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Gomel or Homel, (Belarusian Гомель; Russian: Гомель, transliteration: Gómel') is the second-largest city of Belarus and the main city of Homiel Province. It has a population of 481,000 (2005 estimate). Gomel is situated in the southeastern part of the country, on the right bank of Sozh river, close to the border to Ukraine and to Chernobyl nuclear power plant. Although it has been heavily contaminated following the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, people still continue to live in the city. The coordinates of the centre of Gomel are .

The exact date of the founding of Gomel is not known. It was first mentioned in chronicles from the first half of the 12th century; the officially accepted date is 1142. In 1854 Gomel merged with the neighbouring Bielica town situated on the left bank of Sozh River, which is now is a part of Gomel city and one of its four wards.

Gomel contained about fifty thousand Jews (a third of total population) on the eve of WWII. Some Jewish residents escaped in the early months of the war but those who remained were later confined to ghettos and eventually executed by the Nazis, suffering the fate of millions of Jews who perished in the Holocaust. Rabbi Avraham Elyashiv was the Rabbi of this city of 24 synagogues before the Holocaust.

1142 establishments | Homiel Voblast | Towns in Belarus

Гомель | Гомел | Gomel | Homel | Homiel | Homiel | Gomel | 호몔 | הומל | Gomeļa | Homel | Homel | ホメリ | Homel | Гомель | Homel | Homel

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Homyel".

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