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Yaroslavsky district (Yaroslavl region)

Yaroslavl region - an administrative-territorial unit ( district ) and a municipal entity ( municipal district ) as part of the Yaroslavl region of the Russian Federation .

Municipal district
Yaroslavl district
FlagEmblem
FlagEmblem
A country Russia
Enters intoYaroslavl region
Includes8 municipalities
Adm Centrein the city of Yaroslavl
Head of the municipal districtZolotnikov Nikolay Vladimirovich [1]
History and geography
Date of education1929 year
Square1936.7 km² (11th place )
TimezoneMSK ( UTC + 3 )
Population
Population↗ 63 574 [2] people ( 2018 )
Density26.7 people / km²
Official site
Yaroslavl district on the map

The administrative center is located in Yaroslavl (not part of the district).

Content

Geography

The territory of the municipal district is located in the east of the central part of the Yaroslavl region, its area is 1936.7 km² (11th place among the municipal regions of the region). The territory on which the Yaroslavl municipal district is located surrounds the territory of an independent municipal formation in the Yaroslavl region - the urban district of Yaroslavl, also borders on the municipal districts of the Yaroslavl region:

  • in the north with Danilovsky ,
  • in the east - with Nekrasovsky ,
  • in the south - with Gavrilov-Yamsky ,
  • in the west - with Borisoglebsky and Bolsheselsky , in the north-west - with Tutaevsky .

The main rivers are the Volga , Pakhma , Kotorosl , It .

History

The district was formed by a decree of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of June 10, 1929 as part of the Yaroslavl District of the Ivanovo Industrial Region . It included most of the territory of the former Yaroslavl district of the Yaroslavl province .

January 1, 1932 by the Decree of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee, among others, the Yaroslavl region of the Ivanovo industrial region was liquidated. Village councils of the Yaroslavl region are distributed as follows [3] :

  • Bekrenevsky, Vysokovsky, Gavrilovsky, Grigorievsky 1st, Grigorievsky 2nd, Dolmatovsky, Dorovskoi, Dorozhaevsky, Ermak, Efremov, Zverintsevsky, Ivan'kovskii, Karabihsky, Kolokunovsky, Kormilitsinsky, Kurbski, Lopukhovsky, Medvedkovo, Medyaginsky, Melenkovsky, St. Michael, Pazushinsky, Serenovsky, Telegin, Telishchevsky, Terekhovsky, Ustinsky and Yakovlevsky are attached to the city of Yaroslavl ;
  • Ramensky, Titovsky and Shirinsky - to Borisoglebsky district ;
  • Novlensky, Putyatinsky, Seletsky, Telitsinsky and Ushakovsky - to the Borovsky district ;
  • Bakanovsky, Kashcheevsky and Yurinsky - to the Gavrilo-Yamsky district ;
  • Bereznikovsky, Golodyaevsky, Davydkovsky, Markovsky and October - to the Danilovsky district ;
  • Banevsky, Davydovsky, Dmitrievsky, Dryakhlovsky, Rezaninsky and Chentsovsky - to the Tutaevsky district ;
  • Ananyinsky, Burmakinsky, Vysotsky, Levinsky, Lyutovsky, Radyukinsky, and Seslavinsky - to the Nerekht district .

On July 20, 1933, the district was restored, it included village councils, which were subordinate to the Yaroslavl City Council, as well as the workers' villages Krasny Pereval and Krasny Tkachi . On March 11, 1936, the district entered the newly formed Yaroslavl region . On March 17, 1944, 7 village councils were listed in the newly formed Kurbsky district and 3 village councils in the newly formed Burmakinsky district . On April 15, 1946, 4 village councils became part of the newly formed Davydkovsky district . On November 15, 1957, parts of the liquidated Kurbsky and Tolbukhinsky districts were added to the district. On March 6, 1959, the Lyutovsky village council of the former Burmakinsky district entered the district [4] .

On January 1, 2005, in accordance with the law of the Yaroslavl Region No. 65-z of December 21, 2004 “On the Names, Borders and Status of Municipalities of the Yaroslavl Region” [5] , 2 urban settlements Krasny Tkachi and Lesnaya Polyana and 7 rural settlements were formed in the district : Zavolzhskoye , Ivnyakovskoye , Karabikhskoye , Kuznechikhinskoye , Kurbskoye , Nekrasovskoye , Tunoshenskoye . On February 25, 2009, the law of the Yaroslavl region No. 7-z [6] included in the composition of the Karabiha rural settlement the abolished urban settlement Krasny Tkachi .

