Ivyanets

Ivianec
Івянец

Coat of arms
Ivianec
Івянец
Coordinates: 53°53′24″N 26°44′49″E / 53.89000°N 26.74694°E / 53.89000; 26.74694Coordinates: 53°53′24″N 26°44′49″E / 53.89000°N 26.74694°E / 53.89000; 26.74694
Country  Belarus
Voblast Minsk
Raion Valozhyn
First mentioned XIV century
Established 1940
Population (2009)
  Total 4 800
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
  Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Postal code 222370
Area code(s) +375 1772
Vehicle registration 5

Ivianec (Belarusian: Iвяне́ц, [ivʲaˈnʲets]; Russian: Ивенец; Polish: Iwieniec) is a township in the Valozhyn Raion of the Minsk Voblast, Belarus.

History

It is located in a hilly and woody area on the river Volma, 56 kilometers west of Minsk. It has been known since the end of the 15th century as a privately owned settlement of the Sollohub family. Originally known as Givenech, presumably derived from Lithuanian gyventi – "to live". The place was under German occupation from 1941 to 1944. In 1941, there were probably about 1,200 Jews residing in this district center.

On September 5, 1941, 50 male Jews were shot. On November, 1941, the German established an enclosed ghetto. The ghetto received Jews from the surrounding villages. In 1942, the Jews were selected and sent to other ghettos, as that of Novogrudok. The Germans liquidated the remaining ones from the Ivenets ghetto on June 9, 1942. That day, about 800 victims were shot in a pit in a forest.[1] There is a memorial on the location of the massacre.

Personalities

Felix Dzerzhinsky was born on an estate near Ivyanets in 1877.

References

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