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It had a population of 39,220 (2022 estimate).[2] In 2001, it had a population of 40,718. It is the largest city in the northern part of Odesa Oblast.
History
Birzula was first mentioned in Ottoman documents in 1772 as one of the settlements of the Dubossar raya. The Russian-Italian physicist Gleb Wataghin was born in Birzula in 1899.[3][circular reference]
The city is known as the place where Soviet military leader Grigori Kotovsky was buried in a mausoleum. In 1935, the city was renamed Kotovsk after him; formerly the settlement bore the name Birzula. The mausoleum was later destroyed during the Romanian occupation of Transnistria. The monument was (again) dismantled in June 2017 to comply with decommunization laws.[4]
Until 18 July 2020, Podilsk was incorporated as a city of oblast significance and served as the administrative center of Podilsk Raion though it did not belong to the raion. In July 2020, as part of the administrative reform of Ukraine, which reduced the number of raions of Odesa Oblast to seven, the city of Podilsk was merged into Podilsk Raion.[9][10]
Transportation
The city has a major railway station and depot on the Odesa—Zhmerynka line (a stretch of the Rozdilna—Poberezhzhia line).
Notable people
Nikolai Morshen, Russian second-wave émigré poet and translator of American poetry into Russian
Volodymyr Muntyan, Soviet and Ukrainian midfielder of the 1960s and 1970s
Viktor Seliverstov, Russian political figure and deputy of the 7th and 8th State Dumas
Gleb Wataghin, famous Ukrainian-Italian theoretical and experimental physicist
Valentyn Zghursky, head of the executive committee of the Kyiv City Council