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Beryslav
Beryslav
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Beryslav (Ukrainian: Берислав, IPA: [berɪˈslɑu̯] ) is a city in Kherson Oblast, southern Ukraine. It serves as the administrative center of Beryslav Raion, housing the district's local administration buildings. Beryslav hosts the administration of Beryslav urban hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine.[1] Population: 11,895 (2022 estimate).[2]

Key Information

The city is located on the right-bank of the Dnieper River across from Kakhovka on the opposite bank. Until the creation of the Kakhovka Reservoir, the city contained one of a historical crossing over the Dnieper.

By the Resolution of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine of July 26, 2001, No. 878,[3] Beryslav was included in the List of Historical Settlements of Ukraine as the oldest settlement in the Kherson region.

History

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Early history

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Siege of Kazikermen in 1695 by united forces of Ivan Mazepa and Boris Sheremetev, engraving by Tarasiewicz

One of the oldest settlements in the Kherson Oblast, in the late 14th century Beryslav was part of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. It served as a Lithuanian customs point on the trade route between Caffa and Kyiv,[4] as the lower Dnieper formed the Lithuanian border. It later served as a Polish and Cossack fortress.[4]

Later on it was known as the Turkish fortress of Kizikermen or Kazikermen (Gazikermen). Kazikermen and Islamkermen and Sahinkermen nearby were primary fortifications in the lower Dnieper area starting in the 15th century.[5][6][7] According to legend, chains were stretched across the Dnieper between the fortifications to control river traffic.[8] Here was also one of the fords providing access across the Dnieper known as Tawan crossing. At the end of August of 1695, Kazikermen was sacked by the Zaporizhia Host Cossacks of Ivan Mazepa and the Sloboda Ukraine Cossacks of Boris Sheremetev during the so called Azov-Dnieper campaigns.

By the 1700 Treaty of Constantinople, the Ottomans disbanded the fortifications. Later in the 19th century, ruins of the Kazikermen fortress were completely cleared away. After its 1784 re-establishment, the settlement was renamed Beryslav.

20th century

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Early-20th-century view

On 16 December, 1918, Hetman of Ukraine Pavlo Skoropadsky signed a telegram in Beryslav addressed to Kyiv where he officially resigned from his post.

During World War II, Beryslav was occupied by German forces on August 23, 1941. On September 22 about 400 Jews then living in Beryslav were murdered near the town by the members of Einsatzgruppe D. Another 35 Jews from Beryslav were shot in early October 1941. In September 1941, the Germans relocated the Dulag 123 transit prisoner-of-war camp from Varvarivka to Beryslav, and in November 1941, it was further relocated to Dzhankoi.[9] Beryslav was recaptured by the Red Army on March 11, 1944.[10]

Recent events

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Since August 2016, the city has hosted the revived Ukrainian Premier League and UEFA Europa League football club, Tavriya Simferopol.[11]

Hospital in Beryslav after Russian shelling, 2023

During the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Beryslav was one of many settlements occupied by the Russians, but was recaptured by the Ukrainian military during the southern counteroffensive on 11 November.[12]

Demographics

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Ethnic makeup of the town according to the 2001 Ukrainian census:[13]

Ethnic groups in Beryslav
percent
Ukrainians
89.43%
Russians
8.71%
Roma
0.53%
Belarusians
0.39%
Armenians
0.20%
Moldovans
0.19%

Native language according to the 2001 Ukrainian census:[14]

Languages in Beryslav
Languages percent
Ukrainian
89.5%
Russian
10.1%
Armenian
0.1%
Belarusian
0.1%
others
0.2%

Sights

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See also

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Beryslav is a historic city in Kherson Oblast, southern Ukraine, serving as the administrative center of Beryslav Raion and Beryslav urban hromada, with a pre-war population of approximately 12,000 residents. Located on the right bank of the Dnipro River at 46°50′N 33°25′E, it is recognized as the oldest settlement in the oblast, with roots tracing to ancient Ostrogothic, Scythian-Sarmatian, and later Ottoman periods, including the ruins of the 15th-century Kazikermen fortress that once controlled regional trade routes. The city was occupied by Russian forces shortly after the full-scale invasion in February 2022 but was liberated by Ukrainian Armed Forces on 11 November 2022 as part of the Kherson counteroffensive, after which its population declined sharply to around 4,000 due to displacement, ongoing Russian shelling, and infrastructure damage. Beryslav's strategic position near the Dnipro made it a key target during the conflict, highlighting its historical role in controlling river crossings and regional access.

