Huluboaia

Huluboaia is a village in Cahul District, Moldova,[5] By the 2014 census the village has a population of 794 people.

Huluboaia
Village
Huluboaia is located in Cahul
Huluboaia
Huluboaia
Coordinates: 46°3′30″N 28°20′7″E
Country Moldova
Government
  MayorValeriu Oboroc (PSRM[1])
Population
  Total794
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal code
MD-3920[4]
General view from the western slope of the valley

Until 1912 it was called Novohrad, in 1912 it was renamed Goluboje (Russian: Голубое). It was founded by Czechs, and has a Czech minority, which calls it Holuboje. By the fall of the Soviet Union, most Czechs returned to the Czech Republic.

Geography

Huluboaia lies about 25 km (16 mi) northeast of Cahul, approximately 15 km (9 mi) from the Romanian border. It is located on the elevation 164 meters above sea level on the river Salcia Mare.

Demographics

By the last census (2014) 794 people lived here.
According to the 2004 census, 1011 people lived here (494 male, 517 female).

Ethnic makeup (2004):

Ethnicity Population  %
Moldovans 468 46,29
Ukrainians 262 25,91
Russians 79 7,81
Bulgarians 56 5,54
Gagauzs 16 1,58
Romanians 2 0,2
Other 128 12,66
Total 1011 100%

History

Huluboaia was founded in the 1880s by Czechs from Ukrainian Novhorodkivka (also a Czech settlement). Because in Ukraine, there was a small amount of soil for harvesting crops, 153 migrants moved to the then Bessarabia, where they established the village Novohrad. In the year 1912 the village renamed to Holuboje (meaning „dove“ or „blue“). From the year 1934 a school functioned, where Czech was being learned.

Huluboaia today is the center of Czech countryman in Moldova.[6] Surnames like Karásek, Pluhař or Lněnička are common here, even if the young generation speaks Czech more advisedly and use Russian.

Present

From the year 2004 a Czech countryman association Novograd, is registered here, under the presidency of Ivan Lauda. The association has more than 120 members.

Most of the people, live from own agricultural activities, mostly harvesting corn and grapevine. In school functions a Czech language course (Kroužek českého jazyka Novohrádek); in the summer students from the Czech Republic arrive here, to teach Czech.[6] The current mayor is Valeriu Oboroc.

Local russified Czechs, have worries from the alleged Moldovan nationalism, watch mainly Russian television and have a Russian stance on the Russo-Ukrainian War and the role of the US in it. Local schoolchildren are either from mixed Czech-Moldovan or Czech-Bulgarian wedlock and the Russian environment caused, that they view Russian as native.[7]

References


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