According to this version, the name of the village of Mukhavka comes from the large number of flies that lived in the river Tupa (Dupla).
According to the "Geographical Dictionary of the Kingdom of Poland and Other Slavic Countries, "Vol.6",[5] published in 1885, on pages 790-791, it is stated that the village of Muhavka belonged to the estate complex of the village of Jagielnytsia, also known as Jagielnytsia key, which the Liantskoronski family owned until 1939 The Yagilnicza estate encompassed the lands around the towns of Yagilnytsia and Ulashkivtsi, as well as the villages of Antonów, Chomyakivka, Dolina, Nahyrianka, Mukhavka, Swidova, Sosulivka, Stara Yagilnytsia , Rosokhach, Saliwka, Shulhanivka, and Zabolotivka.
[6] According to the administrative division of the 16th century, the village of Mukhavka belonged to the Kamieniec Podolski county of the Podolia voivodeship.
Under the Treaty of Buchach (1672), the village of Mukhavka was under the rule of the Ottoman Empire from 1672 to 1684 and belonged to the Chortkiv nahie of the Kamieniec Podolski eyalet of the Podolia pashalik.
In 1867-1918, the Mukhavka community (gmina) belonged to the Chortkiv district of the crownland of the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, part of the Austrian Empire, from 1867, Austria-Hungary.
During World War I, a resident of Mukhavka, Volodymyr Kotsyuk, volunteered for the Ukrainian Galician Army (UGA).
An excerpt from "Memoirs of the Liberation War of the Ataman Alexander Hnizdovsky", which describes the battles that took place through the village of Mukhavka.
From 1939 to 1941 and from 1944 to 1991, the village of Mukhavka belonged to the Chortkiv district of Ternopil region of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.
During 1939-1941, 19 residents of the village were held in the Chortkiv NKVD prison, of whom 3 were tortured and executed - Vasyl Barytsky, Karl Okhvat and Mykola Strotsen.
[10] According to the report of the district research commission (district research commission) dated 07/01/44, there was a camp for Jewish people (ghetto) in the village of Mukhavka, which housed about 200 people, who were almost all killed during 1941-1944 (State Archive of the Russian Federation, fund R-7021, description 75, case 107, sheet 324 back, pages 95–96, 98).
A steel cross with the inscription "Glory to the fighters who fell for the freedom of Ukraine" was erected on the grave, and a chapel of the Mother of God (1908) was built nearby.
This was facilitated by the former school director Grushchych P.T., the head of the village council Berezovsky G.R., and the People's Deputy of Ukraine Mr. Metyuk.
On August 19, on Spas, the train connecting Ternopil - Chernivtsi stopped for the first time in the village of Mukhavka.
Girls in embroidered shirts met him with bread and salt, and the head of the village council Mr. Berezovsky awarded the locomotive driver with a wreath of periwinkle.
1779 - The first known image of the Church of St. Paraskeva in the village of Mukhavka on a topographic map of the Kingdom of Galicia and Volhynia in 1779-1783.
1784 - The first written mention, in the publication of the UGCC "Schematism of the All-Holy Clergy of the Greek Catholic Diocese of Stanislaviv in 1887", about the keeping of a separate metric for the village of Mukhavka at the Church of St. Paraskeva: records of birth, baptism, marriage and death.
Roman Catholic church School According to written sources, a school has been operating in the village of Mukhkavka since the second half of the 19th century: Social sphere Since the end of the 19th and early 20th centuries, branches of the following societies have been operating in the village: «Prosvita», «Sich», «Lug», «Sokol» (1934),[21] «Skala» (1934 р.
Currently, there is a kindergarten, a general practice and family medicine clinic, shopping establishments, "Fortuna" and "Bagrii" farms.
In the 19th century, their reconstruction (expansion) took place to increase the volume of fish farming and more effective irrigation of fields.
In the 20th century, during the time of the Polish Republic, as part of the land reclamation program in Galicia in 1930-1939, the construction of new ponds began in the village of Muhavka in 1936 and was completed in 1938.