Between 1932 and 1933, the village suffered a large reduction in population during the Holodomor famine, which in a combined casualty count killed 113 in Dvorichne and ten other small settlements nearby.[4]
In the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the village was occupied by Russian troops during their initial advance into the nation. It became a frontline village after the settlement was successfully recaptured sometime in September by Ukrainian forces during the 2022 Ukrainian eastern counteroffensive.[7] The village would change hands multiple times from then,[8][9][10][11] largely remaining contested until it definitively came under partial Russian control on 4 February, when Ukrainian forces were pushed out of the western outskirts of the village.[12] This progress of the Russian forces was continued on 8 February,[7][13] until the village came under full Russian control on 10 February,[14] where it remains as of May 2023.[3][circular reference] Despite the Russian capture, the village still comes under artillery fire with the frontline still not far away.[15]
^Perpetua, Andrew (21 October 2022). "Ukraine Daily Update: Update for October 20th". ukrdailyupdate.com. Retrieved 15 May 2023. in recent days Russia has counterattacked and claimed to have pushed Ukraine out of the towns of Horobivka and Dvorichne […] In Dvorichne, Russia claims to have taken control of the train station in the middle of the town.
^Stepanenko, Kateryna; Bailey, Riley; Mappes, Grace; Howard, Angela; Kagan, Frederick W. (4 February 2023). "Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment, February 4, 2023". Institute for the Study of War. Retrieved 15 May 2023. Russian forces conducted successful offensive actions near Dvorichne […] and pushed Ukrainian forces out of the western outskirts of the settlement.