Tuchyn
Tuchyn is a rural settlement in Rivne Oblast, western Ukraine. It is located in Rivne Raion in the historic region of Volhynia, approximately 18 km east from the oblast capital, Rivne.
Image:Tuczyn.JPG|thumb|right|Street in Tuczyn
Image:Tuczyn Church.JPG|thumb|right|Church erected by the Walewski's in 1796
History
The Polish noble family Siemaszko is rooted in Tuchyn. In 1650, the town was owned by the Daniłłowicz family, then later by the Lubomirski's, and finally by the Walewski's from the 18th century to the outbreak of World War II. The Stanisław Lubomirski foundation erected two wooden churches, cerkwie, in the town in 1711 and 1730. The Walewski's built a classicist Church in 1796.A Roman Catholic Parish was founded in Tuczyn in 1590, it included many villages of the surrounding region. In 1938, the Catholic parish numbered 2,660 individuals, almost all of them Poles.
There was a significant German population in the Tuczyn region. They began to arrive in large numbers in the 1860s. The vast majority were German Lutherans, initially served from distant Zhitomir Lutheran Parish. The Lutheran Parish of Tuczyn was established there in 1888. At its peak, prior to World War I, the parish served over 25,000 Germans in more than 80 villages in a region much larger than that covered by the Catholic parish - yet no church building was constructed until 1929. The number of Germans dropped dramatically right before World War I, when many migrated to North America. Only some 6000 or so remained during the inter-war years.
Prior to World War II Tuchyn was a major town in the district and had a large population of Jewish, Polish and Ukrainian ethnicity, plus the remnants of the once numerous German population.