Geography

Location and Physical Features

Beryslav is located in in , at coordinates 46.84° N, 33.43° E. The city serves as the administrative center of Beryslav Raion and lies within the zone of the Black Sea Lowland, approximately 60 kilometers northeast of the oblast capital, . The terrain consists of lowlands dissected by ravines and gullies, with an average elevation of 39 meters above . These features support fertile southern low-humus soils, conducive to in the Dnipro River basin. The region is predominantly flat with gentle undulations, typical of the oblast's .

Climate and Environment

Beryslav lies within a temperate zone, classified under the Köppen-Geiger system as Dfa, featuring distinct seasons with cold winters and hot summers. The average temperature in , the coldest month, is approximately -3°C, while , the warmest, reaches about 23°C. Annual totals around 464 mm, predominantly falling as in warmer months, with being the driest at roughly 13 mm. The surrounding environment belongs to the Pontic-Caspian , characterized by grasslands adapted to semi-arid conditions, where low rainfall and strong winds contribute to risks of and wind-induced . Fertile soils support agriculture, but productivity has traditionally relied on drawn from the River and its reservoirs to mitigate in this dry steppe landscape. The on June 6, 2023, triggered immediate flooding along the lower River and tributaries such as the Inhulets near Beryslav, inundating over 600 km² and altering local riverine ecosystems through sediment deposition and habitat loss for aquatic species. Subsequent drainage of the has led to reduced water levels in connected waterways, exacerbating vulnerability and disrupting seasonal flow regimes critical to the steppe's riparian zones.

History

Founding and Early Settlement (18th-19th Centuries)

Beryslav was officially established in 1784 on the ruins of the Ottoman fortress Kazikermen (also known as Kizikermen or Gazikermen), which had been constructed around 1484 during Ottoman control of the region. This founding occurred in the aftermath of the , when the under Catherine II annexed the northern coast, including the right bank of the River, to secure its southern borders and promote colonization. The site, previously a Lithuanian customs point in the late and later a Polish and Cossack stronghold before Ottoman occupation, was repurposed as a Russian outpost to regulate trade along the vital waterway. Early settlers included relocated from regions such as and , who brought cultural and religious elements to the new town, including the transportation of the wooden Holy Presentation Church from the dismantled Zaporozhian Perevolochna fortress along the River. State-directed settlement policies encouraged migration of Ukrainian peasants and other groups from the empire's central territories to populate the frontier, fostering agricultural development and military outposts amid ongoing tensions with the and remnants. Beryslav's name likely derives from the Slavic prince Borys, reflecting the efforts in the newly acquired Novorossiya Governorate. In the early 19th century, the remaining Ottoman-era ruins of Kazikermen were fully cleared to accommodate expanding settlement and infrastructure. The town evolved into an administrative hub within the , with gradual driven by agrarian ; by the mid-19th century, a Jewish community had formed, marking increasing ethnic diversity. This period saw Beryslav solidify as a regional center for trade and governance, though specific population figures from censuses remain sparse, indicative of the challenges in documenting frontier demographics.

Imperial Russian and Revolutionary Periods (Late 19th-Early 20th Centuries)

In the late , Beryslav functioned as a key administrative and commercial hub within the of the , leveraging its position near the River for trade in agricultural goods and as a customs outpost. The town's economy centered on grain processing, , and river transport, contributing to modest urban growth amid broader imperial expansion in . By the early , its population included a Ukrainian majority alongside a notable Jewish minority engaged in commerce and crafts. The upheavals of the 1917 and subsequent Ukrainian War of Independence (1917–1921) brought repeated changes in control to Beryslav, as forces, units, local atamans, and vied for dominance in the region. The Jewish community, numbering around 1,500 residents prior to 1919, endured severe pogroms carried out by multiple factions, including elements of the army, detachments, forces, and independent warlords, resulting in a two-thirds decline in the local Jewish population through killings, displacement, and starvation. These atrocities reflected widespread anti-Jewish violence across during the , often fueled by accusations of Bolshevik sympathies or economic resentment. Bolshevik forces secured Beryslav by 1919, establishing rural revolutionary committees to impose Soviet authority amid local resistance from nationalist and peasant groups. This takeover facilitated the integration of the town into early Soviet administrative structures, though governance fluctuated due to ongoing hostilities until consolidation in the region by 1920. In the immediate aftermath, 1921–1922 saw acute famine and repressive measures, exacerbated by war devastation, grain requisitions, and drought, which struck as part of the broader Volga-Ukraine crisis claiming millions of lives empire-wide. Local Soviet organs enforced food seizures, contributing to peasant unrest and further demographic losses in Beryslav.

