Andriiashivka, Sumy Oblast

Andriiashivka (Ukrainian: Андріяшівка; Belarusian: Андрыяшыўка, romanizedAndryjašyŭka; Russian: Андрияшевка, romanizedAndriyashevka) is a village in Romny Raion, in Ukraine's central Sumy Oblast. It is the administrative centre of Andriiashivka rural hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine. Its population is 1,352 (as of 2024).[1]

Andriiashivka
Андріяшівка
The Andriiashivka oak [uk] and church in Andriiashivka
The Andriiashivka oak [uk] and church in Andriiashivka
Andriiashivka is located in Sumy Oblast
Andriiashivka
Andriiashivka
Location of Andriiashivka in Sumy Oblast
Andriiashivka is located in Ukraine
Andriiashivka
Andriiashivka
Location of Andriiashivka in Ukraine
Coordinates: 50°34′15″N 33°22′45″E / 50.57083°N 33.37917°E / 50.57083; 33.37917
Country Ukraine
Oblast Sumy Oblast
Raion Romny Raion
HromadaAndriiashivka rural hromada
First mentioned1666
Population
1,352

History

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Andriiashivka was first mentioned in 1666. Around this time, it was one of the primary centres of the potato farming industry in Ukraine. The village is known for the Andriiashivka oak [uk], a 400-year-old oak tree, which is located near the church.[2]

Andriiashivka came under the control of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic in January 1918. An Association for Joint Cultivation of Land was established in 1923, followed by an artel named for Rosa Luxemburg the next year. 147 inhabitants of the village died during World War II.[citation needed]

Demographics

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According to the 1989 Soviet census Andriiashivka's population was 2,358. By 2001, this number had dropped to 2,087. As of the 2001 census, the majority (97.94%) of Andriiashivka speaks Ukrainian. The remaining population speaks Russian (2.01%) and Belarusian (0.05%).[3]

Notable people

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References

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  1. ^ "Андріяшівська громада" [Andriiashivka hromada]. gromada.info (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  2. ^ "Село Андріяшівка: що можна побачити за кілька хвилин" [Andriiashivka village: what can you see, and in how much time?]. Zemliak (in Ukrainian). 15 February 2023. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  3. ^ "Перепис населення" [Population census]. State Statistics Service of Ukraine (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 2 January 2024.