Coat of arms and flag

The emblem (adopted May 22, 1999 ) [7] and the flag (adopted December 20, 2002 ) [8] of the Yaroslavl region on a silver field depict two black bears with golden axes (Yaroslavl and the Yaroslavl region), standing on a green foot (beautiful nature and agriculture) on opposite sides of the blue wavy pillar (Volga). Authors - Konstantin Mochenov (Khimki) and Vladimir Druzhitsky (Yaroslavl); artist - Robert Malanichev (Moscow).

Population

Population
1939 [9]1959 [10]1970 [11]1979 [12]1989 [13]2002 [14]2007 [15]
107 736↘ 64 553↘ 56 797↘ 52 485↗ 55 636↘ 53 579↗ 54 894
2009 [16]2010 [17]2011 [18]2012 [19]2013 [20]2014 [21]2015 [22]
↘ 51 688↗ 52 328↗ 52 413↗ 53 738↗ 54 661↗ 56,026↗ 58 523
2016 [23]2017 [24]2018 [2]
↗ 60 845↗ 62 411↗ 63 574

The population as of January 1, 2010 is 51,920 people, including 7,097 people living in urban conditions. [25] The population density is 27.1 people. for 1 km. The largest nationality in the region is Russians - 96.7% of the total population.

Administrative division

Yaroslavl district as an administrative-territorial unit of the region includes 2 working villages ( urban-type settlements ) and 19 rural districts . [26] [27]

The Yaroslavl municipal district within the framework of local self-government includes 8 municipalities , including 1 urban settlement and 7 rural settlements formed within the boundaries of workers' settlements and rural districts [27] [28] .

Administrative
territorial unit
Administrative
Centre
MunicipalityAdministrative
Centre
amount
inhabited
points
Population
(people)
Area [29]
(km²)
rp Lesnaya Polyanarp Lesnaya Polyanaurban settlement Lesnaya Polyanarp Lesnaya Polyanaone↘ 2766 [24]0.46
Gavrilovsky rural districtwith. PrusovoZavolzhsky rural settlementZavolzhye127↗ 10,797 [24]317.49
Levtsovsky rural districtGrigoryevskoe village
Pestretsovsky rural districtv. Pestretsovo
Tochishchensky rural districtwith. Spas-Vitaliy
Bekrenevsky rural districtwith. SarafonovoIvnyakovskoe rural settlementp. Ivnyaki83↗ 8768 [24]233.38
Ivnyakovsky rural districtp. Ivnyaki
rp Red Weaversrp Red WeaversKarabihi rural settlementKarabikha village64↘ 14,441 [24]217,195
Karabik rural districtKarabikha village
Telegin rural districtn. Nagorny
Glebovsky rural districtGlebovsky villageKuznechikhinsky rural settlementvillage Kuznechikha105↗ 10 235 [24]349.48
Kuznechikhinsky rural districtvillage Kuznechikha
Ryutnevsky rural districtp. Yaroslavka
Tolbukhinsky rural districtwith. Tolbuhino
Kurbsky rural districtwith. KurbaKursk rural settlementwith. Kurba113↘ 5797 [24]477.07
Melenkovsky rural districtp. Kozmodemyansk
Mordvinovsky rural districtMordvinovo village
Shirinsky rural districtwith. Shirin
Nekrasovsky rural districtp. MikhailovskyNekrasovskoe rural settlementp. Mikhailovsky24↗ 3198 [24]43.78
Lyutovsky rural districtvillage MokeevskoyeTunoshenskoe rural settlementwith. Tunoshna59↘ 6409 [24]275.96
Tunoshensky rural districtwith. Tunoshna

Locations

In total, there are 576 settlements in the district.

Economy

The basis of the region’s economy is agriculture .

Transportation

The total length of roads in the region is 513.7 km, of which 410.96 km are with asphalt concrete pavement.

Education

In the Yaroslavl municipal district there are 28 comprehensive schools, 14 pre-school educational institutions, 7 out-of-school institutions, 1 orphanage , 1 institution of the type " Primary School - Kindergarten " in the village of Lesnaya Polyana. Also in the region there is an agricultural technical school in the village of Kozmodemyansk , the Institute for Advanced Training of Agricultural Workers , the Research Institute of Livestock and Feed Production .