Soviet Era (1920s-1991)

During the 1920s, Beryslav was integrated into the as part of the Soviet administrative structure, with local governance emphasizing agricultural reorganization under Bolshevik policies. Collectivization efforts accelerated from 1929, compelling private farmers to join kolkhozy (collective farms), often through coercive measures including property confiscation and campaigns targeting perceived wealthier peasants. In Beryslav , this process involved extensive grain requisitions to meet state quotas, contributing to widespread rural hardship. The early 1930s collectivization drive precipitated severe famine conditions in , including where Beryslav is located, as part of the broader of 1932–1933. Local populations faced acute food shortages due to inflated procurement targets, export demands, and restrictions on mobility, resulting in documented deaths from and related diseases; survivor accounts from the region describe children and collective farm workers receiving minimal rations, exacerbating demographic declines. Beryslav Raion's rural areas, with their grain-dependent economy, mirrored these effects, as evidenced by famine impacts in nearby settlements like Zmiivka. Population estimates for the district reflect drops during this period, though precise city-level figures remain limited. German forces occupied Beryslav in August 1941 following advances along the River, incorporating the area into until liberation by Soviet troops in March 1944 during operations to recapture . The occupation involved exploitation of local agriculture for German supply lines, suppression of resistance, and partisan activities by Soviet-affiliated groups in the surrounding , which disrupted supply routes. Post-liberation purges targeted alleged collaborators, aligning with broader Soviet retribution against occupied territories, while reconstruction prioritized restoring collective farms and basic infrastructure amid wartime devastation. In the postwar decades, Beryslav's centered on agro-industrial development, with state investments in facilities, including production plants and building materials factories, alongside limited machine-building operations to support regional . These sectors benefited from centralized and subsidies, particularly under the Brezhnev administration's emphasis on rural stability, though output remained tied to collective farm performance. The city's grew steadily, peaking at around 13,000 by the late according to 1989 data, reflecting migration incentives and state housing programs despite underlying stagnation in productivity.

Ukrainian Independence and Post-Soviet Development (1991-2021)

Ukraine's declaration of independence on August 24, 1991, was affirmed by a nationwide referendum on December 1, 1991, with 92.3% approval overall, reflecting broad support in regions like Kherson Oblast where Beryslav is located. The dissolution of the Soviet Union prompted Beryslav's integration into the new state framework, shifting from centralized Soviet administration to local governance under Ukrainian sovereignty, though the town retained its role as the administrative center of Beryslav Raion. The post-independence era brought economic challenges as Ukraine transitioned to a , characterized by , , and spikes in the , with GDP contracting by over 60% nationally by 1999. In Beryslav, a predominantly in an agricultural , the impact was moderated by the sector's resilience; Kherson Oblast maintained about 2 million hectares of , supporting grain, vegetable, and melon production that sustained local livelihoods amid broader industrial decline. Factory closures affected some Soviet-era facilities regionally, but Beryslav's economy leaned toward farming cooperatives transitioning to private holdings, avoiding the sharp urban job losses seen elsewhere. By the 2000s and 2010s, Beryslav achieved relative stability, with infrastructure including roads linking it to city facilitating agricultural trade, though upgrades were incremental and tied to national budgets rather than major projects. Local governance focused on raion-level administration, experiencing typical Ukrainian issues like bureaucratic inefficiencies and sporadic probes in councils, but no large-scale scandals disrupted operations pre-2022. The agricultural emphasis persisted, with the oblast's output contributing to Ukraine's role as a key exporter, underscoring Beryslav's continuity as a rural hub until geopolitical tensions escalated.

Russian Occupation, Liberation, and Aftermath (2022-Present)

Russian forces occupied Beryslav in early March 2022 as part of their advance into from , capturing the city shortly after taking regional centers like on March 2. On March 21, occupiers kidnapped the city's , Oleksandr Shapovalov, along with a local activist, amid reports of abductions targeting Ukrainian officials. During the occupation, which lasted until November, Russian troops engaged in of civilian property and cultural sites across , including systematic pillaging of museums and homes, though specific incidents in Beryslav were part of broader patterns in the region. Efforts at forced included imposing and curriculum in schools and suppressing Ukrainian identity, as documented in occupied territories. Ukrainian forces liberated Beryslav on November 11, 2022, during the Kherson counteroffensive, expelling Russian troops from the right bank of the Dnipro River without urban fighting in the city itself. The retreat positioned Russian artillery on the occupied left bank, enabling continued bombardment of the liberated city from across the river. In the aftermath, Beryslav has faced persistent shelling and drone strikes, causing civilian casualties and infrastructure damage. On March 23, 2023, Russian artillery hit a local museum, administrative building, residential home, and newspaper office. Near Beryslav on February 19, 2023, three civilians were killed in shelling. Drone attacks escalated in 2025, killing two men on May 22 and two more on May 29 via explosives dropped from UAVs. The invasion and ongoing hostilities displaced over 70% of Beryslav's pre-war population of approximately 12,500, reducing it to around 3,000 residents by mid-2023, with many evacuating due to shelling risks. Local aid efforts, including church-run soup kitchens, have supported remaining civilians amid infrastructure strain.

