Bilche Zolote (Ukrainian: Більче-Золоте)
(Bilcze Zlote, Bilche Zolotoye), a village in Ukraine, is located within the Borshchiv Raion
(district) of the Ternopil Oblast (province), about 460 kilometers (290 mi)
driving distance southwest of Kiev, and about 16 kilometers (9.9 mi) west of the
district seat of Borshchiv. This rural community is located in a small valley
adjacent to the Seret River, which is surrounded by plateaus covered with farms,
broken by occasional stands of mixed forest. It is home to a remarkable park of
1800 hectares (4448 acres), of which 11 hectares (27 acres) is covered with
virgin timber, including some trees up to 400 years old. Bilche Zolote is also
the location of the large gypsum karst Verteba Cave, as well as a
significant Neolithic Cucuteni-Trypillian culture archaeological site, and
attracts tourist and spelunker visitors from many countries. Founded in the early 10th Century,
Bilche Zolote has been ruled at various times by the Kievan Rus, Lithuania,
Austria, Russia, Poland, the Soviet Union, Germany, Carpatho-Ukraine, and
Ukraine. Its town council, which oversees the governance of the area, also
administers the villages of Yuryampil (Ukrainian: Юр'ямпіль), Monastyrok (Ukrainian:
Монастирок), and Mushkativ (Ukrainian: Мушкатів). The nearest railway station is
12 kilometers (7.5 mi) away in the town of Ozeryany (Ukrainian: Озеряни). The
town includes public elementary through secondary schools, a public library, two
recreational facilities, and an Inter-Regional Rehabilitation Hospital. This page is hosted at no cost to the public by JewishGen, Inc.,
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Last updated
03/07/12 by ELRBILCHE ZOLOTE
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