town was called Neronovychi after the Bolshevik activist Yevhen Neronovych, who was executed by Ukrainian military forces in the town in 1918.

The population as of 2013 was estimated at 3,809, down from 4,231 in the 2001 census.

The name of the village came either from the Slavic word soroka (magpie) or sorochka (shirt). There are many legends explaining the name of the village as the location of the Magpie's kingdom or of some magical shirt.

History

Transfiguration Church in Velyki Sorochyntsi, 1732

The earliest recorded mention of the settlement (sloboda) is in the 1620s. In 1646, the sloboda became the domain of a Polish Prince from the Wiśniowiecki family. By the end of the 17th and beginning of the 18th centuries, the sloboda was the location of a Cossack district (sotnia) government. Born here, the future Hetman of Zaporizhian Host Danylo Apostol in 1670 founded the Sorochyntsi St. Michael's Monastery. He went on to build the Ukrainian Baroque Church of the Transfiguration (Преображенська церква) in 1732, also in Sorochyntsi, where he was buried two years later. Nikolai Gogol was later baptized in this same church.

Since the middle of the 18th century, the large Sorochyntsi Fair (; ) has been held in Velyki Sorochyntsi. Recurring five times a year in the time of the Russian Empire, the fair is now held annually since its revival after a 40-year moratorium during Soviet rule. Since the Presidential Decree of August 18, 1999, the fair bears the status of the National trade fair. The fair is a large showcase for traditional handicrafts made by skilled craftsmen, including Reshetylivka embroidery, rugs, Opishnia ceramics, as well theatrical performers who re-enact scenes of village life from famous Ukrainian stories.

From 1925 to 1931 the city was called Neronovychi after the Ukrainian People's Secretary of Military Affairs, Yevhen Neronovych.

Population

According to the Ukrainian Census of 2001 in village resided 4050 people.

LanguageNo.PercentageUkrainianRussianHungarianBelarusianGerman
396897.98%
791.95%
10.02%
10.02%
10.02%

Famous people

On , writer Nikolai Gogol was born in Velyki Sorochyntsi. His short story The Fair at Sorochyntsi made the small village, and its fair, world-famous.

On August 23, 1911, a monument to Nikolai Gogol (by the sculptor Ilya Ginzburg) was installed in the village. There is also the Gogol Memorial Museum in the village. In 1983, the Soviet Union issued a postage stamp showing the monument and the museum.

In 1845, Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko visited the village for the archeological commission, compiling the history and architecture of Poltavshchyna. There has been a street named in his honor in this village for over a half a century.

Once being categorized as a town the village is also a birthplace of other notable Ukrainians such as Hetman Danylo Apostol, writer Volodymyr Samiylenko, and many others.

References

References

  1. "Великосорочинская громада". Портал об'єднаних громад України.
  2. "Velyki Sorochyntsi". World Gazetteer.
  3. (August 9, 1999). "кoляди".
  4. "Європейський Союз - Публікації".
  5. link. (2015-11-17 at the [[Verkhovna Rada]] website.)
  6. "Division of population by native language, Poltava region (in % to total population)".
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