Liubeshiv


Liubeshiv is a rural settlement in Kamin-Kashyrskyi Raion, Volyn Oblast, western Ukraine. It is located in the historic region of Polesia. It is the administrative seat of Liubeshiv settlement hromada. Population:

History

Lubieszów was first mentioned in 1484. It was a private town of Grand Duchy of Lithuania, later part of Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. After the Partitions of Poland it was annexed by Russia.
In 1684 a monastery was established in Liubeshiv by the Catholic order of Piarists, and in 1693 a collegium was founded by the order's monks in the town. The foundation was supported by the local landowners from Dolski family, with Anna Dolska, the widow of the town's former owner, donating 30,000 złotys on the construction of the monastery and another thousand for the purchase of books for the local library. Some sources of the time mentioned Liubeshiv as "New Dolsk".
During the late 1690s the settlement came into ownership of the Wisniowiecki family, who donated 20,000 złotys for the education of local youths. During the 18th century the collegium in Liubeshiv achieved great authority, and also housed a pharmacy serving local inhabitants. In 1730 a botanical garden was created, with some of its trees surviving to our time. Among students of Liubeshiv collegium was Polish statesman and revolutionary Tadeusz Kosciuszko, who also fought in the American War of Independence. Teaching positions in the collegium were held representatives of different nations, such as Poles, Lithuanians and Ukrainians., known as the "father of Polish surgery", started his medical practice in Liubeshiv and taught at the collegium. Among notable alumni of the establishment were natural scientist and Vilnius University professor Stanisław Bonifacy Jundziłł, philosopher, jurist and historian.
Between 1745 and 1762 the Piarist church was constructed in Liubeshiv. Adorned with numerous frescoes depicting the scene of Ascension of Christ and the Mother of God, it was consecrated in 1786. The collegium in Liubeshiv was closed down by Russian authorities in 1852. During the battles of First World War in July 1916 the monastery and church buildings were seriously damaged. In 1926 the complex was transferred to Capucin monks, who attempted to revive the educational establishment, which functioned until 1939. After the Second World War the monastery building was repurposed as a school and stands to this day. In 1969 Soviet authorities demolished the church and destroyed its frescoes.
On 9 November 1943, 300 Poles were murdered by the Ukrainians as part of the genocide of Poles in Volhynia. A 2013 monument on the local Polish cemetery commemorates the victims
Until 26 January 2024, Liubeshiv was designated urban-type settlement. On this day, a new law entered into force which abolished this status, and Liubeshiv became a rural settlement.

Notable people