Rakoshyno (Ukrainian: Ракошино, Hungarian: Beregrákos) is a village located in the Mukacheve Raion (district) in the Zakarpattia Oblast (province) in western Ukraine.
In some written sources, the village is also called Beregrakosh (ie Rakoshin Berezky), because it belonged to the Berezka County.
Stone tools of the Neolithic era (4th–3rd centuries BC) were found in the area of Kaidanov and the vicinity of Rakoshin.
In 1463, he and the peasants of Ianoshiev (Ivanivka) protested against the attacks and violence of the Irshava feudal lord Ladislav Karachoni.
Authorities built barracks to house parts of the castle cavalry in the village.
In addition to numerous dues, the peasants performed various works on construction and repair in the manor or in Mukachevo Castle, carried security, transported various things and so on.
During the invasion of Transcarpathia by the Polish - noble army in 1657, the estate of the Rakoci in Rakoshin was destroyed.
The serfs still barely survived, suffered from shortages, and were also robbed by stationed German troops.
This, first of all, explains the active participation of many peasants of Rakoshin in the liberation war of the Hungarian people in 1703-1711.
The Ukrainian language was expelled from school, and it was forbidden even to speak it in government institutions.
Terror, torture and persecution forced many young men and women to flee to the Soviet Union.
Many of Rakoshin's youth joined the Red Army and took part in the final defeat of the Nazis.
Their elected representatives Dmytro Kovach and Petro Varha voted for the reunification of Transcarpathia with the USSR at the First Congress of the People's Committees of Transcarpathian Ukraine.
The bell tower was built of metal and concrete in 1935, when the church was renovated by the efforts of the parish priest Mykola Tovt.
[3][circular reference] Many immigrants to the US from Rakoshyno/Beregrákos in the late 19th and early 20th centuries were destined for Pennsylvania and New Jersey.