Vul. Shevchenka – Yanivsky (Yaniv) cemetery
Yanivsky (Yaniv) cemetery was founded in 1883; it is situated on Shevchenka street. The area of the cemetery is about 38 hectares now; over 200 thousand persons are buried in its 68 fields. One can find there numerous burial vaults of high artistic value as well as civil and military graves from the First and Second World Wars, including those of the Ukrainian Galician Army riflemen, Polish military men, Nazi, the Yaniv concentration camp of 1941-1943 victims. In 1962 the territory of the nearby Jewish cemetery, which was founded in 1855, was attached to Yanivsky cemetery. Since the early 1980s the cemetery has been closed for burials because of lack of free area.
Architecture
As compared with Lychakivsky cemetery, Yanivsky cemetery numbers much less artistic monuments. Monumental family vaults without sculpture décor prevail in this cemetery. However, there are some exceptions. Particularly, the Dzencelowski family’s vault (field 31) with the Way to Eternity bas-relief made by sculptor Teobald Orkasiewicz is of high artistic value.
Main monuments of the cemetery include graves located in the eastern part of the cemetery (where the first by numbering fields begin) and along the central lane. The north-western part of the cemetery and the fields near the central entrance are older.
The oldest monument of Yanivsky cemetery is the Machan family’s vault where Jan Machan (d.1815), a physician, is buried; the vault was taken there in the early twentieth century from Horodotsky cemetery after the latter had been dismantled. This monument with a woman mourner figure is made in the Empire style probably by sculptor Antoni Schimser in the 1820s.
Attention can be paid to family vaults decorated with art deco style ornaments; vaults of this kind were made in sculptor workshops of Władysław Korzewicz, Kazimierz Królik, Ludwik Makolondra, Aleksander Zagórski, Aleksander Król, Henryk-Karol Perier, Ludwik Olszewski, Ludwik Tyrowicz, Tadeusz Iwanowicz, Wojciech Jabłoński, Wojciech Walczak, Antoni Bojanowski, Michał Wesołowski et al. The monument of Roman (d. 1928) and Bronisława Kalecki can serve as an example; it is situated in field 9 and is decorated with a bas-relief of a female figure with a torch in hand.
In the late 1930s a column chapel, the so-called “Lantern of the Dead” dating back to the seventeenth century was installed near the main entrance to the cemetery from Yanivska (now Shevchenka) street. The project was drawn up by architect Antoni Łobos in 1938.
The military memorial of the Ukrainian Galician Army riflemen, located in fields 38 and 38a, was made under a project drawn up by Yevhen Nahirny, a known Ukrainian architect. It was constructed by the Cooperative of Engineering Works (Kooperatyva inzhynirnykh robit) managed by engineer Andriy Piasetsky. In 1971 the memorial was destroyed with bulldozers by the Soviet authorities. In 1997-1999 it was restored according to a project drawn up by a group of authors of the "Ukrzakhidproektrestavratsiya" institute managed by O. Petryshyn.
In field 37, where a Polish military memorial was arranged in 1918 and then destroyed in the early 1970s, a field monument altar stands in the shape of a high black marble cross integrated into a concrete stele.
A Slovak cemetery, which was located close to Shevchenka street and was destroyed in the 1970s, has not been preserved. Only a stele with a half-erased inscription has remained.
Near field 55 there is a common grave called TheThree Crosses where unidentified victims from the Brygidky prison were buried. A memorial cross (stylized as a birch tree) to the victims of the NKVD terror in June of 1941 was set up nearby in 1990.
A Holocaust memorial tomb with an inscription in Russian saying “Soviet citizens who fell victims of fascist crimes in Lviv in 1941-1943 are buried here” is situated above field 37.
Related Places
Personalities
Aleksander
Zagurski – a
sculptor.
Andriy
Piasetsky – an
engineer, known scientist, lecturer of Lviv Polytechnic, member of
the Ukrainian State Administration.
Anton
Schimser – a
sculptor.
Antoni
Łobos
– an architect.
Vasyl
Ben (d. 1941)– a lieutenant
colonel of the Ukrainian People’s Republic Army and Symon
Petliura’s aide-de-camp.
His
Eminence Nykonor (d.
1982) – an archimandrite of the Studite order.
Wojciech
Jabłoński
– a sculptor.
Henryk-Karol
Perier – a
sculptor, son of Abel Maria Karol Perier who was a sculptor too.
Yevhen
Nahirny – a
Ukrainian architect.
Yosyf
Kladochny (d.1994)
– a Ukrainian political prisoners’ guardian and a long-term GULAG
prisoner.
Kost
Levytsky (d.1941) –
the Prime-Minister of the West Ukrainian People’s Republic.
Ludwik
Makolondra – a
sculptor.
Ludwik
Tyrowicz – a
sculptor.
Marian
Nikodemowicz – a
known Lviv architect.
Myron
Tarnavsky (d.1938)
– the UGA commander-in-chief.
Mykhailo
Peresada-Sukhodolsky
(d.1938) – a general of the Ukrainian People’s Republic,
general-cornet of the UPR Army and a member of the committee for the
establishment of the UPR military schools and academies.
Naftali
Botwin (d.1925) –
a member of the underground who was executed by the Polish
authorities for killing a police agent.
O.
Petryshyn – the
manager of a group of authors of the "Ukrzakhidproektrestavratsiya"
institute who drew up a project of the military memorial of the
Ukrainian Galician Army riflemen restoration.
Tadeusz
Iwanowicz – a
sculptor.
Teobald
Orkasiewicz – a
sculptor.
Józef
Bilczewski (d.1923)
– a Roman Catholic
Archbishop beatified by
Pope John Paul II in 2001.
Jan
Machan (d. 1815) –
a doctor buried in Yanivsky cemetery.
Sources
2. DALO 1/30/2421.
3. DALO 1/30/4488.
4. DALO 2/4/1271.
5. DALO 2/4/1273.
6. DALO 2/4/1275.
7. DALO 2/4/1275.
8. M. Baczyńska, Przewodnik po cmentarzach lwowskich Łyczakowskim i Janowskim. (Lwów, 1937).
9. M. Orłowicz, Przewodnik po Lwowie (Lwów, 1925).
10. Miasto Lwów w okresie samorządu 1870–1895 (Lwów: Z drukarni W. A. Szyjskiego, 1896).
11. І. Н., Цвинтар українських поляглих на Янівськім, Діло, 1934, Ч. 293.
Written
by Khrystyna Kharchuk
Edited
by Olha Zarechnyuk and Yulia Pavlyshyn