Gorodishchensky district is an administrative-territorial unit ( district ) and a municipality ( municipal district ) in the Penza region of Russia . The administrative center is the town of Gorodishche , the largest settlement - the village of Middle Yeluzan .
| Municipal district | |||||
| Gorodishchensky district | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
| A country | |||||
| Enters into | Penza region | ||||
| Includes | 20 municipalities | ||||
| Adm Centre | Gorodishche town | ||||
| The head of administration | Vodopyanov Alexander Viktorovich | ||||
| History and geography | |||||
| Date of education | July 16, 1928 | ||||
| Square | 2053.25 [1] km² (5th place ) | ||||
| Timezone | MSK ( UTC + 3 ) | ||||
| Largest cities | Sursk | ||||
| Population | |||||
| Population | ↘ 48,495 [2] people ( 2018 ) (3.68%, 3rd place ) | ||||
| Density | 23.62 people / km² | ||||
| Nationalities | Tatars , Russians, Mordovians, Chuvash | ||||
| Denominations | muslims christians | ||||
| Official site | |||||
Content
Geography
The district is located in the eastern part of the region and covers an area of 2053 km². From it arable land - 63.2 thousand, grasslands - 7.7 thousand, pastures - 21.1 thousand hectares, forests - 84.3 thousand hectares (45.4% of the total area).
It borders the Nikolsky district in the north, the Sosnovoborsky and Kuznetsky districts in the east, the Kameshkirsky and Shemysheysky districts in the south, and the Penza , Bessonovsky and Luninsky districts of the Penza region in the west.
History
The district was formed on July 16, 1928 as part of the Kuznetsk District of the Middle Volga Region . It includes a large part of the territory of the abolished Gorodishchensky district of the Penza province .
From 1929 to 1935 the district was part of the Middle Volga (Kuibyshev) Territory , from 1936 to 1937 - in the Kuibyshev Region . On November 27, 1937, the district was incorporated into the Tambov Region . In February 1939 transferred from the Tambov region to the newly formed Penza region .
In 1943 - 1951, the Chaadaevsky district was separated from the Gorodishchensky district .
In accordance with the Law of the Penza Region dated November 2, 2004 No. 690-ZPO [3] , 3 urban and 16 rural settlements (village councils) were formed in the district, the boundaries of municipal units were established.
On December 22, 2010, in accordance with the Law of the Penza Region No. 1992-ZPO [4] , 4 village councils were abolished, with their territories included in the composition of other village councils.
Population
Dynamics of the population of the region:
| Population | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1939 [5] | 1959 [6] | 1970 [7] | 1979 [8] | 1989 [9] | 2002 [10] | 2009 [11] |
| 69 952 | ↘ 64,682 | ↗ 67,006 | ↘ 61,719 | ↘ 58,266 | 125 53,125 | ↘ 50,247 |
| 2010 [12] | 2011 [13] | 2012 [14] | 2013 [15] | 2014 [16] | 2015 [17] | 2016 [18] |
| 480 52,480 | ↘ 52 345 | ↘ 51,768 | ↘ 51,413 | ↘ 50 651 | ↘ 50,156 | ↘ 49,314 |
| 2017 [19] | 2018 [2] | |||||
| ↘ 49,036 | ↘ 48,495 | |||||
- Urbanization
In urban conditions (the towns of Gorodishche and Sursk , the workers' settlement of Chaadaevka ) live 43.91% of the district’s population.
- National composition
60.5% are Russians ; 31.9% - Tatars ; 5.9% - Mordovians ; 0.3% - Armenians ; 0.1% - Chuvash and 1.3% - others.
Administrative division
In the Gorodishchensky district as an administrative-territorial entity includes 2 cities of district significance , 1 working village ( village ) and 12 village councils [20] .
The municipal district includes 15 municipalities , including 3 urban settlements and 12 rural settlements [21] .
| No | Municipality | Administrative center | amount inhabited points | Population | Square, km 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Urban settlements: | |||||
| one | Gorodishche town | Gorodishche town | one | ↘ 7885 [2] | 9.39 [1] |
| 2 | city of sursk | city of sursk | one | ↘ 6254 [2] | 6.37 [1] |
| 3 | working settlement Chaadaevka | working settlement Chaadaevka | 3 | ↘ 7161 [2] | 31.87 [1] |
| Rural settlements: | |||||
| four | Arkhangelsk village council | Arkhangelskoye village | 3 | ↗ 1489 [2] | 131.60 [1] |
| five | Verkhneeluzansky Village Council | village of Verkhnyaya Yeluzan | one | ↘ 3034 [2] | 46,19 [1] |
| 6 | Verkhnyaya Kafta village council | village of Upper Cabinet | 3 | ↘ 618 [2] | 220.29 [1] |
| 7 | Digilevsky Village Council | Digilevka village | 2 | ↘ 377 [2] | 131.02 [1] |
| eight | Kanaevsky Village Council | Kanaevka village | eight | ↘ 2213 [2] | 210.91 [1] |
| 9 | Lower Belgium Village Council | village of Lower Yeluzan | four | ↘ 2413 [2] | 179.30 [1] |
| ten | Pavlo-Kurakinsky Village Council | Pavlo-Kurakino village | 6 | ↘ 1243 [2] | 159.95 [1] |
| eleven | Russian-Ishimsky village council | village Russian Ishim | 9 | ↘ 842 [2] | 235.36 [1] |
| 12 | Middle Townian Village Council | village Middle Yeluzan | 2 | ↗ 8940 [2] | 86.09 [1] |
| 13 | Turdak Village Council | village Old Turdaki | 6 | ↘ 1520 [2] | 152.60 [1] |
| 14 | Chaadaevsky village council | village Chaadaevka | 2 | ↘ 3776 [2] | 115.18 [1] |
| 15 | Yulovsky Village Council | the village of Yulovo | 12 | ↘ 730 [2] | 337.14 [1] |
Locations
In Gorodishchensky district, 63 settlements.
