Rybnitsa PMR population. Rybnitsa. Industrial giant in Moldavian style. Display objects in Rybnitsa district

Here is a map of Rybnitsa with streets → Transnistria, Moldova. We study a detailed map of Rybnitsa with house numbers and streets. Search in real time, weather today, coordinates

More details about the streets of Rybnitsa on the map

A detailed map of the city of Rybnitsa with street names will be able to show all the routes and roads where the street is located. Industrial and Lazo. Located near.

To view the territory of the entire region in detail, it is enough to change the scale of the online diagram +/-. On the page there is an interactive map of the city of Rybnitsa with addresses and routes of the microdistrict. Move its center to find now Gvardeyskaya and Kirova streets.

The ability to plot a route across the country and calculate the distance using the “Ruler” tool, find out the length of the city and the path to its center, addresses of attractions, transport stops and hospitals (type of “Hybrid” diagram), look at train stations and borders.

You will find everything you need detailed information o location of urban infrastructure - stations and shops, squares and banks, highways and highways.

An accurate satellite map of Ribnitsa with Google search is in its own section. Use Yandex search to show the house number on the folk map of a city in Transnistria (Moldova)/the world, in real time.


In September I went to Transnistria. Having looked at posts about cities, I did not find any mention of Rybnitsa. After taking a photo for the report, I corrected the omission. Meet, northern capital Transnistria - Rybnitsa.

Rybnitsa is a city in the north of the Transnistrian Moldavian Republic. The administrative center of the Rybnitsa region of the unrecognized Transnistrian Moldavian Republic. From Rybnitsa to the capital of Transnistria - Tiraspol - 120 km. To the capital of Moldova - Chisinau - 160.
According to the latest data, about 50 thousand people live in the city (2010 data).

The first information about a settlement in the city dates back to the first half of the 15th century, 1628. There are several versions about the origin of the city's name. According to one of them, it comes from the name of the river of the same name, Sukhaya Rybnitsa, at the mouth of which, at the confluence with the Dniester, the settlement was founded. According to the second - named after the boyar Rydvan, who, having risen to the rank of colonel among the Turks, “remembering the fat pork of his places” - decides to flee to the left bank of the Dniester, under the arm of the Polish king. Soon a wooden fortress is erected and a settlement called Rydvanets arises. This fact is mentioned in the book of the Turkish traveler Evliya Celebi, who visited these parts with an army in 1656 - 1657.

In 1924, Rybnitsa became an urban-type settlement and a regional center of the Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. In 1926, 9.4 thousand inhabitants lived in the city (38.0% Jews, 33.8% Ukrainians, 16.0% Moldovans). In 1938, Rybnitsa acquired the status of a city.

In 1941-42, the remaining Jewish population of Rybnitsa was brutally tortured by the Romanian and German occupiers. A memorial sign was erected at the site of the execution of 500 Rybnitsa residents.

Rybnitsa has favorable transport and geographical position. The city is located on the left bank of the Dniester and is separated from the river by a concrete dam. There is a large reservoir near the city.

In the field of education, there are 12 schools, 2 vocational schools and 3 higher educational institutions, including: a branch of the Pridnestrovian State University named after. T. G. Shevchenko, branch of the North-Western Correspondence Technical University in St. Petersburg and Consultation Center of the Tiraspol branch of the Moscow Academy of Economics and Law.

Rybnitsa Russian Gymnasium No. 1

Branch of Transnistrian State University.

In 1975, the 24-meter-high Military Glory Memorial was built (designed by V. Mednek). Two paired reinforced concrete pylons are lined with white marble; at the foot, the names of the liberators of the city and region are carved on 12 granite slabs (restored in 2010).

Memorial to those who fell for the independence of the Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic


On September 2, the Republic celebrated the 20th anniversary of independence. That's 20 years of unrecognized status.


The main current attraction of the city is the St. Michael the Archangel Cathedral - the largest in Transnistria and Moldova, it took about 15 years to build and was opened on November 21, 2006.


The building of the administration of Rybnitsa and Rybnitsa district.