Demographics

Population Dynamics

Beryslav's exhibited a slow decline in the years preceding Russia's full-scale invasion, with an annual decrease of approximately 1.1% from 2014 to 2022, reflecting broader demographic trends in rural Ukrainian oblasts such as out-migration and low birth rates. Pre-invasion estimates placed the city's at around 12,000 residents. The Russian occupation of Beryslav from March to November 2022 triggered mass evacuation, reducing the local population dramatically as civilians fled advancing forces and associated risks. Post-liberation, persistent shelling from Russian positions across the Dnipro River has sustained high insecurity, deterring returns and prompting further displacement. The Beryslav urban , centered on the city and encompassing surrounding settlements, retained only about 1,000 residents out of nearly 16,000 pre-war by late 2022. By September 2023, the 's population had stabilized at roughly 27% of pre-war levels, amid ongoing hostilities that destroyed and limited access to services. More recent data from local authorities indicate a population of 2,556 as of February 2024, including 569 internally displaced persons, dropping further to 2,100 by May 2024 and 1,547 by January 2025—equivalent to 8.57% of the pre-war figure of 18,062. These figures underscore the war's causal role in depopulating the area, with minimal recovery due to unresolved frontline proximity and economic disruption.

Ethnic and Linguistic Composition

According to the , the ethnic composition of Beryslav's population was predominantly Ukrainian at 89.43%, with comprising 8.71%, 0.39%, and smaller groups including Roma at 0.5%. These figures reflect a legacy of Soviet-era policies, which encouraged ethnic Russian settlement and in , yet Beryslav maintained a stronger Ukrainian majority compared to the broader (82% Ukrainian, 14.1% Russian). No significant separatist movements or ethnic tensions were reported in Beryslav prior to , distinguishing it from eastern regions like . Linguistically, the 2001 census indicated Ukrainian as the native language for approximately 89.5% of residents, with Russian at 10.1%, aligning closely with ethnic distributions but showing a modest gap where some ethnic reported Russian as native due to historical bilingualism in the region. Post-2014 efforts and the 2019 language law mandated Ukrainian in , , and media, accelerating a shift away from Russian dominance in southern oblasts like , where regional Russian-language status was revoked by 2018. In Beryslav, this resulted in Ukrainian becoming the standard for official use, though private bilingualism persisted until the 2022 invasion disrupted patterns. The Russian occupation of Beryslav from March to November 2022, followed by liberation, likely intensified ethnic homogenization, as Russian forces evacuated or displaced perceived pro-Russian elements while many ethnic fled temporarily or resisted. declined sharply from around 12,000 pre-invasion to 4,000 by mid-2023, with returning residents predominantly Ukrainian-speaking and identifying as Ukrainian, though no formal has verified post-war shifts. Soviet-inherited minority protections remained nominal, with no evidence of systemic against pre-2022, but wartime dynamics underscored causal links between linguistic policy enforcement and reduced Russian influence in administration.

Religious and Cultural Demographics

Beryslav's religious landscape is dominated by Eastern Orthodoxy, consistent with patterns across Kherson Oblast where Orthodox Christians form the overwhelming majority of believers. The town's primary religious site is the wooden Holy Presentation Church, constructed in the 18th century in Cossack architectural style, which continues to serve Orthodox parishioners and symbolizes the fusion of faith and historical Cossack identity. Following the 2018 schism in Ukrainian Orthodoxy, local affiliations reflect national divisions between the autocephalous Orthodox Church of Ukraine (OCU) and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate (UOC-MP), though specific parish transitions in Beryslav lack detailed public enumeration; regional trends indicate slower shifts to the OCU in southern areas prior to the 2022 invasion. Minority faiths include a small Ukrainian Greek Catholic community, evidenced by the active Martyrs parish, which has operated a daily serving over 100 residents amid wartime hardships. Traces of a historical Jewish presence persist, marked by a in the town center, though the community has dwindled significantly since the Soviet era and . Other groups, such as , maintained a until it sustained damage during the 2022 Russian occupation. Pre-invasion reports indicate no major interfaith tensions, with religious observance characterized by tolerance in this multi-confessional setting. Culturally, Beryslav's practices draw from Orthodox liturgical cycles and Cossack heritage, with local monuments commemorating Zaporozhian Cossack figures underscoring traditions of folk songs, dances, and historical reenactments tied to regional identity. Annual observances likely incorporate Ukrainian-wide customs like rituals and harvest festivals, adapted to Cossack motifs evident in and memorials, though urbanization and the ongoing war have diminished communal events and preserved practices. No large-scale inter-ethnic cultural festivals specific to Beryslav are documented, but the town's pre-war cultural life emphasized inclusive heritage celebrations without reported conflicts.

