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Thursday, August 28, 2008
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Estimado Usuario - Dado el proceso de migración el cual hemos realizado como parte de la Modernización del Portal. Muchos de los mensajes se encuentran en la categoria "Búsqueda de Familiares" esto será corregido a la brevedad y serán alocados los Mensajes según su correspondiente Foro
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  Forum  Genealogía  Búsqueda de Fam...  busco familiares de Lopushanskiy, Kryvk, Paulichko y Grushak
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New Post 5/24/2008 8:25 PM
  Olga Pita
74 posts
No Ranking


busco familiares de Lopushanskiy, Kryvk, Paulichko y Grushak 

Hay algún familiar en Argentina de las siguientes personas?:

 

Mejailo Mekolaiovich Lopushanskiy

Andriy Kryvak

Ivan Paulichko

Ivan Grushak

 

Son los amigos de papá que viajaron con el en el vapor Alsina en 1929.  Creo que eran todos de Tysovicka.

 

 
New Post 5/25/2008 11:35 AM
  Hannia
130 posts
5th Level Poster


Re: busco familiares de Lopushanskiy, Kryvk, Paulichko y Grushak 

Dobrij den Olyu,

Your father's selo/village Tysovytsia/ Тисовиця was/is a BOYKO village. 

The Boyko/Bojko are a distinctive micro-ethnic group of Ukrainian Carpathian  Montagnards of the Carpathian highlands. The Boykos inhabited the central and the western half of the Carpathians in Ukraine, including the Dolynskij and a part of the Rozhniativakisj raions/district > Ivano-Frankivska oblast/region, theSkolivskij , Turkivskij, and parts of theDrohobytskij, Sambirskij and Starosambirskij raions > Lvivska oblast, and parts of the Mizhirskij raion >Zakarpatska oblast as well as the adjacent areas of and .NE SlovakiaSE Poland

In recent times some scholars have claimed that this group is a part of Rusyn ethnos. However, the Boykos call themselves Ukrainians. Indeed, in the 19th century and in the first part of the 20th century Boykos, as well as most of the population of the present day's called themselves Ruthenians/Rusyny (pronounced RU-TEENY, not Russiany). Then the term UKRAINIAN, that replaced the term RUTHENIAN in a century earlier, became more common among /Ukrainians, including Boykos, as well. According to the recent census practically all Boykos in declared their ethnicity as Ukrainian.UkraineWestern RutheniansEastern UkraineWestern Ukraine

The name, BOYKO is thought by some to originate in their patterns of speech, specifically the use of the expression, "bah!".

Most Boykos belong to the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, with a minority belonging to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church. The distinctive wooden church architecture of the Boyko region is a three-domed church, with the domes arranged in one line, and the middle dome slightly larger than the others.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Bojki1837.jpg

_____________________________________________

From late 18th century to 1919 wies/village TYSOWICA was predominantly a Ruthenian/Ukrainian village with its own Greek Catholic Church.  The filial Roman Catholic Church was in Stary Sambor.  Stary Sambor was both the POWIAT/administrative district - county and the GMINA/judicial tax district > Galicia/Halyczyna Province, administered by ethnic Poles for the Austro-Hungarian Empire.  From 1919-1939 this region was called Lwowskie wojiwodstwo/region, under Reconstituted Poland's domain. Technically Poland had not existed as a geopolitical entity for the previous 125 years.  Anyone emigrating in this time frame had Polish papers and was considered a Polish citizen. All previous place names are official Polish.  Post World War 2. this region became a part of SSR Ukraine, under Soviet domain until 1991 when Ukraine became independent.

___________________________________________

TODAY selo/village Тисовиця/Tysovytsia (coordinates  49°20’N 22°55’E) still exists and has a population of 728 people >Starosambirskij raion/district > Lvivska oblast/region> Ukraine, latest zip code 82091.

Consider writing Village administrator and inquiring about any surviving family still residing in the village. Below is address. On the  local level, it is best to communicate in Ukrainian.

Тисовицька сільська рада

село Тисовиця

Старосамбірський р-н

Львівська обл.

Україна  82091

UCRANIA

 
New Post 5/25/2008 11:58 AM
  Hannia
130 posts
5th Level Poster


Re: busco familiares de Lopushanskiy, Kryvk, Paulichko y Grushak 
Ellis Island Records in New York show approximately 145 villagers emigrating from Tysowice in early 20th century.
 
Among the surnames are Andruch Lopuszanki  (40 yrs  old - arriving 1905), Stanislaw Lapuszanski (26 yrs old - arr 1907), Wasyl Krywak (25 - arr 1913),
Mykola Krywak (27- arrv 1904), Dmytro Pawlecyko (34 - arr 1906), Wasyl
Pawlecyko (17 - arr 1906), Dmytro Hruszak (31 - arr 1907).  They were all
heading for Berwick , Pennsylvania, near Philadelphia. Most went to work for the American Car and Foundry Co. that manufactured passenger and freight trains.  The Ukrainian immigrants to Berwick donated their hard earned wages and built St. Cyril & Methodius Byzantine Church, that still serves the Ukrainian community in Berwick.
 
After making contact with father's traveling companions, consider
passing on the information above.
 
New Post 6/3/2008 12:13 AM
  Olga Pita
74 posts
No Ranking


Re: busco familiares de Lopushanskiy, Kryvk, Paulichko y Grushak 

dobrei deñ Hanniu.  Very interesting information about my father´s celo.  I still have family there. They are waiting for me to visit them. My father was born under the Austro Hungarian Empire and registered in the Roman Catholic Church.

As regards the people you mention,  what I´m looking for is relatives in Argentina of those who came with my father into Argentine in 1929  on board of steamship Alsina. They all emigrated to Argentina and lived here .

Thank you for your cooperation.

Regards

Olga

 

 
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