Culture

In the municipal district there are 27 clubs, 32 libraries, cultural and sports centers, as well as three theaters: the Amateur Pilgrim Theater of Ananyinsky Palace of Culture based on the Dubkovsky Cultural and Sports Center; the theater of pop miniatures "Impromptu" and the youth theater "Youth" on the basis of the Kuznechikhinsky cultural and sports center; in Ananyinsky Palace of Culture there is a folk dance ensemble “Fireworks” (as of January 1, 2010, work is being carried out with 4 groups of different ages)

Attractions

  • Karabikha - Museum-Reserve of N. A. Nekrasov
  • Selifontovo - a memorial cemetery on the site of the shooting range in October 1938
  • Yaroslavl Dolphinarium in the village of Dubki
  • Within 10-12 km from Strelka of Yaroslavl there are ancient Russian proto-urban centers with burial mounds - Timerevsky , Mikhailovsky (near the village of Mikhailovskoye beyond the Volga [30] ) and Petrovsky (upstream of Kotorosli near the village of Petrovsky) [31]

Prominent natives

  • Volodin, Pavel Semenovich - Soviet military leader, pilot, major general of aviation (1940), at the beginning of World War II he headed the headquarters of the Red Army Air Force Korolevo , studied at the town of Krasnye Tkachi .
  • Volonchunas, Viktor Vladimirovich - mayor of Yaroslavl; village of Orlovo .
  • Kolesova, Elena Fedorovna - partisan, Hero of the Soviet Union; Kolesovo village .
  • Komarov, Arseniy Vasilievich (1907-2002) - Soviet military-political figure, vice admiral; Bukontievo village .
  • Korchagin Vladimir Matveevich (1912-1995) - editor of the newspaper "Stalinets", war correspondent for the newspapers "Wings of the Soviets", "Soviet Fleet", the magazine "Soviet Military Review". Member of the editorial commission of the book "4th Air Army in the Second World War" (1968). He worked on the book of military memoirs, “With the Duma of the Homeland” (1982). Born in the village of Dulepovo near the village. Kurba of the Yaroslavl region. [32]
  • Kostylev, Valentin Ivanovich (1884-1950) - Soviet writer, prose writer, author of the novel-trilogy "Ivan the Terrible." He spent his childhood and youth in the estate of his uncle in the village of Nagornoye near the village of Kurba. [33]
  • Mariev, Pavel Lukyanovich - General Director of the Belarusian Automobile Plant in 1992-2007, Hero of Belarus.
  • Petrov, Ivan Fedorovich (1897-1993) - lieutenant general of aviation, the first rector of MIPT . Born in the village of Shchiptsovo .
  • Seleznev, Alexander Anatolyevich - commander of the detachment of the operational platoon of riot police, Hero of Russia; with. Tunoshna .
  • Syromyatnikov, Sergey Petrovich (1891-1951) - heating engineer, scientist in the field of steam locomotive engineering, academician of the USSR Academy of Sciences, honored worker of science and technology of the RSFSR, general director of traction of the 1st rank.
  • Tolbukhin, Fedor Ivanovich - Marshal of the Soviet Union; Born in the village of Androniki , he studied in the village of Davydkovo, which was renamed Tolbukhino in his honor.
  • Kharchev, Mikhail Alexandrovich - Major General of Justice, Chairman of the Military Tribunal of the Central Group of Forces, and October 16, 1953 to November 10, 1963 - Chairman of the Military Tribunal of the Moscow Military District. Korolevo , studied at the town of Red Weavers .
  • Yakovlev, Alexander Nikolaevich - a political and public figure, the main ideologist of Perestroika; Born in the village of Korolevo , studied at the town of Krasnye Tkachi .
  • Yakovlev Konstantin Fedorovich - Yaroslavl original writer, editor-in-chief of the Verkhne-Volzhsky publishing house, Korolevo , studied at the town of Krasnye Tkachi .