Economy

Primary Sectors and Industries

The economy of Beryslav is predominantly agrarian, with serving as the foundational sector due to the expansive fertile lands in . Approximately 85% of the Beryslav Urban Territorial Community's total land area—spanning 456.167 km², of which 387.688 km² is agricultural—supports crop cultivation and related activities. This aligns with the broader region's profile, where utilizes about 2 million hectares regionally, emphasizing and oilseed production. Cereal crops dominate local output, with Beryslav district allocating 68.2 thousand hectares to winter wheat, barley, corn, and sunflower, contributing significantly to oblast-level yields. These staples form the core of primary production, supplemented by vegetable and fruit farming typical of the Dnieper River valley's chernozem soils, though specific Beryslav yields have been curtailed by wartime demining and infrastructure damage since 2022. Industrial activities remain limited, with no large-scale manufacturing or extractive operations documented as primary drivers; small-scale agro-processing, such as grain handling or rudimentary , occurs adjunct to farming but lacks the scale of regional hubs like city. thus accounts for the majority of and in rural households, where it serves as the principal income source amid post-liberation recovery efforts.

Agricultural Role and Trade

Beryslav Raion's agriculture centers on and oilseed crops, leveraging the region's fertile soils to cultivate , , sunflower, and corn across extensive arable lands. Cereal crops alone span 68.2 thousand hectares in the district, ranking among the largest sown areas in and underscoring the area's role as a key grain-producing zone. Pre-2023, systems drawing from the boosted yields of cereals and oilseeds by 2.0–2.5 times compared to rain-fed farming, enabling consistent output despite variable rainfall. The on June 6, 2023, drained the reservoir and severed irrigation for approximately 1.1 million hectares across , including Beryslav's farmlands, leading to widespread drought vulnerability and crop losses exceeding 55,000 hectares in de-occupied areas by mid-2025. Farmers in the Beryslav community have adapted by sowing winter crops on partially demined fields, though shelling and mine contamination continue to hinder operations on thousands of hectares. Post-Soviet land reforms privatized collective farms, fostering private enterprises and cooperatives that integrated local production into broader markets; these entities handle procurement, storage, and sales, serving regional demand in Kherson while channeling surpluses toward export routes. Agricultural output from Beryslav feeds local markets and contributes to oblast-wide trade, with grains and oilseeds historically routed via Odesa ports for international shipment, though wartime disruptions including port strikes and Black Sea blockades have exposed supply chain fragility.

Post-War Economic Challenges

Following the liberation of Beryslav in November 2022, extensive infrastructure damage from Russian shelling severely hampered agricultural output, with farms, grain storage, and machinery—such as combine harvesters, tractors, and trailers—destroyed in targeted strikes. In , constant fire rendered many fields unusable for cultivation, leading to untreated land and reduced planting during the 2023 season. Mine contamination emerged as a primary barrier to resuming farming, with local farmers reporting the removal of thousands of explosives from individual plots before could begin; one operator cleared 4,000 mines from 1,000 hectares in the Beryslav community prior to winter crop planting in late 2023. Partial efforts delayed spring and summer cycles into 2024 and 2025, as and ongoing risks limited machinery access and full-scale operations across Oblast's agrarian lands. Economic recovery has relied heavily on external for essential inputs, including , fertilizers, and equipment replacements distributed to affected communities in Beryslav Raion. Humanitarian distributions of generators and agricultural supplies addressed immediate power and operational shortfalls, though formal sector decline—evident in destroyed facilities—has fostered growth in informal trading and subsistence activities amid persistent disruptions. Prospects for rebound hinge on international grain export corridors, yet sustained Russian drone and attacks on fields continue to impose risks, with corrected aerial bombs striking industrial-agricultural sites in Beryslav district as recently as 2023.

