Husiatyn[a] (Ukrainian: Гусятин; Yiddish: הוסיאַטין, romanized: Husyatin) is a rural settlement in Chortkiv Raion, Ternopil Oblast, western Ukraine.
The Emperor Joseph II toured this area immediately after its annexation to Austria and was very impressed by the fertility of the soil and its future prospects.
It remained a county centre under Austrian rule until the collapse of Austria-Hungary and the declaration of the Western Ukrainian People's Republic in 1918.
A Neolithic grave, complete with a coffin, was discovered some time before 1928 in the village of Chornokintsi Velyki (Czarnokońce Wielkie in Polish).
There are educational, cultural and social institutions: Secondary schools of 1-3 grades, Husiatyn College of TSTU, music school, House of Culture, Center for Children and Youth Creativity, Taras Shevchenko Cinema, library, preschool, printing house, editorial office of the district newspaper "Visnyk Nadzbruchchia", central district hospital, clinic, water resort, sanatoriums "Zbruch" and "Medobory", local history museum (opened in 1979).
Branch of the "Prosvita" society: founded in 1898, liquidated by the Soviet authorities in 1939, resumed its work in 1990 (headed by Vasyl Horbovaty).