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Donets Ridge

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The Donets Ridge is a highland that is the highest north-eastern part of the Donets upland. The ridge is in the Donetsk and Luhansk Oblasts of Ukraine and partially in the Rostov Oblast of Russia. The highest point on the ridge is a hill — Mohyla Mechetna, 367 m (1,204 ft).

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7-570: Another hill, Savur-Mohyla (278 m (912 ft)), was a notable site in the War in Donbass . The name derives from the river Seversky (Siversky) Donets . 48°20′00″N 39°00′00″E  /  48.3333°N 39.0000°E  / 48.3333; 39.0000 This article about a location in Ukraine is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This Russian location article

14-615: A kind of frontier between the Russians and the Turks and Tatars in the mediaeval period; Saur appears in them either as an evil Turkish khan or a Cossack hero." During World War II , Savur-Mohyla was the focal point of intense fighting, when Soviet troops managed to retake control of the height from German forces in August 1943. In 1963, a memorial complex was unveiled at the top of the hill to honour fallen soldiers, comprising an obelisk with

21-454: A steel-and-concrete statue of a Soviet soldier, four steel-and-concrete sculptures built along the slope leading up to the obelisk (each memorializing infantrymen, tankmen, artillerymen and airmen involved in the battle), and walls inscrcribed with the names of fallen soldiers in the battle. In 2014, during the first months of the military conflict between Ukrainian troops and Ukrainian Russian backed "Donetsk People's Republic" (DPR) militants in

28-576: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Savur-Mohyla Savur-Mohyla ( Ukrainian : Савур-могила ), often transliterated using the Russian spelling Saur-Mogila ( Russian : Саур-Могила ), is a strategic height in the Donets ridge near the city of Snizhne , in Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine. The 277.9 m (912 ft) tall hill is better known for a big monument complex that

35-665: The Donbas, the Savur-Mohyla height was captured by Donetsk People's Republic fighters. On 23 July 2014, DPR forces shot down two Ukrainian Air Force Sukhoi Su-25 (NATO reporting name "Frogfoot") ground-attack aircraft flying at 17,000 feet (5,200 meters) over Savur-Mohyla, using an advanced anti-aircraft system. On 28 July 2014, after intense fighting, the Armed Forces of Ukraine claimed that they recaptured control of Savur-Mohyla from Russian troops. Following its capture by

42-478: The Ukrainian 25th Airborne Brigade on 9 August 2014, the Russian militants recaptured the hill on 26 August 2014. During the fighting, the hill changed sides between Ukraine and Russia about 8 times. On 21 August 2014, the memorial's obelisk collapsed after enduring weeks of heavy indiscriminate shelling from Ukrainian armed forces. On 4 September 2022, Russians announced completion of restoration works on

49-542: Was built in 1963 by Ukrainian architect Anatoly Ignashchenko to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the liberation of Savur Mohyla during World War II . It was originally a tumulus ( kurgan ) – mohyla means "tumulus" in Ukrainian and according to one interpretation the word savur comes from Turkic sauyr , meaning "steppe mound shaped like a horse bottom". Rosamund Bartlett writes, "Many popular legends had been spun about this particular kurgan, which had acted as

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