Mginsky district is an administrative-territorial unit within the Leningrad region , which existed from 1927 to 1960 .
| area | |
| Mginsky District | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Entered into | Leningrad region |
| Adm. Centre | Mga village, Putilovo village |
| History and Geography | |
| Date of formation | 1927-1960 |
| Date of Abolition | |
| Square | 2423 km² |
| Timezone | MSK ( UTC + 3 ) |
| The largest city | Kirovsk |
| Population | |
| Population | 37 070 people ( 1926 ) |
| Density | 15.3 people / km² |
| Nationalities | Russians - 88.56% Finns - 9.16% |
| Official language | Russian |
The administrative centers of the district were the working village of Mga and the village of Putilovo .
The area is 2423 km² (according to 1928 ). The population is 67,740 people ( 1959 [1] ; 37,070 people in 1926 [2] , 82,707 people in 1939 [3] , 17,896 people in 1945 ; 41,128 people in 1949 [4 ] ).
District Education
Mginsky district was formed on August 1, 1927, simultaneously with the formation of the Leningrad Region. The following administrative units of the simultaneously abolished Leningrad province were included in the district:
a) from the Leningrad district :
- Mginsky volost completely (24 village councils);
b) from Volkhov district :
- from the Shumsky volost - 14 village councils [5] .
Initially, the Mginsky district was included in the Leningrad district . After the liquidation of the districts (decree of the Central Executive Committee and the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR of July 23, 1930 ), the district was subordinated directly to regional authorities.
Administrative Division
At the time of the formation of the district, it included 38 village councils. After enlargement, carried out in 1928 , their number decreased to 25:
- Annensky
- Berezovsky
- Vasilkovsky
- Vloisky
- Exhibition
- Hawsar
- Gorsky
- Kobonsky
- Lavrovsky
- Lezensky
- Lipsky
- Markovsky (Finnish)
- Maryinsky
- Mginsky
- Nazi
- Nizovsky
- Porechsky
- Putilovsky
- Ratnitsky
- Ryndelsky
- Sassar
- Sinyavinsky
- Turyshkinsky
- Chernovsky
- Shumsky
By a decree of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee on April 20, 1930, the town of Sinyavino was classified as a working community.
By a decree of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee on September 30, 1930 [6], the center of the Mginsky district was moved from the Mga railway station to the village of Putilovo , and the district was renamed Putilovsky , but on September 30, 1931 this decision was canceled [7] .
By a decree of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of September 27, 1933 [8], the settlement under Nazievsky peat mines of the Mginsky district was assigned to the category of working settlements and it was given the name - Naziya working settlement.
By a decree of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee on October 1, 1936 [9] , the workers' village of the 8th Kirov Hydroelectric Power Station , the territory of the Pavlovsky Silicate Plant of the abolished Prigorodny District and the Ivanovo Village Council of the Tosnensky District are listed in the Mginsky District .
By a decree of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of July 5, 1937 [10], the regional center of Mga was classified as a working community.
By a resolution of the Presidium of the Leningrad Oblast Executive Committee of April 14, 1939 [11], the following village councils were abolished: a) Turyshkinsky (annexed to Lezinsky) and b) Markovsky (divided between Putilovsky and Porechensky village councils).
By a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR of June 16, 1940, the settlement Otradnoye was classified as a working village.
By a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR of May 16, 1941, the Vloisk Village Council was abolished.
In 1953, the working village of Kirovsk was transformed into a city of regional subordination.
By a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR of June 16, 1954 [12] the following village councils of the Mginsky district were abolished:
1) Chernovsky ;
2) Lavrovsky ;
3) Nizovskiy (attached to the Kobon village council);
4) Nazi (attached to the Putilov Village Council);
5) Sassarsky (attached to the Vasilkovsky village council);
6) Gavsarsky (attached to the Exhibition Village Council);
7) Ryndelsky (attached to the Ratnitsky Village Council);
8) Gorsky (annexed to the Shumsky Village Council).
By the decision of the Leningrad Oblast Executive Committee of December 23, 1957 [13], the village of Ivanovskoye was categorized as a working village.
By a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR of May 12, 1959 [14], the city of Petrokrepost was classified as a city of regional subordination and included in the Mginsky district.
By the decision of the Leningrad Oblast Executive Committee of May 29, 1959, the settlement of Pavlovo of the Mginsky District was classified as a working village. The settlements of Lobanovo and Petrushino were included in the line of the working village of Pavlovo.
In 1959, the Mginsky Village Council was abolished, part of its territory was transferred to the Lezensky Village Council, and part was transferred to the subordination of the Mginsky Village Council [15] .
Population
In 1927, the district was inhabited by 37,071 people, including 36,518 people in rural areas, of which
- Russians - 32,540
- Finns - 3177 people
- Estonians - 418 people [sixteen]
Area Abolition
The area was abolished by Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR of December 9, 1960 [17] . The territory of the district was divided between the Volkhov and Tosno districts. According to the decision of the Leningrad Oblast Executive Committee, the working village of Nazia and village councils were transferred to the Volkhov district: Vystavsky, Vasilkovsky, Kobonsky, Putilovsky, Ratnitsky, Shumsky. The composition of the Tosnensky district included the cities of Kirovsk and Petrokrepost, the working villages of Ivanovo, Mga, Otradnoe, Pavlovo, Sinyavino. Since 1977, the territory of the former Mginsky district is fully part of the Kirovsky district .
Notes
- ↑ ア ー カ イ ブ さ れ た コ ピ ー . Date of treatment May 2, 2011. Archived August 23, 2011. (inaccessible link - history ) Retrieved September 23, 2015.
- ↑ Bulletin of the Leningrad Regional Department of Statistics. No. 20. April — May 1928
- ↑ RGAE, f. 1562, op. 336, d. 1248, l. 83-96.
- ↑ TsGA St. Petersburg, f. 95, op. 6, d.37.
- ↑ Districts of the Leningrad District: Stat.-econ. description. - L., 1928 .-- S. 138.
- ↑ SU. 1930, No. 50, Article 616
- ↑ SU. 1931, No. 59, Article 435
- ↑ SU. 1934, No. 26, Article 153
- ↑ SU. 1936, No. 22, Article 149
- ↑ SU. 1937, No. 8, Article 62
- ↑ Bulletin of resolutions of the Leningrad Oblast Executive Committee. - 1939. - No. 12. - S. 7-9.
- ↑ TsGA St. Petersburg, f. 7179, op. 53-a, d. 531, l. sixteen.
- ↑ Bulletin of the Executive Committee of the Leningrad Regional Council of Workers' Deputies. - 1958. - No. 1. - S. 11.
- ↑ Bulletin of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR. - 1959. - No. 18. - Article 314.
- ↑ Bulletin of the Executive Committee of the Leningrad Regional Council of Workers' Deputies. - 1959. - No. 10. - S. 23.
- ↑ Musaev V.I. The Ingrian Question as a Historical and Political Phenomenon // -. - 2000 .-- S. 72 . Archived March 4, 2012.
- ↑ Bulletin of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR. - 1960. - No. 47. - Art. 696.