Early history The city has its origins in a settlement named
Dovzhykove-Orlovskе that originated in the late 18th century. It was later renamed to
Sharapkyne. The first coal mines in the area began development in the 1870s.
20th century From 1920, it was administratively part of the
Donets Governorate of Ukraine. On 22 October 1938, several of the mining settlements in the area, along with the "Sverdlov" mine, were merged into a new city named
Sverdlovsk, named after Bolshevik leader
Yakov Sverdlov. During
World War II, Sverdlovsk was occupied by
Nazi Germany between 20 July 1942 and 17 February 1943. During the occupation, the Nazis massacred communists and Jews, as well as murdering other civilians for minor infractions. The population waged
partisan warfare against the occupiers. As the Nazis retreated from the settlement, they burned down and blew up several buildings, and
kidnapped 4,500 people to Germany for forced labor.
21st century On 4 June 2014, at the beginning of the
war in Donbas, militants proclaiming loyalty to the Russian-backed separatist
Luhansk People's Republic (LPR) seized control of the border guards' base at Sverdlovsk, as well as taking over the city itself. The Luhansk People's Republic and
Donetsk People's Republic, both considered proxies of
Russia, went on to seize large swathes of
eastern Ukraine. Using August 2014 footage from occupied Sverdlovsk, investigators identified a Russian tank in one of the separatist columns that "only have come from across the border in Russia", confirming direct Russian involvement in the war. On 22 August the same year, it was discovered that the LPR authorities in Sverdlovsk - as well as
Chervonopartyzansk and other nearby settlements - had forbidden shops owned by people who held pro-Ukrainian views from selling bread. Residents of the settlements began making a petition to end this practice, calling the bans on selling food "genocide". On 23 August, a group of Russian "humanitarian" trucks arrived with packets of salt and water. However, the trucks were reportedly "half-empty", and the salt packets had unusual prices. On 11 September 2014, it was reported that in the past month, sixteen people in Sverdlovsk had died of starvation in what Ukrainian media called a "famine in
Donbas". Elderly people with disabilities living on their own were particularly at risk of starvation, now that social services were unable to access the city. On 24 September,
Information Resistance coordinator
Dmytro Tymchuk reported that the
Russian military, who had been fighting alongside the LPR militants in the war, were using an abandoned mine in Sverdlovsk as an impromptu mass grave for its dead soldiers in an attempt to hide casualties and obscure its role in the war. On 4 October 2014, there was a "hunger riot" in Sverdlovsk in protest against the LPR, citing lack of payment of wages, lack of food, the collapse of the baking system, and widespread looting and robbery. Unknown people threw grenades at the organizers of the protests. This came in the wake of larger-scale "hunger riots" throughout occupied Luhansk Oblast. On 17 November 2014, a second, larger-scale rally broke out in protest of the occupation. People poured blue and yellow paint (the national colors of Ukraine) over the gate of an administrative building and threatened the militants. The militants fired automatic weapons in an attempt to disperse the rally, but this failed. About 2,000 people were taking place in the rally, and they called for the separatists to leave the city, By 18 November, activists reported that 64 people in the city had now died of starvation. In 2016, Sverdlovsk was renamed
Dovzhansk and Sverdlovsk Raion was renamed to
Dovzhansk Raion by the Ukrainian government as a result of
decommunization laws. In 2020, the designation of a city of oblast significance was abolished across Ukraine, and Dovzhansk has since been officially subordinated to
Dovzhansk Raion. On 21 August 2022, during the full-scale
Russian invasion of Ukraine, Luhansk Oblast governor
Serhiy Haidai reported that the LPR authorities had forcibly conscripted 430 mine workers in Dovzhansk. According to Russian state TV, only women and the elderly were left to work the mines.
Systematic abduction of children has taken place in the city, with 200 children being taken to camps in
Krasnodar Krai in Russia for "patriotic training" on 17 August 2023. ==Economy==