Government and Infrastructure

Administrative Structure

Beryslav serves as the administrative center of Beryslav Raion, one of five raions in established under Ukraine's 2020 administrative reform, which consolidated smaller districts into larger units for efficiency. The raion encompasses approximately 1,721 square kilometers and includes multiple hromadas, with Beryslav hosting key district-level institutions such as the council and state administration offices prior to wartime adjustments. At the local level, Beryslav anchors the Beryslav urban territorial , formed in 2020 by amalgamating the city council with adjacent rural councils including Zmiivka and Novoberyslav, enabling decentralized governance over services like education, utilities, and social welfare. In peacetime, the hromada operates through an elected city council (Beryslavska mis'ka rada) and , with Oleksandr Shapovalov serving as mayor until his abduction by Russian forces on March 18, 2022, and subsequent release on April 3, 2022. Under imposed following the Russian invasion, local self-government in Beryslav has been suspended, replaced by the Beryslav City , headed by Oleksandr Alchiyev, appointed by President on October 19, 2023. This structure integrates civil-military coordination for security, reconstruction, and essential services amid ongoing hostilities, with Alchiyev overseeing operations from the administration's offices in Beryslav. The raion-level similarly reports to the , reflecting broader wartime centralization to address occupation threats and de-occupation aftermath.

Transportation and Utilities

Beryslav is connected by road networks to regional centers, though sustained significant damage during the 2022 Russian invasion and subsequent hostilities, prompting ongoing repair efforts. In Beryslav district, tenders for road maintenance and reconstruction totaling hundreds of millions of hryvnia have been announced, including works in Beryslav and districts. By October 2025, two bridges destroyed by military actions were repaired, restoring access for local communities previously requiring lengthy detours. Public transportation primarily relies on bus services from the local , which operates routes to destinations such as and . These services provide essential connectivity amid limited rail options directly in the city, with nearby stations in Beryslav Raion serving broader lines like those linking to Nikopol. War conditions have constrained operations, with reliance on scheduled buses rather than extensive local networks. Utilities in Beryslav face persistent disruptions: gas supply remains absent across the territorial , while is unavailable in at least two settlements and prone to outages elsewhere due to grid vulnerabilities. Water provision lacks systematic reliability, hindered by frequent shelling of supply infrastructure. The June 2023 on the River intensified these challenges by depleting the reservoir critical for regional water and hydroelectric resources, leading to intermittent access tied to the broader grid. Gas pipelines have also suffered hits in attacks, compounding restoration delays.

Security and Military Presence

The Ukrainian Armed Forces maintain a defensive presence in Beryslav and the surrounding to secure the right bank of the River following the city's liberation in October 2022 during the counteroffensive, where Ukrainian forces recaptured multiple settlements in the district. These positions focus on countering Russian artillery from the occupied left bank and preventing crossings, with fortifications adapted since 2023 to emphasize compact, drone-resistant designs amid evolving aerial threats. Local security is handled by National Police units and territorial defense forces, which conduct patrols, document war crimes, and support amid persistent explosive remnants from the Russian occupation. Beryslav faces acute mine hazards, including drone-delivered petal mines on access roads; Russian forces scattered such devices near the city as of October 2024, blocking routes and endangering civilians. A was killed in July 2025 after triggering a Russian landmine within the liberated city limits. During air alerts triggered by incoming drones or missiles, civilians in Beryslav are directed to shelters or temporary evacuations, with regional authorities organizing missions to relocate vulnerable residents from high-risk zones. An evacuation team vehicle detonated on near the city outskirts in 2025, injuring police officers involved. Ukrainian air defenses routinely intercept Russian drones targeting the area, as evidenced by frequent reports of downed threats in , though strikes still occur and cause injuries, such as a January 2024 drone drop that wounded a resident.

Culture and Landmarks

Historical Sites and Architecture

Beryslav originated on the site of the Ottoman Kyzy-Kermen fortress, constructed by the Turks in the late on the River's banks, likely overlying an earlier Lithuanian fortification. This stronghold functioned as a defensive outpost and customs station during Turkish-Tatar control of , before its destruction in 1695 amid regional conflicts. Russian authorities established the modern city in 1784 atop these ruins, repurposing the location as a strategic administrative center. Traces of the fortress walls and foundations persist in archaeological remnants, underscoring Beryslav's pre-modern defensive heritage, though urban expansion has obscured much of the original layout. The Svyato-Vvedenskaya Wooden Church, erected in 1725, exemplifies surviving 18th-century Orthodox architecture in the region, characterized by traditional wooden construction techniques typical of Ukrainian ecclesiastical design. This structure, dedicated to the Presentation of the Virgin Mary, features elements such as log framing and a single-dome , and holds protected status as a national architectural monument due to its historical and stylistic value. Its endurance through centuries highlights the resilience of wooden religious buildings in , predating the city's formal founding yet integrated into its cultural fabric. Beryslav's Jewish heritage manifests in its central , built in the amid a growing that numbered around individuals by 1939. The edifice reflects Ashkenazi adapted to local conditions, with simple brick or masonry exteriors suited to the environment, serving as a focal point for religious and communal life until disruptions from 20th-century pogroms and decimated the population. Though modest in scale, it stands as a testament to multicultural layers in Beryslav's urban development, alongside remnants of older cemeteries linked to events like the .

