LC control no. | n 97078381 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
Geographic heading | Hoshcha (Ukraine) |
Geographic subdivision usage | Ukraine--Hoshcha |
Variant(s) | Goshcha, Poland Gosca (Ukraine) Goshcha (Ukraine) Goschtscha (Ukraine) Hošča (Ukraine) Hosht (Ukraine) Hoshtch (Ukraine) Hoszcza (Ukraine) Гоща (Ukraine) |
Special note | Non-Latin script reference not evaluated. |
Found in | It could not have happened, 1995: p. 14-15, etc. (Hosht, a small town 20 miles from Ostrog) Ukraïna [MAP], 1992 (Гоща = Hoshcha, a town in Rivnensʹka oblastʹ) Ukraïna, ohli︠a︡dova mapa, 1994: p. 33 (Hoshcha) Rovensʹka oblastʹ, 1973: p. 179, etc. (Hoshcha, a settlement in the Hoshchansʹkyĭ raĭon, 33 km. from Rovno) Shtetl finder WWW, 08-05-97 (Goshcha, 50°36ʹN, 26°40ʹE: variants: Hoszcza, Hosht, Hoshtch, Gosca, Goschtscha: located 272.6 km. west of Kiev) BGN gaz., USSR (Goshcha, ppl.: 50°36ʹN, 26°40ʹE; variant form: Hoszcza) Russian Brockhaus: v. 9, p. 464 (Goshcha, a small town in Ostrozhskīĭ ui︠e︡zd, in Volynskai︠a︡ gubernīi︠a︡. It was owned by the Kirdeev family and has existed for many centuries) Ukr. rad. ent︠s︡ykl: v. 3, p. 134 (Hoshcha, an urban settlement in Rovensʹka oblastʹ URSR. It has been known since the 14th cent. In the 1450s the village came under the control of Lithuania, but with the peace treaty of 1569 it was ceded to Poland. After the 2nd partition of Poland in 1793 Hoshcha, as part of Right-Bank Ukraine, became part of the Russian Empire. Soviet rule was established there in Jan. 1918 but Poland regained control of Hoshcha from 1920 to 1939) Encyc. of Ukraine: v. 2, p. 229 (Hoshcha [Hošča], a town and raion center in Rivne oblast. It was first mentioned in historical sources of the 14th century. In the late 16th cent. it became a center of the Socinians in Volhynia) LC PreMARC file (hdg.: Goshcha, Poland) |
Geographic area code | e-un--- |