The small village of Buda is located in the depths of Kholodnyi Yar. In Cossack times, artisanal enterprises for the production of potash, tar, and charcoal from wood were called budas. Iron was also smelted here.
During the Second World War, when Kholodnyi Yar was the center of the partisan movement, the Germans burned Buda farm to the ground. 83 local residents were shot by the occupiers for supporting the partisans (a monument was erected).
On the outskirts of the village there is a oak grove, where one of the oldest trees in Ukraine grows - the 1,000-year-old oak of Maksym Zaliznyak, which is considered a symbol of Kholodnyi Yar, as well as one of the symbols of the Ukrainian Cossacks.
Маленьке селище Буда розташоване в глибині Холодного Яру. В козацькі часи будами називали кустарні підприємства по виготовленню з деревини поташу, дьогтю і деревного вугілля. Також тут виплавляли залізо.
В роки Другої світової війни, коли Холодний Яр був центром партизанського руху, німці спалили хутір Буда вщент. 83 місцевих жителі були розстріляні окупантами за підтримку партизан (встановлено пам'ятник).
На околиці села знаходиться діброва, де росте одне з найстаріших дерев в Україні - 1000-річний дуб Максима Залізняка, який вважається символом Холодного Яру, а також одним із символів українського козацтва.
Maksym Zaliznyak's Oak
Natural object
Maksym Zaliznyak's Oak in Kholodny Yar is one of the oldest oaks in Ukraine (perhaps the oldest). According to various estimates, it is from 1000 to 1200 years old.
The patriarch oak grows on the southern slope of the Kyrykivsky Yar tract on the territory of the Kholodny Yar tract on the outskirts of the Buda village. It is the largest in Ukraine and one of the ten largest trees in Europe. Its girth is 8.9 meters, height - 24 meters. The trunk was struck by lightning six times.
Bohdan Khmelnytskyi, Severyn Nalivayko, Taras Shevchenko rested under its crown, but it is named after Maksym Zaliznyak - the leader of the Haydamak uprising, which was active in these places. The Zaliznyak oak is considered a symbol of Kholodny Yar, as well as one of the symbols of the Ukrainian Cossacks.
A monument to the residents of the village of Buda, who died during the Second World War, has been erected nearby.
There is a cafe and a souvenir shop at the entrance to the reserve.
Saint Petro the Long-suffering (Kalnyshevsky) Church
Temple
The Church of Saint Righteous Petro the Long-suffering (Kalnyshevsky) was built on the Buda farm in 2012 at the initiative of the public organization "Free Cossacks of Kholodny Yar" at the expense of entrepreneurs Olesya and Oleh Ostrovsky, who own the nearby ethnographic complex "Dykiy khutir".
The brick temple is made in the form of traditional Cossack churches and is decorated with wood. This is the first church in Ukraine, dedicated to the last basket chieftain of Zaporizhzhian Sich, Petro Kalnyshevsky, who was canonized in 2008.
Nearby, in 2014, the first monument to the heroes of the "Heavenly Hundred" was erected in Ukraine.
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