Mordovian Ivanovka ( erz. Balls-vele) is a village in the Leninogorsk district of the Republic of Tatarstan .
| Village | |
| Mordovian Ivanovka | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Tatarstan |
| Municipal District | Leninogorsk |
| Rural settlement | Nizhnechershilinskoe |
| History and Geography | |
| First mention | 1785 |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 29 people ( 2010 ) |
| Official language | Tatar , Russian |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Postcode | |
| OKATO Code | 92236000027 |
| OKTMO Code | |
Mordovian Ivanovka was first mentioned in the materials of the fourth census (1785). According to the data, 26 people from the Mordovians ( Erzya ) of new baptists lived in the village of yashash peasants. Until the 20s of the XX century, Mordovian Ivanovka was called Points (in Tatar the word "ball" is honey, that is, honey, sweet). But since the Erzya population lived mainly in the village, the inhabitants called it as Points Vele . It came from the name of the river, which flows on the spot where Ivanovka was founded.
In 1910, the village had 105 yards, 3 ponds, a parish school. The population was engaged in the decoration of wild stone .
With the establishment of Soviet power in the village and volost, a volost rural council was elected. Until the 50s, the Erzya language was taught in a rural school. Mordovian-Ivanovo collective farms: “Yakster Sokitsya” (from Erzya “Red Plowman”), “Yakster test” (“Red Star”) and collective farm “Trud” (n. Trud) were merged in 1950 into the collective farm named after Chapaeva.
It has become a tradition in the Mordva-Ivanovo village library to hold readings in Erzya, “Ancestors of Erzya in 12 Tales,” “ Alena Arzamasskaya ”. [one]
Currently, the population is engaged in field husbandry, sheep breeding, work in the field of oil production. In 1989, 65 people lived, in 1997 - 61 people. [2]
Notes
- ↑ Revival of Mordovian culture and literature in the Leninogorsk district O. Valeeva, head of the methodological department of the Leninogorsk Central Library System Archived on August 12, 2008.
- ↑ according to the Tatar Encyclopedic Dictionary