Manhush, Donetsk Oblast is a company founded in 1826.
Mangush (Ukrainian Mangush, in 1946-1995 - Pershotravnevoe) is an urban-type settlement, the regional center of the Mangush district of the Donetsk region of Ukraine. It is located 15 km from the city of Mariupol, on the river Mokraya
Belosaraika (flows into the Sea of Azov).
Mangush United Community is located in the southwestern part of Donetsk region. In the north it borders with the Nikolsky territorial community, in the west - with the Zaporozhye region, in the south it is washed by the waters of the Sea of Azov, and in the east it adjoins the lands of the large industrial city of Mariupol.
The distance of Mangush from the regional center of Donetsk is 130 km by highways. Distance from the temporary regional center of Kramatorsk - 238 km.
There are 17 settlements in the administrative-territorial structure of the community, including two urban-type settlements (Mangush and Yalta) and 15 villages.
The national composition is dominated by Ukrainians, who make up 50.3%, Russians occupy 27%, Greeks - 20%. Mangush community - a territory of compact residence of the Greeks.
Within the community is 56 km of seafront with unique shallow sandy beaches. The mild climate of the Sea of Azov awaits vacationers here. Recreational potential meets the highest world standards: warm shallow sea, comfortable seashell-sandy beaches, favorable climatic conditions (lots of clear days), sea breezes that bring to the coast a lot of clean, ozone-rich, salt and trace elements air and mineral resources. therapeutic mud, favorable geographical location, developed transport infrastructure.
The Sea of Azov and its coastal territory is one of the important natural resources of Ukraine in the Donetsk region. The Azov coast has high potential for the development of modern tourism industry, an invaluable feature of which is the combination of tourism with recreation and health. It has unique natural and climatic conditions, rich historical and cultural heritage with a historical Scythian past, national, ethnographic and material resources.