Notes

  1. ↑ Head of NMR
  2. ↑ 1 2 The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2018 (Undec.) . The appeal date was July 25, 2018. Archived July 26, 2018.
  3. ↑ Resolution of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of January 1, 1932 “On changes in the administrative-territorial division of the Ivanovo industrial region” Archived on December 10, 2014.
  4. ↑ Yaroslavl region. Directory of administrative divisions 1917-1967
  5. ↑ LAW of the YAROSLAV REGION of December 21, 2004 N 65-z “On the names, boundaries and status of municipalities of the Yaroslavl region”
  6. ↑ LAW of the Yaroslavl region "On the union of settlements in the Bolsheselsky, Danilovsky and Yaroslavl municipal regions of the Yaroslavl region and amending the Law of the Yaroslavl region" On the names, borders and status of municipalities of the Yaroslavl region ""
  7. ↑ Coat of arms of the Yaroslavl municipal district (Yaroslavl region) . Heraldry.ru
  8. ↑ Flag of the Yaroslavl Municipal District (Yaroslavl District) . Heraldry.ru
  9. ↑ All-Union Population Census of 1939. Population of the USSR by area and city
  10. All-Union census of the population in 1959 (Neopr.) . Circulation date October 10, 2013. Archived October 10, 2013.
  11. ↑ 1970 All-Union Population Census. The actual population of cities, urban-type settlements, districts and regional centers of the USSR according to census data as of January 15, 1970 by republics, territories and regions (Neoprov.) . The date of circulation is October 14, 2013. Archived October 14, 2013.
  12. ↑ All-Union Population Census 1979
  13. ↑ All-Union Population Census of 1989 (Unsolved) . Archived August 23, 2011.
  14. ↑ All-Russian census of 2002. Tom. 1, table 4. The population of Russia, federal districts, constituent entities of the Russian Federation, districts, urban settlements, rural settlements — regional centers and rural settlements with a population of 3,000 or more (unidentified) . Archived on February 3, 2012.
  15. Data on the population by municipalities, settlements and settlements that are part of the Yaroslavl region on January 1, 2007 (Neopr.) . Rural settlements of the Yaroslavl region on January 1, 2007 // Statistical compendium. The appeal date is February 14, 2013. Archived March 14, 2015.
  16. ↑ The resident population of the Russian Federation by cities, urban-type settlements and districts as of January 1, 2009 (Neopr.) . The date of circulation is January 2, 2014. Archived January 2, 2014.
  17. ↑ 2010 All-Russian Population Census. Population of the populated areas of the Yaroslavl region (Neopr.) . The appeal date is April 28, 2016. Archived April 28, 2016.
  18. ↑ Population and composition of municipal entities of the Yaroslavl region as of January 1, 2011 (Neopr.) . The date of circulation is May 9, 2014. Archived May 9, 2014.
  19. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities. Table 35. Estimated number of resident population on January 1, 2012 (Neopr.) . The date of circulation is May 31, 2014. Archived May 31, 2014.
  20. ↑ Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2013. - M .: Federal State Statistics Service Rosstat, 2013. - 528 p. (Table 33. Population of urban districts, municipal districts, urban and rural settlements, urban settlements, rural settlements) (Neopr.) . The appeal date is November 16, 2013. Archived November 16, 2013.
  21. ↑ Table 33. The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2014 (Undec.) . Circulation date August 2, 2014. Archived August 2, 2014.
  22. ↑ Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2015 (Neopr.) . Circulation date August 6, 2015. Archived August 6, 2015.
  23. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2016
  24. ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2017 (neopr.) (July 31, 2017). The date of circulation is July 31, 2017. Archived July 31, 2017.
  25. ↑ The number of permanent population of the Russian Federation by cities, urban-type settlements and regions as of January 1, 2010 . Rosstat
  26. ↑ Law of the Yaroslavl region of February 7, 2002 N 12-z “On the administrative-territorial structure of the Yaroslavl region”
  27. ↑ 1 2 Law of the Yaroslavl Region dated December 21, 2004 No. 65-z “On the Names, Borders and Status of Municipalities of the Yaroslavl Region”
  28. ↑ Law of the Yaroslavl Region of September 29, 2009 “On Amending Legislative Acts on the Administrative-Territorial Structure and Municipalities of the Yaroslavl Region”
  29. ↑ Database of municipal indicators
  30. ↑ Mikhailovsky Mounds - article from the Great Soviet Encyclopedia .
  31. ↑ The glorious city of Yaroslavl has been created here
  32. ↑ site "Immortal regiment"
  33. ↑ Website YarIRO

Links

  • The site of the administration of the Yaroslavl municipal district
  • Information on the website of the regional administration
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title= Yaroslavl_district_ ( Yaroslavl_region)&oldid = 100192517


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Clever Geek | 2019