View of the central square of the city.

The city is very green. In 2000, there was icing in Transnistria. The city remained without electricity and water for 2 weeks. The city has lost 30% of green spaces. After 10 years, the vegetation increased.

The building of the local history museum.


A sparse cobbled street. Rarity!

The building of the former cinema "Mir"

The fountain is a meeting place for Rybnitsa residents in the central park.

Since I found the Day of Knowledge on September 1, I will show those who acquire this knowledge.

There are several residential neighborhoods in the city. One of them is the Yuzhny microdistrict.

Microdistrict "Valchenko". In the distance is already Moldova.

In the background of this photo is the building of the giant Moldavian Metallurgical Plant.

Useful information for tourists about Rybnitsa in Moldova - geographical location, tourism infrastructure, map, architectural features and attractions.

Rybnitsa is small town in the Republic of Moldova. It is located 130 km from the capital Chisinau. According to statistics, about 48 thousand people live in the city. Half of the national composition of Rybnitsa are Ukrainians, the rest are Russians (23%) and Moldovans (22%). There are several versions about the origin of the name of this settlement. One of them says that the name of the city was given by the Rybanets River, on the banks of which the settlement was located.

The first written mentions of settlement in the territory modern city date back to 1657 and are contained in a work written by the Turkish traveler Evliy Celebi, who visited Moldova in 1656-1657. In 1793, after the second partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, these lands became part of the Russian Empire. In 1797, the city became part of the Molokishsky volost of the Baltic district of the Podolsk province. XIX century marked the opening of the town catholic church and the Orthodox Church. The first school appeared in 1871. The Slobozia-Balti railway line, built in 1892 and passing through Rybnitsa, played a huge role in the city’s economy.

In 1924, Rybnitsa was declared an urban-type settlement, as well as one of the regional centers of the Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. Already in 1938 the village acquired the status of a city. During the war, the Jewish population remaining in the city was brutally tortured by the Romanian and German invaders.

In December 1962, Rybnitsa became a city of republican subordination to the Moldavian SSR. In 1991, it lost this status. Today Rybnitsa is a large production, industrial, educational and cultural center Transnistria. There are more than 400 enterprises in the city, including the oldest sugar factory in the state, as well as a distillery, a centrifugal pump plant, a cement-slate and metallurgical plant.

Rybnitsa is a very interesting and beautiful city. The main city attraction is considered to be the largest not only in Transnistria, but also in all of Moldova, St. Michael the Archangel Cathedral. The construction of the temple took 15 years. His Grand opening took place in November 2006. The temple is crowned with 11 bells. The weight of the largest bell, “Blagovest,” was 100 pounds.

The most important monument of the city is the Military Glory Memorial, built in 1975. The author of this 24-meter project in the form of two paired reinforced concrete pylons was the architect V. Mednek. At the foot of the granite slabs you can see the carved names of the liberators of the region.

Among other religious attractions, it is also worth noting the Assumption Rock Monastery in Tsipovo, located on the right bank of the Dniester, which is about 20 km from Rybnitsa. Built in the XII-XIV centuries. the monastery is considered the most significant of the country's rock complexes. Of particular interest to tourists are the Kalaur gorge in Rashkov, the Trinity Monastery, as well as the one located near Rybnitsa nature reserve in Sakharny.

In September I went to Transnistria. Having looked at posts about cities, I did not find any mention of Rybnitsa. After taking a photo for the report, I corrected the omission. Meet the northern capital of Transnistria - Rybnitsa.

Rybnitsa is a city in the north of the Transnistrian Moldavian Republic. The administrative center of the Rybnitsa region of the unrecognized Transnistrian Moldavian Republic. From Rybnitsa to the capital of Transnistria – Tiraspol – 120 km. To the capital of Moldova – Chisinau – 160.
According to the latest data, about 50 thousand people live in the city (2010 data).


