Gainovo is a village in the Borovichi municipal district of the Novgorod region , it belongs to the Sushilovsky rural settlement . According to the 2010 census, 13 people live in the village.
| Village | |
| Gainovo | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Novgorod region |
| Municipal district | Borovichsky |
| Rural settlement | Sushilovskoe |
| History and geography | |
| Center height | 88 m |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 13 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Postcode | 174432 |
| OKATO code | 49206852006 |
| OKTMO code | |
The village is located in the eastern part of the Mstinsk Depression, dividing the Valdai Upland into the Valdai Ridge in the south and Tikhvin in the north, at an altitude of 88 m [2] above sea level , near the Shilokata River , one and a half kilometers east of the administrative center of the rural settlement - the village of Sushilovo .
History
In the list of populated areas of the Novgorod province for 1911, the village of Gaynovo is listed as belonging to the Shegrinsky volost of Borovichi district [3] .
By decision of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of April 3, 1924, the Shegri volost was attached to the Borovichi volost [4] . The population of the village according to the census of 1926 - 83 people. Until July 31, 1927, a village in the Borovichi volost of the Borovichi district of the Novgorod province, and then on August 1 in the Sushilovsky village council (with a center in the village of Sushilovo ) of the newly formed Borovichi district of the Borovichi district of the Leningrad region . [5] . July 30, 1930 Borovichi district was abolished. The population of the village in 1940 was 120 people [5] . By a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of July 5, 1944, the Novgorod Region and Borovichi District were formed, and the village council became its members.
During the failed all-Union reform of the division into rural and industrial areas and party organizations [6] , in accordance with the decisions of the November (1962) plenum of the Central Committee of the CPSU "on the restructuring of the party leadership of the national economy" from December 10, 1962 the village council and village entered the major Borovichsky the rural district, and on February 1, 1963, the administrative Borovichi district was abolished, but the plenum of the Central Committee of the CPSU, which took place on November 16, 1964, restored the former principle of the party leadership of the national economy, after which the Decree of the Supreme Soviet The RSFSR of January 12, 1965, rural areas were again transformed into administrative districts and by the decision of the Novgorod Regional Executive Committee of January 12, 1965 and the Sushilovsky Village Council and the village again in Borovichi District [4] .
After the termination of the activities of Sushilovsky village council in the early 1990s [7] , the Administration of the Sushilovsky Village Council (in 1996 - the Sushilovskaya Rural Administration [8] ) began to operate, which was abolished from January 1, 2006 on the basis of a decree of the Borovichi City Administration and Borovichi District October 18, 2005 and Gainova, according to the results of the municipal reform is a part of the municipality - Sushilovskoe rural settlement area Borovichi municipal ( local government ), as administrative ones device-territorial subordinated administration Sushilovskogo rural settlement area Borovichi [9] .
In the area of the village (between Gaynovo and the village of Deryagino ) it was planned to place a landfill for the disposal of municipal solid waste from Okulovka and Borovichi [10]
Transportation
The nearest railway stations of the Oktyabrskaya Railway are in Borovichi (15 km) (on the Uglovka-Borovichi line ), in the village of Kotovo (on the Okulovka-Nebolchi line) and in Okulovka (on the main run of the October Railway).
Notes
- ↑ 2010 All-Russian Population Census. 12. The population of municipal districts, settlements, urban and rural settlements of the Novgorod region . Date of treatment February 2, 2014. Archived February 2, 2014.
- ↑ Gainowo
- ↑ Borovichi Uyezd // List of the inhabited places of the Novgorod province. Issue VI (sixth). Borovichi district. Compiled under the editorship of the secretary of the Novgorod provincial statistical committee V. A. Podobedov. Novgorod. Provincial printing house. 1911 year.
- ↑ 1 2 Snytko, OV The administrative-territorial division of the Novgorod province and the region 1727-1995. Reference : [] / O.V. Snytko, et al. - St. Petersburg, 2009 .-- P. 159.
- ↑ 1 2 Gainovo \\ Handbook of the history of the administrative-territorial division of the Leningrad Region (1917-1969) / Sost Dubin A.S., Lebedeva P.L.L. 1969. // LOGA. T. V. S. 1978.
- ↑ ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AMPLITUDE Archived November 29, 2013.
- ↑ With the adoption of the Russian law of July 6, 1991 “On local self-government in the RSFSR” and the Decree of the President of the Russian Federation of October 9, 1993 “On the reform of representative bodies of power and local self-government in the Russian Federation”, the activities of village councils were terminated ahead of schedule
- ↑ HISTORICAL SUMMARY OF THE SUSHILOVSKY RURAL SETTLEMENT \\ Official site of the Administration of the Sushilovsky Rural Settlement
- ↑ Register of administrative-territorial structure of the region
- ↑ Administration of the Novgorod region financed environmental activities \\ NovgorodInform. Ru 03/18/2005