Coșnița

Coordinates: 47°11′N 29°10′E / 47.183°N 29.167°E / 47.183; 29.167
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Coșnița
UTC+3
(EEST)
Postal code
MD-4572

Coșnița is a commune located in

Republic of Moldova, on the eastern bank of the River Dniester. It consists of two villages, Coșnița and Pohrebea (Romanian: Pohrebea; Russian
: Погребя, Pogrebya).

During the 1992

War of Transnistria, the commune was the center of some of the heaviest fighting between the local inhabitants and the government of the Republic of Moldova on one side, and the secessionist government of Transnistria
and the Russian 14th Army, on the other. As a legacy of that war, Pogrebea today hosts one of the largest areas of unremoved
landmines in the region.[1]

47°11′N 29°10′E / 47.183°N 29.167°E / 47.183; 29.167

Population

According to the

2004 Moldovan Census,[2] the commune had a population of 5,699 people, of which Coșnița 4,996, and Pohrebea
703. Of these, 5,524 (4,829 in Coșnița, and 695 in Pohrebea) were ethnic Moldavians, 167 (160 in Coșnița, and 7 in Pohrebea) were ethnic minorities, and 9 other/undeclared.

Etymology

In Romanian, pogrebă means 'basement' and -ea is a definite suffix; thus Pohrebea means 'the basement', and Coșnița is derived from the Bulgarian word for 'basket': кошница, koshnitsa.

Notable people

See also

References

  1. ^ Results of Population and Housing Census in the Republic of Moldova in 2014: "Characteristics - Population (population by communes, religion, citizenship)" (XLS). National Bureau of Statistics of the Republic of Moldova. 2017. Retrieved 2017-05-01.
  2. ^ (in Romanian) Official results of 2004 Moldovan census Archived March 11, 2007, at the Wayback Machine