The Leningrad District is an administrative-territorial unit within the Leningrad Region that existed in 1927-1930 .
| district | |
| Leningrad District | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Entered into | Leningrad region |
| Included | 21 district |
| Adm. Centre | Leningrad |
| History and Geography | |
| Date of education | 1927-1930 |
| Date of Abolition | |
| Population | |
| Population | 790 943 people ( 1926 ) |
| Nationalities | 75.5% Russians , 15% Finns |
| Official language | Russian , Finnish - in Kuyvozovsky district |
The Leningrad District with its center in the city of Leningrad was established on August 1, 1927, simultaneously with the formation of the Leningrad Region (divided into 10 districts).
The territory of the Leningrad district has completely entered the Leningrad district .
Volkhov uyezd, Leningrad province, volosts: Shumskaya, Oktyabrskaya, Proletarskaya, Kolchanovskaya and parts of Glashevskaya;
Trotsky district, Leningrad province, volosts: Begunitskaya, Vengissarovskaya, Gostilitskaya, Detskoselskaya, Kaporsky, Krasnoselskaya, Lisinsky, Oranienbaum, Ropshinsky, Strelinsky, Sosnitsky, Trotsky, parts of Glebovsky and Rozhdestvenskaya;
Kingisepp county, Leningrad province, volosts: Vruda, Kingisepp, Kotel, Narovo, Sonkinsky and parts of the Moloskovitsky volost;
Novgorod county, Novgorod province, volosts: Luban, part of Apraksinskaya, Tesovskaya and Oskuy volosts;
Tikhvin county, Cherepovets province, volosts: Bolshegorskaya, Vasilyevskaya, Zhukovskaya, Katinskaya, Lukinskaya, Nedashetskaya, Prigorodnaya, Progalskaya, Sugorovskaya, parts of Anisimovskaya, Pikalyovskaya, Borisovshchinsky and Peldush volosts [1] .
Included 21 districts: Andreevsky , Budogoshchensky , Volosovsky , Volkhovsky , Detskoselsky , Zhukovsky , Kapshinsky , Kingiseppsky , Kolpinsky , Kotelsky , Kuyvozovsky Finnish national , Leninsky , Lomonosovsky , Lyuban , Mginsky , Moloskovitsky , Pargolovsky , Pikalevsky , Tikhvin 29 , Tikhvin 29 in Tikhvin 29 Tikhvin 29 in Tikhvin 29 Tikhvin Krasnogvardeisky) and Uritsky .
The district was liquidated in July 1930 (like most other districts of the Soviet Union), and its constituent areas are subordinated directly to regional authorities.
As of 1929, there were 62 national village councils in the district:
- in Detskoselsky district - Wittolovsky, Voiskorovsky, Mondel-Kokkelsky, Peskovsky, Poginsky, Tallikovsky, Shusharsky
- In Kingisepp district - Estonian Tibiks
- In Kolpino district - Estonian Estonian [2]
- In the Kotelsky region - Soikinsky Izhora; Kononovsky, Kurgolovsky Finnish
- In the Krasnogvardeisky district - Skvoritsky, Voyskovitsky, Kovshovsky, Kolpan, Lukashevsky, Pudostsky, Romanovsky, Chernitsky Finnish
- In the Kuyvozovsky Finnish region - Voloyarvsky, Garbolovsky, Elizavetinsky, Kiryasalsky, Koyvuppelsky, Korkiomyagsky, Koyvukyulsky, Lembolovsky, Leskolovsky, Lekhtusky, Maselsky, Nikulsky, Soelovsky, Toksovsky, Troitsemyagsky, Khimpel
- In the Leninsky district - Kanistsky, Koltushsky, Kuyvorovsky, Manushkinsky, Myaglovsky, Romanovsky, Rumbolovsky Finnish
- In the Mginsky district - Markovsky Finnish
- In the Moloskovitsky district - Zimititsky Estonian
- In Oranienbaum district - Bibigonsky, Iliikovsky Finnish
- In the Pargolovsky district - Agalatovsky, Kavgolovsky, Kapitolovsky, Krasno-Ostrovsky, Luppolovsky, Mertutsky, Mistolovsky, Novo-Alakyulsky, Skotnitsky, Yukkovsky Finnish
- In the Uritsky district - Duderhof, Razbegaevsky, Finnish-Vysotsky, Shungarovsky Finnish [3] .
Notes
- ↑ All of Leningrad and the Leningrad Region for 1928. Address and reference book. p. 1335
- ↑ On the approval of the official symbols of the municipality “Shapkinskoye rural settlement”
- ↑ National minorities of the Leningrad region / P. M. Yanson. - L .: Organizational Department of the Leningrad Oblast Executive Committee, 1929. - S. 22-24. - 104 p.