The village was first mentioned in 1373, by the name
Boshko. Its name derives from a Slavic word meaning "
bull". From 1556 it belonged to the
Báthory family. By 1711 a mansion already stood here. After the failed revolution led by
Francis II Rákóczi, Germans settled down in the area. The village was known as
Németbocskó ("German Bocskó", later called
Újbocskó or "New Bocskó") and was united with two villages (Nagybocskó and Kisbocskó; "Greater" and "Smaller" Bocskó) across the river, forming a greater village called
Nagybocskó. This village had thus three parts: Újbocskó, which forms today's Bocicoiu Mare, and Kisbocskó and Nagybocskó, which form today's Velykyy Bychkiv. Lunca la Tisa was part of the former
Hungarian village of Lonka, which was cut into two parts after the World Wars, when the Tisza River became a natural border between Romania and
Ukraine. Its Ukrainian half forms the village of Luh (, , ) ==Demographics==