Kiliia
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History
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Template:Flagicon Byzantine Empire until 1361
From 1361 until 1412 contested between Kingdom of Hungary, Wallachia, Poland, the Republic of Genoa and the Ottoman Empire
Template:Flagicon Principality of Moldavia 1412–1448
Template:Flagicon Kingdom of Hungary 1448–1465
Template:Flagicon Principality of Moldavia 1465–1484
File:Flag of the Ottoman Empire (1844–1922).svg Ottoman Empire 1484–1812
File:Flag of Russia.svg Russian Empire 1812–1856
File:Flag of the Ottoman Empire (1844–1922).svg Ottoman Empire 1856–1878
File:Flag of Russia.svg Russian Empire 1878–1917
Template:Country data Moldavian Democratic Republic 1917–1918
Template:Country data Kingdom of Romania 1918–1940
File:Flag of the Soviet Union (1936 – 1955).svg Soviet Union 1940–1941
Template:Country data Kingdom of Romania 1941–1944
File:Flag of the Soviet Union.svg Soviet Union 1944–1991
File:Flag of Ukraine.svg Ukraine 1991–present
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A town on the Romanian side of the Chilia branch of the Danube, now known as Chilia Veche (Template:Langx, translit. Stara Kiliia) or "Old Chilia", was founded by the Greek Byzantines – κελλία, kellia in Greek being the equivalent of "granaries", a name first recorded in 1241, in the works of the Persian chronicler Rashid-al-Din Hamadani. Kiliia is therefore sometimes referred to as Nova Kiliia meaning "New Kiliia".
In the place that is now Kiliia, a large colony was established by the Republic of Genoa, known as "Licostomo" and headed by a consul (a representative of the Republic in the region). From that time, only the defensive ditches of a Genoese fortress remained.[2]
The city was founded by Stephen the Great of Moldavia, in order to counteract the Ottoman Empire which had taken control over Chilia Veche in the 15th century. It was a major Moldavian port. However, it was eventually conquered by the Ottomans in 1484. In 1570 (Hijri 977) the town of Kilia was inhabited by Muslims and Christians. It had 298 Muslim households in 13 neighbourhoods and 316 Christian households in 5 neighbourhoods and it was a "has" of the Sultan, a land property that was directly owned by the Sultan. One of the Muslim neighbourhoods was recorded as a Circassian neighbourhood.[3] Kiliia was taken by the Russian army under the command of the general Ivan Gudovich during Russo-Turkish War (1787–1792). The Times of London reported that "35,000 of the inhabitants were involved in a general massacre," an incident that had "been celebrated in prose and poetry." [4] The city was given back to the Ottomans in 1792, but retaken by the Russians in 1806 and awarded to them officially in 1812.
After being bombarded by the Anglo-French fleet in July 1854 during the Crimean War, it was given to Romania in the Treaty of Paris (1856).[5] In 1878 (Congress of Berlin), Kiliia was transferred back to Russia together with Budjak. Between 1918 and 1940 (Interwar period, Greater Romania) it was again part of Romania. In July 1940, after a Soviet ultimatum, Romania agreed to give up Bessarabia and northern Bukovina; the Soviet Union occupied it and came to the Ukrainian SSR (it was held yet again by Romania, from 1941 to 1944, in World War II, time during which it was the capital of the Chilia County), and passed on to independent Ukraine after the dissolution of the Soviet Union. The Jews were deported to Transnistria by the Romanian authorities in 1941, where most of the 316 deported Jews died.[6]
The oldest building in Kiliia is the semi-subterranean church of St. Nicholas, which may go back to 1485, although an old inscription in the church claims that it was founded on 10 May 1647.
Until 18 July 2020, Kiliia was the administrative center of Kiliia Raion. The raion was abolished in July 2020 as part of the administrative reform of Ukraine, which reduced the number of raions of Odesa Oblast to seven. The area of Kiliia Raion was merged into Izmail Raion.[7][8]
Demographics
As of the 2001 Ukrainian census, Ukrainians constitue the majority of the town's population. Russians, Moldovans and Bulgarians form significant minorities.[9]
In 2001, 55.5% of the inhabitants spoke Russian as their native language, while 39.56% spoke Ukrainian and 2.93% of the inhabitants spoke Romanian.[10]
Notable people
- Vadym Prystaiko (born 1970), Ukrainian diplomat
- Oleksandr Dubovoy (born 1976), Ukrainian politician (Batkivshchyna)
- Ihor Nesterenko (born 1990), Israeli-Ukrainian basketball player in the Israel Basketball Premier League
Gallery
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Intercession of the Theotokos Church
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St. Nicholas Church
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Skyline of Kiliia from one of the churches
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Tombstone in Kherson of soldier fallen in the siege of Kiliia
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Kiliia Fortress
References
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- ↑ See Radu Ioanid, The Holocaust in Romania: The Destruction of the Jews and Gypsies Under the Antonescu Regime (Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 2000), p. 129, 131-132 (where the number of 316 Jews appears), 199, 201.
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- Pages with script errors
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- Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica
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- Castles in Ukraine
- Castles in Moldavia
- Territories of the Republic of Genoa
- Populated places on the Danube
- Romania–Ukraine border crossings
- Port cities and towns in Ukraine
- Port cities of the Black Sea
- Cities of district significance in Ukraine
- Ismail County
- Chilia County
- Izmailsky Uyezd
- Cities in Izmail Raion
- Populated places in Kiliia urban hromada
- Kiliia