The first information about a settlement in the city dates back to the first half of the 15th century, 1628. There are several versions about the origin of the city's name. According to one of them, it comes from the name of the river of the same name, Sukhaya Rybnitsa, at the mouth of which, at the confluence with the Dniester, the settlement was founded. According to the second - named after the boyar Rydvan, who, having risen to the rank of colonel among the Turks, “remembering the fat pork of his places” - decides to flee to the left bank of the Dniester, under the arm of the Polish king. Soon a wooden fortress is erected and a settlement called Rydvanets arises. This fact is mentioned in the book of the Turkish traveler Evliya Celebi, who visited these parts with an army in 1656 - 1657.


In 1924, Rybnitsa became an urban-type settlement and a regional center of the Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. In 1926, 9.4 thousand inhabitants lived in the city (38.0% Jews, 33.8% Ukrainians, 16.0% Moldovans). In 1938, Rybnitsa acquired the status of a city.


In 1941-42, the remaining Jewish population of Rybnitsa was brutally tortured by the Romanian and German occupiers. A memorial sign was erected at the site of the execution of 500 Rybnitsa residents.


Rybnitsa has a favorable transport and geographical location. The city is located on the left bank of the Dniester and is separated from the river by a concrete dam. There is a large reservoir near the city.


In the field of education, there are 12 schools, 2 vocational schools and 3 higher educational institutions, including: a branch of the Pridnestrovian State University named after. T. G. Shevchenko, branch of the North-Western Correspondence Technical University in St. Petersburg and Consultation Center of the Tiraspol branch of the Moscow Academy of Economics and Law.


Rybnitsa Russian Gymnasium No. 1


Branch of the Pridnestrovian State University.


In 1975, the 24-meter-high Military Glory Memorial was built (designed by V. Mednek). Two paired reinforced concrete pylons are lined with white marble; at the foot, the names of the liberators of the city and region are carved on 12 granite slabs (restored in 2010).


Memorial to those who fell for the independence of the Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic




On September 2, the Republic celebrated the 20th anniversary of independence. That's 20 years of unrecognized status.






The main current attraction of the city is the St. Michael the Archangel Cathedral - the largest in Transnistria and Moldova, it took about 15 years to build and was opened on November 21, 2006.




The building of the administration of Rybnitsa and Rybnitsa district.


View of the central square of the city.


The city is very green. In 2000, there was icing in Transnistria. The city remained without electricity and water for 2 weeks. The city has lost 30% of green spaces. After 10 years, the vegetation increased.


The building of the local history museum.




A sparse cobbled street. Rarity!


The building of the former cinema "Mir"


The fountain is a meeting place for Rybnitsa residents in the central park.


Since I found the Day of Knowledge on September 1, I will show those who acquire this knowledge.


There are several residential neighborhoods in the city. One of them is the Yuzhny microdistrict.


Microdistrict "Valchenko". In the distance is already Moldova.


In the background of this photo is the building of the giant Moldavian Metallurgical Plant.


Another republican giant is Sheriff, owner of a network of gas stations and supermarkets.

Social sector

In the field of education, there are 12 schools, 2 vocational schools and 3 higher educational institutions, including: a branch of the Pridnestrovian State University named after. T. G. Shevchenko, branch of the North-Western Correspondence Technical University in St. Petersburg and Consultation Center of the Tiraspol branch of the Moscow Academy of Economics and Law.

The development of physical culture and sports is ensured by 4 children's and youth sports schools, 150 sports facilities, including 37 gyms, 2 swimming pools and 92 flat sports facilities.

Three Russian-language city newspapers are published in Rybnitsa - the official "Novosti" (circulation 2,500 copies), independent "Good Day" and "Good Evening" (circulation - 6,500 copies each). The republican newspaper “Gomin” is also published here in Ukrainian (circulation - 2,000 copies).

There are 2 hotels in the city: “Tiras” with 250 beds and “Metallurg” with 50 beds, many restaurants and cafes. In the lower part of the city on the banks of the Dniester there is a sanatorium-preventorium MMZ.