Cultural Institutions and Events

The Beryslav Historical Museum, founded in 1958 as a community initiative and integrated as a department of the Regional Museum of Local Lore in 1981, maintains a collection of approximately 7,672 exhibits focused on regional , including 18th- to 20th-century Ukrainian clothing, household tools, and rare coins that illustrate local . The Beryslav Center of Culture and Leisure, dedicated to , functions as the primary venue for community gatherings, hosting creative contests, public performances, and events tied to national and local commemorations, such as those preceding the community's liberation anniversaries. Local libraries and schools have periodically organized Cossack-themed festivals emphasizing historical reenactments and traditional arts, drawing on the region's Cossack heritage near the River. Annual city day celebrations in September feature contests on , artistic , and into forgotten aspects of Beryslav's past, fostering community participation in cultural preservation. ensembles and workshops, rooted in southern Ukrainian patterns, have been integral to pre-war youth programs aimed at transmitting traditions, though ongoing conflict has curtailed regular sessions since 2022. Efforts to integrate internally displaced persons include community adaptation projects through cultural centers, where shared events promote social cohesion amid displacement challenges in .

Impact of Conflict on Heritage

On March 23, 2023, Russian shelling struck Beryslav, damaging the local alongside administrative buildings and residential structures. The attack targeted civilian infrastructure in the de-occupied city, with the sustaining direct hits that compromised its physical integrity. The Assumption Church in Beryslav, a historical religious site, suffered damage from shelling in September 2022, as verified by assessments of war-affected cultural properties in . This incident contributed to broader -documented losses in the region, where verified damages include religious and historical structures targeted amid ongoing hostilities. During the Russian occupation of Beryslav from March to November 2022, the Beryslav Museum experienced systematic by retreating troops, resulting in the removal of artifacts and exhibits. This plunder aligns with reported patterns of cultural extraction in , where occupied institutions faced organized removal of heritage items prior to withdrawal. Restoration efforts for damaged sites in Beryslav remain limited due to persistent security risks and resource constraints, with partial repairs focused on stabilizing structures like the museum but many artifacts unrecovered. The conflict has also disrupted intangible heritage, as displacement of local residents—including traditional craftsmen—has interrupted community-based practices tied to the region's Cossack and agricultural history, though specific artisan losses in Beryslav are not fully quantified.

Ongoing Conflict and Controversies

Russian Claims and Ukrainian Counter-Narratives

Russian forces occupied Beryslav in early March 2022 during the initial advance into , establishing a local occupation administration that operated until Ukrainian forces liberated the town on November 11, 2022, as part of the broader Kherson counteroffensive. Russian officials portrayed the occupation as a liberation of historically Russian lands from Ukrainian control, integrating Beryslav into the purported and later annexing the following a September 27, 2022, they claimed demonstrated local support for joining with over 87% approval in . Ukrainian authorities rejected these claims, asserting the was fraudulent, conducted under military coercion with no independent oversight, low turnout due to evacuations and resistance, and invalid under as it violated Ukraine's ; they cited of ballot stuffing, voter intimidation, and exclusion of pro-Ukrainian residents, with organizations like the UN and OSCE declining to monitor due to the coercive environment. Post-liberation, Russian Ministry of Defense statements have justified ongoing artillery, drone, and on Beryslav—located on the right bank of the River opposite Russian-held positions—as targeted operations against Ukrainian military assets, including a May 24, 2023, destroying hangars containing tanks, infantry fighting vehicles, and personnel carriers in the Beryslav district, as well as an ammunition depot and electronic warfare station nearby on other occasions. These narratives frame the strikes as defensive measures to degrade Ukrainian , fortifications, and buildup for potential Dnipro crossings, aligning with Russia's broader claim of conducting legitimate and precision hits under to neutralize threats from Ukrainian-held territory. Ukrainian military and regional officials counter that such attacks are indiscriminate or pretextual, primarily striking and populations to demoralize residents and hinder reconstruction, with documented incidents including a October 14, 2023, shelling killing a in her home, a February 19, 2023, barrage killing three near the city, and repeated drone strikes in 2024-2025 causing nearly 150 documented hits on residential areas, markets, and a on October 5, 2023; they attribute this to Russia's inability to advance across the river, resulting in punitive fire rather than verifiable , supported by geolocated footage of in zones and casualty patterns inconsistent with precision targeting. Disputes persist over attribution and intent, with Russian sources emphasizing Ukrainian use of Beryslav for staging—citing alleged equipment concentrations—while Ukrainian reports highlight the town's depopulation to around 2,000 from 12,000 pre-war, limiting plausible presence and underscoring vulnerability; independent analyses note challenges in verifying claims amid restricted access, but patterns of damage to non- sites like homes and utilities suggest broader punitive elements beyond stated objectives, though Russian downplays collateral effects. Ukrainian investigations frame the shelling as part of systematic terror, linking it to occupation-era tactics, whereas Russian narratives dismiss reports as exaggerations to garner Western sympathy.