| List of settlements of the district | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | Locality | Type of | Population | Municipality |
| one | Aleksandrovka | village | 186 [12] | Pavlo-Kurakinsky Village Council |
| 2 | Alekseyevka | village | 5 [12] | Turdak Village Council |
| 3 | Arkhangelsk | village | ↗ 1368 [22] | Arkhangelsk village council |
| four | Aryavo | village | 3 [12] | Yulovsky Village Council |
| five | Borisovka | village | 191 [12] | Pavlo-Kurakinsky Village Council |
| 6 | Vedenyapino | village | 3 [12] | Lower Belgium Village Council |
| 7 | Upper Krutets | village | 8 [12] | Yulovsky Village Council |
| eight | Upper Shkaft | village | 335 [12] | Verkhnyaya Kafta village council |
| 9 | Upper Yeluzan | village | ↘ 3034 [2] | Verkhneeluzansky Village Council |
| ten | Ahis | village | 359 [12] | Verkhnyaya Kafta village council |
| eleven | Hillfort | city | ↘ 7885 [2] | Gorodishche town |
| 12 | Digilevka | village | 416 [12] | Digilevsky Village Council |
| 13 | Backwater | village | 379 [12] | Turdak Village Council |
| 14 | Ivanisovka | village | 178 [12] | Lower Belgium Village Council |
| 15 | Ivanovka | village | 19 [12] | Yulovsky Village Council |
| sixteen | Kadada | railroad station | 6 [12] | working settlement Chaadaevka |
| 17 | Reed | village | 101 [12] | Kanaevsky Village Council |
| 18 | Kanaevka | village | 1749 [12] | Kanaevsky Village Council |
| nineteen | Cardavo | village | 213 [12] | Yulovsky Village Council |
| 20 | Keyword | village | 23 [12] | Yulovsky Village Council |
| 21 | Kologreevka | village | 102 [12] | Russian-Ishimsky village council |
| 22 | Red | village | 97 [12] | Kanaevsky Village Council |
| 23 | Forest | village | 80 [12] | Arkhangelsk village council |
| 24 | Timber mill | village | 59 [12] | Yulovsky Village Council |
| 25 | Lobanovka | village | 4 [12] | Yulovsky Village Council |
| 26 | Lopatino | village | 248 [12] | Lower Belgium Village Council |
| 27 | Meadow Vyselki | village | 19 [12] | Russian-Ishimsky village council |
| 28 | Maryivka | village | 73 [12] | Pavlo-Kurakinsky Village Council |
| 29 | Mozharka | village | 181 [12] | Russian-Ishimsky village council |
| thirty | Mordovsky Ishim | village | 245 [12] | Russian-Ishimsky village council |
| 31 | Lower Yeluzan | village | 2290 [12] | Lower Belgium Village Council |
| 32 | Nikolo-Paradise | village | 32 [12] | Kanaevsky Village Council |
| 33 | Nikonovo | railroad station | 3 [12] | working settlement Chaadaevka |
| 34 | Novokrescheno | village | 42 [12] | Turdak Village Council |
| 35 | New Zabalki | village | 296 [12] | Kanaevsky Village Council |
| 36 | New Turdaki | village | 13 [12] | Turdak Village Council |
| 37 | New Ishim | village | 3 [12] | Russian-Ishimsky village council |
| 38 | Pavlo-Kurakino | village | 828 [12] | Pavlo-Kurakinsky Village Council |
| 39 | Pereleski | village | 3 [12] | Russian-Ishimsky village council |
| 40 | Gerbil | village | 50 [12] | Yulovsky Village Council |
| 41 | Border Settlements | village | 22 [12] | Yulovsky Village Council |
| 42 | Russian Ishim | village | 333 [12] | Russian-Ishimsky village council |
| 43 | Gardening | village | 61 [12] | Russian-Ishimsky village council |
| 44 | Salovka | village | 258 [12] | Chaadaevsky village council |
| 45 | Sereda | village | 71 [12] | Pavlo-Kurakinsky Village Council |
| 46 | Bow | village | 10 [12] | Middle Townian Village Council |
| 47 | Nightingale | village | 59 [12] | Digilevsky Village Council |
| 48 | Middle Yeluzan | village | ↗ 8779 [12] | Middle Townian Village Council |
| 49 | Old Turdaki | village | 656 [12] | Turdak Village Council |
| 50 | Glass factory | village | 120 [12] | Verkhnyaya Kafta village council |
| 51 | Sursk | city | ↘ 6254 [2] | city of sursk |
| 52 | Suhodolnye Settlements | village | 102 [12] | Pavlo-Kurakinsky Village Council |
| 53 | Telegino | village | 14 [12] | Yulovsky Village Council |
| 54 | Trescino | village | 765 [12] | Turdak Village Council |
| 55 | Trushnino | village | 37 [12] | Kanaevsky Village Council |
| 56 | Tumaleyka | village | 5 [12] | Russian-Ishimsky village council |
| 57 | Uranka | village | 170 [12] | Arkhangelsk village council |