Memorial of Military Glory. In the background on the right is St. Michael the Archangel Cathedral

In 1975, the 24-meter-high Military Glory Memorial was built (designed by V. Mednek). Two paired reinforced concrete pylons are lined with white marble; at the foot, the names of the liberators of the city and region are carved on 12 granite slabs (restored in 2010). In the prisoner of war camp, the Nazis killed 2,700 Soviet soldiers, in May-June 1943, about 3,000 Ukrainian Rybnitsa residents were evicted near Ochakov, about 3,000 people died of typhus in the Jewish ghetto and 3,650 Rybnitsa residents fell on the fronts of the Second World War - such were the losses of the small Transnistrian city.

St. Michael the Archangel Cathedral

The main current attraction of the city is the St. Michael the Archangel Cathedral - the largest in Transnistria and Moldova, it took about 15 years to build and was opened on November 21, 2006. The bells are placed on the third tier, in the center there is a large bell “Blagovest” weighing 100 pounds, around it there are 10 more bells, the smallest of which weighs only 4 kg. The bells for the cathedral belfry were cast at the Moscow joint-stock company "Litex".

In addition to the Archangel Michael Cathedral itself, which can simultaneously accommodate about 2 thousand parishioners, on the territory temple complex A large, 3-story parish house will be built, which will house a library, a dining room, a parish school and the rector’s chambers.

Nearby attractions

Customs post on the bridge over the Dniester between Rybnitsa and Rezina

Kalaur Gorge in Rashkovo

After the victory of the Lithuanian prince Olgerd on the Sinyukha River, Podolia was given to his nephew Fedor Koriatovich. He ordered the construction of the Kalaur castle over the narrow gorge around the bend of the river, on the border of Lithuania and Moldova, which was completely ready by the end of the 14th century. During the marriage of B. Khmelnitsky's son, Timosh, and the daughter of the Moldavian ruler V. Lupu, Ruksanda, the newlyweds received this castle as a gift from B. Khmelnitsky, but, unfortunately, it has not survived to this day. The ancient church of St. will tell us about the Polish presence. Cajetana in Rašków, built in 1749 (Baroque) by the Polish magnate Stanisław Lubomirski (1704-93). The two towers are decorated with pilasters of the Ionic and Tuscan order. Art. Since 1764, Lubomirski became the voivode of Bratslav, his residence was Szargorod, but many palaces belonged to the Lubomirskis throughout Poland (Warsaw, Rzeszow, Przemysl). The treasures of Tatar silver and Swedish coins found here, as well as the ruins of a huge synagogue with a secret staircase in the wall, tell about the former glory of Rashkov in the Middle Ages.

Nature reserve and Trinity Monastery in Saharna

Memorial to those killed during the Great Patriotic War View of Rybnitsa (to the Valchenko microdistrict) Residential buildings

Personalities

  • Rybnitsa Rebbe Chaim Zanvl ( Abramovich), Hasidic tzaddik, rabbi of Rybnitsa
  • Meir Argov (Grabovsky), Israeli politician, one of the 37 signers of the country's Declaration of Independence
  • Pavel Zaltsman, film artist, painter, writer; Between 1917 and 1925 he lived intermittently in Rybnitsa
  • David Zelvensky, military historian
  • Yitzhak Yitzhaki (Lishovsky), Israeli socialist politician, Knesset member
  • Valeriy Kabak, professor at Balti State University. Alec Russo
  • Victor Comlyakov, Moldovan chess player, grandmaster
  • Alexander Marcus, Moldovan mathematician
  • Israel Feldman, Moldovan mathematician
  • Semyon Shvartsburd, Soviet mathematician-teacher, creator of specialized physics and mathematics schools

Twin Cities

Notes

Topographic maps

  • Map Sheet L-35-10 Rybnitsa. Scale: 1: 100,000. State of the area in 1986. 1988 edition
  • Map Sheet L-35-11 Slobodka. Scale: 1: 100,000. State of the area in 1984. 1987 edition

Links

  • Official website of the Rybnitsa city and district Council of People's Deputies
  • Official website of the State Administration of the city of Rybnitsa and Rybnitsa region
  • Website of the Rybnitsa branch of the Pridnestrovian State University. T. G. Shevchenko

 

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