Reported Atrocities and Investigations

During the Russian occupation of Beryslav from March to November 2022, Ukrainian prosecutors documented cases of targeting civilians, including local officials, with the Oleksandr Shapovalov subjected to severe by occupation authorities. In the , including areas around Beryslav, over 1,500 victims of systematic by Russian forces were identified, with approximately 50 investigations ongoing into civilian deaths resulting directly from such . These reports align with broader findings by the UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry, which verified patterns of arbitrary detention, , and executions in occupied Ukrainian territories as war crimes and potential . Russian officials have consistently rejected these accounts, attributing them to fabricated Ukrainian aimed at discrediting their operations. Following liberation in November 2022, Beryslav has endured repeated artillery and drone strikes from Russian positions on the Dnipro River's left bank, causing documented civilian fatalities and injuries. Notable incidents include the death of a 61-year-old man on December 26, 2023, from shelling in the Beryslav community, and multiple wounds reported in September 2023 and June 2023 attacks that damaged residential areas and injured residents aged 63 and others. The UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine has attributed the majority of such casualties in Kherson Oblast—nearly 150 civilian deaths from drone strikes alone—to Russian forces, amid accusations from both sides of indiscriminate fire violating international humanitarian law. Investigations into occupation-era violations have involved local exhumations across , uncovering bodies with gunshot wounds and other execution evidence, as documented by Ukrainian forensic teams and supported by observations of grave abuses. The , investigating the situation since March 2022, has issued warrants for senior Russian officials over related war crimes, though specific Beryslav cases fall under broader regional probes by Ukrainian authorities and UN commissions confirming systematic patterns. Ongoing monitoring by the UN continues to classify these acts as violations attributable primarily to Russian conduct, with evidentiary thresholds met through witness testimonies, forensic analysis, and .

Humanitarian and Reconstruction Efforts

In the aftermath of Beryslav's liberation in November 2022, international partners and local authorities launched targeted reconstruction initiatives to restore amid widespread damage from occupation and ongoing hostilities. The Beryslav municipality, supported by the European Union's U-LEAD with programme, received a equipped with a crane, along with tools and a generator, to facilitate clearance and municipal operations essential for recovery. Complementing this, the same initiative enabled the creation of a local enterprise producing fuel briquettes from , aimed at supplying heating to kindergartens and reducing dependency on disrupted energy supplies. Infrastructure rebuilding efforts advanced in 2025, with Beryslav prioritizing the reconstruction of its long-dormant plant, which had been inoperable for over two decades due to prior conflict-related degradation; regional plans allocated approximately 80 million UAH for such treatment facilities across , including this project. Broader humanitarian support in the Kherson region, which includes Beryslav, channeled over 1.5 billion UAH in international aid during 2024 for repairs, utilities restoration, and immediate relief, marking an 814 million UAH increase from the prior year. Humanitarian aid distributions, including food kits and essentials, continued through NGOs like ADRA Ukraine, though operations faced interruptions from Russian drone strikes; on May 16, 2025, an FPV drone targeted an ADRA aid truck during unloading in the region, damaging vehicles and highlighting risks to relief convoys. Persistent attacks exacerbated challenges, with October 24, 2025, shelling damaging 63 private houses and 29 multi-storey buildings region-wide, delaying home repairs and straining resources amid reports of donor fatigue in prolonged conflict zones. Mine clearance efforts, coordinated by UN agencies like UNDP across , progressed to secure liberated areas for safe habitation and agriculture, though specific Beryslav metrics remain integrated into oblast-level operations.

References

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