| 58 | Chaadaevka | working village | ↘ 7156 [2] | working settlement Chaadaevka |
| 59 | Chaadaevka | village | 3818 [12] | Chaadaevsky village council |
| 60 | Shnaevo | railroad station | 215 [12] | Kanaevsky Village Council |
| 61 | Shnaevo | village | 35 [12] | Kanaevsky Village Council |
| 62 | Southern | village | 3 [12] | Yulovsky Village Council |
| 63 | Yulovo | village | 522 [12] | Yulovsky Village Council |
- Abolished populated areas
In December 2015, the village of Ishimka 1-I of the Upper Vneshkafta Village Council , the villages of Kichkini and the Boundary of the Russian-Ishim Village Council were excluded from the administrative data of the administrative-territorial structure of the Penza Region as actually settled areas that lack officially registered residents [23] .
Economy
The district has an enterprise of light industry (“Surskaya Manufactory”), a distillery, a bakery and some others.
Also an important place in the economy of the district is agriculture livestock and crop production.
Transportation
The district is connected with Penza by the federal highway M5 "Ural". In the southern part of the district there is the Kuibyshev Railway , there are 4 stations: Shnaevo , Kanaevka , Aseevskaya , Chaadaevka .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Penza Oblast. Total land area of the municipality
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2018 . The appeal date was July 25, 2018. Archived July 26, 2018.
- ↑ LAW OF THE PENZA REGION No. 690-ZPO Dated November 2, 2004 ON THE BORDERS OF MUNICIPAL FORMATIONS OF THE PENZA REGION
- LAW OF THE PENZA REGION No. 1992-ZPO dated December 22, 2010 On the Abolition of Certain Administrative-Territorial Entities (Units) of the Penza Region
- ↑ All-Union Population Census of 1939 . Archived February 13, 2012.
- All-Union census of the population in 1959 . Archived August 23, 2011.
- ↑ All-Union Population Census 1970 . Archived on February 3, 2012. 1970 All-Union Population Census
- ↑ 1979 All-Union Population Census . Archived on February 3, 2012.
- ↑ All-Union Population Census of 1989 . Archived August 23, 2011.
- ↑ 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 . Archived on February 3, 2012.
- ↑ The resident population of the Russian Federation by cities, urban-type settlements and districts as of January 1, 2009 . The date of circulation is January 2, 2014. Archived January 2, 2014.
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 28 30 31 33 33 35 35 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 All-Russian census of 2010. Population size and location of the Penza Region . The date of circulation is July 20, 2014. Archived July 20, 2014.
- ↑ Penza region. Estimate of the number of resident population on January 1, 2009-2014
- Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities. Table 35. Estimated number of resident population on January 1, 2012 . The date of circulation is May 31, 2014. Archived May 31, 2014.
- ↑ 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) . The appeal date is November 16, 2013. Archived November 16, 2013.
- ↑ Table 33. The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2014 . Circulation date August 2, 2014. Archived August 2, 2014.
- ↑ Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2015 . Circulation date August 6, 2015. Archived August 6, 2015.
- Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2016
- ↑ Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2017 (July 31, 2017). The date of circulation is July 31, 2017. Archived July 31, 2017.
- ↑ Law “On administrative and territorial structure of the Penza region”
- ↑ Law of the Penza Region dated November 2, 2004 No. 690-ZPO “On the Borders of the Municipal Formations of the Penza Region”
- ↑ Administration of the Arkhangelsk Village Council. About the village
- ↑ Law of the Penza Region dated December 01, 2015 No. 2830-ZPO “On exclusion of certain localities from the registration data of the administrative-territorial structure of the Penza Region and amending certain laws of the Penza Region” . The official website of the Legislative Assembly of the Penza Region (December 1, 2015). The appeal date is January 13, 2016.