a city of the province of Moldavia, in European Turkey. It is situated on a river of the same name, which falls a little below into the Siena. It consists chiefly of wooden houses, and has several Greek churches and monasteries, with 4200 inhabitants, who have a considerable trade in wine, cattle, wool, honey, wax, and tobacco. During the continental system the Jews and Armenians of Bottoschany carried on a great smuggling trade in sugar, coffee, and other colonial goods, with Brody, Leipsic, and Brunn.