Hlyboka

Hlyboka (Ukrainian Глибока, German and Polish Hliboka, Russian Глыбокая / Glybokaja, Romanian Adancata ) is an urban-type settlement in the Ukrainian Chernivtsi Oblast. It is located south of the Pruths, about 23 km south of the northern Bukovina Chernivtsi.

The settlement was first mentioned in writing in 1438 and then to 1776 belonged to the Principality of Moldavia. After that it was a part of Austria in Bukowina. 1869, the place where the rail network was Chernivtsi Suczawa connected by the construction of the line (owned by the Lemberg - Czernowitz - Jassy Railway ), on November 30, 1886 was the built under the leadership of Bukovina Lokalbahnen local railway Hliboka - Berhometh added on Sereth, on January 1, 1897 was followed by the operated by the New Bukovina local railway company Lokalbahn Hliboka - Seret. Mid-19th century it came to the settlement of German settlers in the existing settlement, but they left during the population exchange in 1940 (see Bukovina German ) the place. Large parts of the town were in the hands of Polish nobles, last, this was the family Skibniewski.

After the end of World War II, the place came to Romania (in the circle Storojineţ ) and was a border town to Poland. As part of the annexation of Northern Bukovina on June 28, 1940, she was part of the Soviet Union ( 1941-1944 intervening turn to Romania) and is since 1991 a part of the Ukraine. In 1956, she was elevated to the urban-type settlement.

From 1959 to 1992 the village lying northeast Dymka was a part of the community.

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