The area now occupied by Dobrivliany was originally an unincorporated community of people, one of three settlements that would eventually be built here, that later became the original foundation of
Zalishchyky sometime before 1340. In 1440, parts of this community broke away and established Dobrivliany as a separate community. The first recorded name of this separate settlement was "Chrona Debra" (), and the first written mention of the town dates to 1580. During eras of invasions from numerous parties (such as the
Tatars), Dobrivliany was razed by the
Mongols and rebuilt. In 1672, Dobrivliany was destroyed for the second time during the
Second Polish–Ottoman War (a fate also shared by Zalishchyky), and since Zalishchyky was re-established around a mile south in 1792, Dobrivliany was assumedly re-established around the same time as well. Dobrivliany saw large growth in the 18th century. Several floods from the Dniester (what was not an uncommon occurrence) brought numerous populations from surrounding regions to permanently settle in Dobrivliany, thanks in-part to Dobrivliany's main church miraculously surviving each catastrophic flood with often little to no damage. Between 1894 and 1896, Dobrivliany was the site of a brief epidemic of the
Black Death. Thanks to neighboring Zalishchyky's prolific reputation in the world of tourism, Dobrivliany thrived off the area's booming economy before and after
World War I, and became a center of winemaking along with the rest of the region. The onset of
the Second World War marked the end of this economic prosperity, and Dobrivliany had its share of hard times just like the rest of the area. In 1941, the Dniester again flooded, causing the
Germans (who occupied the area for little over a month) to abolish taxes in the area. Under
Soviet control after the end of the Second World War, Dobrivliany was annexed by Zalishchyky in 1981, only to have its independent status restored five years later in 1986. Until 18 July 2020, Dobrivliany belonged to
Zalishchyky Raion. The raion was abolished in July 2020 as part of the administrative reform of Ukraine, which reduced the number of raions of Ternopil Oblast to three. The area of Zalishchyky Raion was merged into Chortkiv Raion. ==References==