price: $60
Total sq: 43m
Rooms: 1
WiFi, AC, Satellite Tv

price: $70
Total sq: 37m
Rooms: 1 (bedroom)
Wi-Fi, A/C, Cable Tv

price: $50
Total sq: 33m
Rooms: 1
WiFi, AC, Cable Tv

price: $60
Total sq: 41m
Rooms: one
Internet, AC, Cable Tv

price: $50
Total sq: 32m
Rooms: one (studio)
ADSL modem, A/C, Satellit Tv

price: $120
Total sq: 64m
Rooms: 2
Wi-Fi, AC, Tv




The founding of the city of Lviv was in 1256. It’s mentioned after the tragic account after the Mongol invasion. Strengthening the country borders, King Danylo Galitskyi built the city (according to legend in 1241) and named it after his son Leo. It was built according to the rules of the time.

The city consisted of three parts, a fortified city, outskirts and suburbs. The city was separated from the High Castle moat and fortified by high walls and a fence so as to reliably defend against the enemy. Suburban occupied the right bank of the river Poltva and was located on the slopes of a semicircle of Knyazha Mountain.

In the mid-14th century, the Germans built a new city in the quadrangular form, with a central rectangular area. The streets were straight and intersect at right angles. All the streets were densely populated, and houses were built mostly in the Gothic style. Lviv, at the time of the Middle Ages, constantly was grown and built up. At the beginning of XV century there were about 10 thousand inhabitants, and in the first half of XVII century it becomes the largest city in Ukraine with a population of 25-30 thousand people. The basis of economic development was trade and craft.



In the period of the 16-17 centuries the city was built up actively. They rebuilt the old houses, built new ones, and many churches were handed over for public use. In addition, the city was also a fortress, which has repeatedly repulsed the attack of enemy troops (mostly Turks and Tatars), and went through the siege forces of Bohdan Khmelnytsky, around 1704 after an attack led by the Swedish King Charles XII Lviv began to decline.

In the first section of the Commonwealth of Rzeczpospolita (1772), the city, being a part of Galicia, ceded to Austria, and was then renamed into Lemberg becoming the capital of the province and, gradually turning into an industrial, commercial and cultural center. In 1867, Lviv went into the Austro-Hungarian Empire. During the World War II, from September 1914 to June 1915, it was occupied by Russian troops. And from 1919 to 1939, after the capture of Poland, it was the administrative center of Lviv province. In 1939, after joining the USSR and western Ukraine, Lviv became a regional center of the USSR, and after in 1991 it became the regional center of Ukraine.

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