Khusnoye ( Belorussian. Khusnay ) is a village in the Ptichsky village council of the Petrikovsky district of the Gomel region of Belarus .
| Village | |
| Husnoe | |
|---|---|
| Belor. Khusnay | |
| A country | |
| Region | Gomel |
| Area | Petrikovsky |
| Village Council | Bird |
| History and geography | |
| First mention | XVIII century |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 118 people ( 2004 ) |
| Digital IDs | |
| Telephone code | +375 2350 |
| Postcode | 247901 [1] |
In the west it borders on a forest.
Content
- 1 Geography
- 1.1 Location
- 1.2 Hydrography
- 2 Transport network
- 3 History
- 4 population
- 4.1 Strength
- 4.2 Dynamics
- 5 See also
- 6 notes
- 7 Literature
- 8 References
Geography
Location
The village is located south of the urban village of Kopatkevichi . 33 km north-east of Petrikov , 3 km from the Ptich railway station (on the Luninets - Kalinkovichi line ), 157 km from Gomel .
Hydrography
In the east, an unnamed river created by the Old and New Fisheries canals (flows into the Ptich River ).
Transportation Network
Near the village passes the M10 highway Red Stone - Gomel - Kobrin . Near the highway Luninets - Gomel. The layout consists of small quarters formed by 2 long streets oriented from southeast to northwest and intersected at right angles by short straight streets. The building is mainly wooden manor type.
History
According to written sources, it has been known since the 18th century as a village in the Mozyr district of the Minsk Voivodeship of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania . After the 2nd division of the Commonwealth (1793) as part of the Russian Empire . In 1811, the possession of Askerko. According to the revision materials of 1858, the property of the treasury. It is marked on the map of 1866, which was used by the Western Land Reclamation Expedition, which worked in these places in the 1890s. In 1879 it was designated in the Kopatkevichsky church parish . 1908 in the Kopatkevichy volost of the Mozyr district of the Minsk province . In 1910, a zemstvo school was opened, for which a new building was built in the same year.
In 1930, a collective farm was organized. During World War II in June 1942, the invaders completely burned the village and killed 99 residents. In May 1944, residents of the village, which was located in the frontline, were relocated to the village of Aleksandrovka ( Kalinkovichi District ), for security purposes, where they were stationed at the beginning of Operation Bagration . In battles for the village and its environs, 866 Soviet soldiers and partisans died (buried in a mass grave in the center). In the village there is a monument and a mass grave for soldiers who died for the liberation of the village. The monument shows the names and military ranks of the dead. 84 residents died at the front. According to the 1959 census as part of the collective farm “40 years of the October Revolution” (center - the village of Ptich ). There were a post office , a club, an elementary school , and a library.
Population
Strength
- 2004 - 64 households, 118 residents.
Dynamics
- 1811 - 17 yards.
- 1834 - 20 yards, 145 residents.
- 1858 - 26 yards, 170 inhabitants.
- 1897 - 84 yards, 505 inhabitants (according to the census).
- 1908 - 100 yards, 663 inhabitants.
- 1921 - 130 yards, 845 inhabitants.
- 1940 - 195 yards.
- 1959 - 604 inhabitants (according to the census).
- 2004 - 64 households, 118 residents.
See also
- City villages of Belarus
- Cities of Belarus
Notes
- ↑ HUSNY POST OFFICE . Date of treatment July 30, 2009. Archived April 4, 2012.
Literature
- Garady and Belarus Belarus: Encyclapedia. T.2, book 2. Gomel oblast / S. V. Marzeleў; Redlegal: G.P. Pashkoў (halogen redactar) і інш. - Mn .: BelEn, 2005.520s .: il. 4000 copies ISBN 985-11-0330-6 ISBN 985-11-0302-0