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Teofipolʹ (Ukraine)

LC control no.no 97005730
Descriptive conventionsrda
Geographic headingTeofipolʹ (Ukraine)
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Geographic subdivision usageUkraine--Teofipolʹ
Variant(s)Teofipilʹ (Ukraine)
Teofilʹpolʹ (Ukraine)
Теофіполь (Ukraine)
Special noteNon-Latin script reference not evaluated.
Found inNavichno v pam'i︠a︡ti narodniĭ, 1995: p. 7 (Teofipolʹ)
GEOnet WWW, 02-18-97 (Teofipol', ppl.: 49°50ʹ00ʺN, 26°25ʼ 00ʺE)
Encykl. Powszechna: v. 14, p. 457 (Teofipol, a small town in the Gub. Wołyńskiej, Pow. Starokonstantynowskim)
Ukr. rad. ent︠s︡ykl.: v. 11, pt. 1, p. 198 (Teofipolʹ, a town in Khmelʹnyt︠s︡ʼka oblastʹ first mentioned in historical sources of 1420 as the Lithuanian fortress of Kamin [no publs. in LC data base]. In 1569 it was annexed by Poland. After the second partition of Poland in 1793 Teofipolʹ became part of Right-Bank Ukraine. Soviet government was established there in January of 1918)
Russian Brockhaus: v. 32, p. 915 (Teofipolʹ (Teofilʹpolʹ, Chuvgan, Cholkhan), a town in Volynskai︠a︡ gubernīi︠a︡, Starokonstantinovskīĭ ui︠e︡zd. Teofipolʹ merged with the village of Tarakanovka)
Ukraïna [MAP], 1992: (Teofipolʹ, city in Khmelʹnyt︠s︡ʹka oblastʹ)
Ukraïna, ohli︠a︡dova mapa, 1994: p. 26 (Теофіполь = Teofipolʹ, in Khmelʹnyt︠s︡ʹka oblastʹ: called Kaminʹ until the end of the 15th cent.; renamed Chovhansʹkyĭ Kaminʹ from the end of 15th cent. to the end of the 17th cent; renamed again as Chovhan from the end of the 17th cent. until 1740 [no publs. in LC data base for any of these earlier names])
SSSR, admin.-territ. delenie, 1983: p. 337 (Teofipolʹ, town in Khmelʹnit︠s︡kai︠a︡ oblastʹ)
Encyc. of Ukraine: v. 5, p. 191 (Teofipil or Teofipol [Teofipil' or Teofipol'], a town on the Polkva River and raion center in Khmelnytskyi oblast. It was first mentioned in historical documents of 1420, as the Lithuanian fortress of Kamin [no publs. in LC data base]. Later the town was called Chovhanskyi Kamin [no publs. in LC data base] and then Chovhan [no publs. in LC data base], and it was owned by Polish magnates. It was destroyed by the Tatars in 1593, 1618, and 1649. Its inhabitants supported B. Khmelnytsky's uprising in 1648 but were soon subjugated by the Poles. In 1740 the town was renamed after its new owner, Princess Teofila Jabłonska. After the second partition of Poland in 1793, Teofipil was annexed by the Russian Empire, and became a volost center in the Starokostiantyniv county, Volhynia gubernia)
Utel, Ukrainian localities and area codes, 1997 (Teofipol, Khmelnytsky [Ukraine])
Not found inLC PreMARC file
Geographic area codee-un---