The Embassy of Ukraine in Prague has prepared a list of many important monuments of the Ukrainian Army in the Czech Republic on the occasion of Defender of Ukraine Day.
Kyiv. Ukraine. Ukraine Gate – October 14, 2021 – Diplomatic Affairs
It has been the tradition of our Embassy for several years that on this day diplomats visit the memorials of Ukrainian soldiers in the Czech Republic to honor the memory of the defenders of Ukraine by laying flowers and wreaths. If you are also interested and would like to visit one of the Ukrainian reference sites in the coming days, we have prepared a list of many important monuments of the Ukrainian army in the Czech Republic.”
Monument to the fighters for the independence of Ukraine in Yuseiev (project of Professor R. Lisovsky, 1941). Here are buried 25 soldiers of the Ukrainian Galician Army, that is, the Armed Forces of the Western Ukrainian People’s Republic founded in 1918. Place: Sector IV, No. 106.
Monument to soldiers killed in World War I and soldiers in Brno (unveiled in 1923, author of statue unknown). 154 soldiers are buried here. Location: Central Cemetery in Brno.
Monument to Soldiers in (1935). Location: Military cemetery in Boscov.
Monument to Soldiers in (1927, designed by 24 Soldiers of the Ukrainian Galician Army are buried here Location: Military unit of Ruperstes cemetery.
Monument to Soldiers in (1932, suggested location: Downtown Cemetery).
Monument to soldiers in Jablona in the Budgest Dida (1921, Monk Mikhail Brynsky). Location: a military cemetery.
Tomb of soldier Mikhailo Shemer Dak (Draft of Mikhailo Brinsky). Location: Pechibram City Cemetery.
We also find many graves of soldiers of the Ukrainian People’s Republic in Olshany cemetery in Prague and they are as follows:
Mykola Topelevich, colonel (tomb 2 ob 115 22);
Yuri Dobrilovsky, colonel (tomb 2 in 174-19);
Arsene Scherer Hare, Presenter (Tomb 2 in 440 18);
Leonid Cyrobolk, officer (tomb 2 in 439 18);
private (tomb 2 in 177 17);
Yuri Lindemann, private (tomb 2 in 241 19);
Ivan Kwasnikevsky, Levi, F. Granat, private (tomb 2 in 118 18);
Yaroslav Endichevsky (tomb 006 7 d 211).
It should be noted that most of these monuments have undergone extensive reconstruction in recent years.
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Source: Ukrgate