Dezginzha ( Gag. Dezgincä, Dezgin , Mold. Dezghingea , Dezginja) - a village in Moldova , as part of the autonomous territorial unit Gagauzia .
| Village | |
| Desigy | |
|---|---|
| gag Dezgincä | |
| A country | |
| ATO | Gagauzia |
| History and geography | |
| Height | 85 m |
| Timezone | UTC + 2 , in the summer UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 5124 people ( 2016 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +373 298 xxxxx |
| Postcode | MD-3820 |
| Car code | Ge xy yyy |
Content
History
The northernmost Bulgarian colony, founded in 1812 at the tract, where, according to legend in former times, the Nogai Tatars were engaged in their beloved fun - “lists”, which they called dizngje. The church is wooden 1, houses 194, the inhabitants are exclusively Bulgarians, among 219 families, out of 1216 both sexes of souls, the land is 9120 acres. [one]
In 1812, in the colony of Dizgindzhe, there was a “folding, now under construction” church of the Descent of the Holy Spirit. During this period, Dizgindzhe was part of Bendery Bessarabia .
In 1835, the Dizginzh colony was located in the Verkhnebudzhaksky district of the Leovsky district of the Bessarab region , later in 1850 - in the Verkhnebudzhaksky district of the Kagulsky district of the Bessarabian region , in 1858 - in the Verkhnebudzhaksky district of the Bendery district of the Bessarabian region .
Geography
Dezginzh village is located in the north-west of the autonomous territorial unit Gagauzia , at an altitude of 85 meters above sea level. The distance to Comrat is about 18 km, to Chisinau - approximately 63 km. Nearest localities: Chenak village of Chimishlia district (6 km), Topal village of Cimishlia district (6 km), Budzhak village of Komrat region (7 km), Borogany village in Leovsky district (10 km).
Population
| Year | 1835 | 1850 | 1858 | 1859 [2] | 1863 [3] | 1904 [4] | 2004 [4] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| men | 457 | 662 | 750 | 760 | 714 | 887 | 2,581 |
| of women | 428 | 624 | 673 | 740 | 667 | 770 | 2,671 |
| Total | 885 | 1286 | 1423 | 1500 | 1381 | 1657 | 5252 |
According to the 2004 census, the ethnic composition of the village is:
| Nationality | Number of inhabitants | Percentage composition |
|---|---|---|
| Moldovans | 158 | 3.01 |
| Ukrainians | 33 | 0.63 |
| Russians | 67 | 1.28 |
| Gagauz | 4963 | 94.5 |
| Bulgarians | 14 | 0.27 |
| Jews | one | 0.02 |
| Poles | 2 | 0.04 |
| other | 14 | 0.27 |
| Total | 5252 | 100 |
Attractions
Church named "Holy Trinity"
Mass grave of the Second World War period in the center of the village, where 38 people are buried