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See also: town of western See also: Russia, capital of the See also: government of See also: Volhynia, on the Teterev See also: river, 83 m
.
W.S.W. of See also: Kiev
.
Pop
.
(1900) 80,787, more than one-third Jews
.
It is the see of an archbishop of the Orthodox See also: Greek See also: Church and of a
See also: Roman Catholic See also: bishop, Two printing offices in See also: Zhitomir issue nearly one-See also: half of all the See also: Hebrew books printed in Russia
.
The Jewish merchants carry on a considerable export See also: trade in agricultural produce, and in See also: timber and wooden wares from the forests to the See also: north
.
Kid gloves, See also: tobacco, dyes and See also: spirits are manufactured
.
Zhitomir is a very old city, tradition tracing its foundation as far back as the times of the Scandinavian adventurers, Askold and See also: Dir (9th century)
.
The See also: annals, however, mention it chiefly in connexion with the invasions of the Tatars, who plundered it in the 13th, 14th and 17th centuries (1606), or in connexion with destructive conflagrations
.
It See also: fell under Lithuanian See also: rule in 1320, and during the 15th century was one of the chief cities of the See also: kingdom
.
Later it became See also: part of Poland, and when the Cossacks See also: rose under their chieftain, Bogdan See also: Chmielnicki (1648), they sacked the town
.
It was annexed to Russia along with the rest of the See also: Ukraine in 1778
.
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Zhitomir is a part of Urkaine and not Russia!
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