place

Odesa City Hall

Buildings and structures in OdesaCity and town halls in UkraineGovernment buildings completed in 1834Neoclassical architecture in UkraineTourist attractions in Odesa
Будівля старої біржі, Одеса DSC8077
Будівля старої біржі, Одеса DSC8077

Odesa City Hall (Ukrainian: Будинок Одеської міської ради) is the city hall of Odesa, Ukraine, located at the junction of Prymorskyi Boulevard, Chaikovskoho Lane and Pushkinska Street. It occupies a Neoclassical building, built to a design by Francesco Boffo and Gregorio Toricelli in 1828-34. Rebuilt in 1871-1873 by Franz Morandi.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Odesa City Hall (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Odesa City Hall
Duma Square, Odesa Centre

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Website External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Odesa City HallContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 46.485627777778 ° E 30.74395 °
placeShow on map

Address

Одеська міська рада

Duma Square 1
65004 Odesa, Centre
Odesa Oblast, Ukraine
mapOpen on Google Maps

Website
odessa.ua

linkVisit website

linkWikiData (Q4331408)
linkOpenStreetMap (187865612)

Будівля старої біржі, Одеса DSC8077
Будівля старої біржі, Одеса DSC8077
Share experience

Nearby Places

Khadjibey
Khadjibey

Khadjibey (Turkish: Hacıbey; Ukrainian: Коцюбіїв) was a fortress and a haven by the Gulf of Odesa, in the location of the modern city of Odesa, Ukraine. The settlement was destroyed and abandoned in the 15th of 16th century and was revived under the Ottoman Empire in the 18th century. Other known spellings include Khadzhibey, Khadjibei, Hajibey, Khacdjibei, Hacıbey, Hocabey, Gadzhibei, Chadžibėjus, Codjabey, Kachybey, Kotsiubey, Kotsiubiiv. By one hypothesis, it was named after Hacı I Giray. Polish historian Marian Karol Dubiecki suggested the connection of the name of the fortress with the Polish roots linking it with the surname Kociuba, an opinion criticized by Vasili Nadler. Nadler suggested that a Tatar settlement existed on the site by the 14th century, but was ceded in the early 15th century to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. An early mention of a "port Kaczubyeiow" dated 1415 is given by Jan Długosz in his Historiae Polonicae. However, it has been argued that Długosz erred and that the described events (the gift of grain by King Władysław II Jagiełło to a besieged Constantinople) are reliably documented to have happened in 1413. In 1480, the fortress was captured by the Ottoman Empire. In 1764, the Ottomans reinforced their position by building the Yeni Dünya fortress nearby; the area was included in the province of Silistra Eyalet. The Russian army took the fortress and settlement in 1789 during the Russo-Turkish War, a battle was fought near Khadjibey in 1790, and, in 1792, the territory was annexed by the Russian Empire.