Dubrovka ( Belor. Dubraўka ) is a village in the Usokho-Budsky village council of the Dobrush district of the Gomel region of Belarus .
| Village | |
| Dubrovka | |
|---|---|
| Belor. Dubraўka | |
| A country | |
| Region | Gomel |
| Area | Dobrushsky |
| Village Council | Usho-Budsky |
| History and Geography | |
| First mention | XVIII century |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 223 people ( 2004 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +375 2333 |
| Postcode | 247055 |
Content
Geography
Location
The village has the Moshok railway station on the Terekhovka - Krugovets branch from the Gomel- Unecha line , 69 km from Gomel .
Transportation System
Transport connection on a country road, then on the Terekhovka - Dobrush highway . The village has 130 residential buildings ( 2004 ). The layout consists of 2 parallel streets with orientation from southeast to northwest, connected by lanes. The building is two-sided, with wooden houses of a manor type.
History
According to written sources, it has been known since the beginning of the 18th century as a village in the Rechitsa district of the Minsk Voivodeship of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania . After the 1st partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth ( 1772 ) it was part of the Russian Empire . In 1776, the village was in the possession of Field Marshal Count P. A. Rumyantsev-Zadunaysky , there was an inn. Since 1834 - possession of Field Marshal Count I.F. Paskevich . In 1788 - in the Gomel volost of the Belitsky district of the Mogilev province . In 1816 - in the Seefeld economy of the Gomel estate. In 1885 there were 3 windmills. In 1897 there were a literacy school, a bakery store, an inn, in the Nosovichi volost of the Gomel district of the Mogilev province.
In August 1918, during the German occupation, a partisan detachment operated near the village. In 1926, a post office and an elementary school functioned in the village.
From December 8, 1926 to December 30, 1927 - the center of the Dubrovsky village council of Krasnobudsky, from August 4, 1927 - Terekhovsky, from December 25, 1962 - Dobrush district of the Gomel district , from February 20, 1938 - the Gomel region .
In 1930, the Krasnopolie collective farm was organized. Worked 2 forges, a windmill. Since 1932, a creamery has been operating.
During the Great Patriotic War in 1941, the invaders partially burned the village. In the battles for the village, 20 Soviet soldiers died, who were buried in a mass grave. Released on September 25, 1943.
In 1959 - as part of the Leninsky Way collective farm with a center in the village of Krasnaya Buda . A school, a feldsher-midwife station, a house of culture, a library, a store are located.
In 1964, the village of Krasnopolie was annexed to the village.
Until December 16, 2009 - the center of the Dubrovsky Village Council [1] .
Population
Strength
- 2004 - 130 households, 223 residents.
Dynamics
- 1776 - 21 courtyards, 153 inhabitants.
- 1788 - 187 inhabitants.
- 1798 - 240 inhabitants.
- 1816 - 57 yards, 296 inhabitants.
- 1834 - 75 yards, 416 inhabitants.
- 1885 - 89 yards, 588 residents.
- 1897 - 104 yards (according to the census).
- 1926 - 482 inhabitants.
- 1959 - 453 inhabitants (according to the census).
- 1997 - 158 households, 290 residents [2] .
- 2004 - 130 households, 223 residents.
Famous Natives
- M.F. Tolkachev - Hero of the Soviet Union .
See also
- City villages of Belarus
- Cities of Belarus
Notes
- ↑ Decision of the Gomel regional council of deputies of December 1, 2009 No. 279 “On changing the administrative-territorial structure of the Dobrush district of the Gomel region”
- ↑ Dubraўka // Belarusian encyclopedia: At 18 t. - T. 6. - Mn. : BelEn, 1998 .-- S. 246.
Literature
- Belarusian encyclopedia: At 18 vol. T. 6: Dada - Zastava / Redkal .: G.P. Pashko і іnsh. - Mn. : BelEn , 1998.- S. 246. - 576 p.: Il. - 10,000 copies. - ISBN 985-11-0106-0 . (belor.)
- Garady and Belarus Belarus: Encyclapedia. T. 1, book. 1. Gomel oblast / S.V. Marzeleў; Redlegal: G.P. Pashkoў (halogen redactar) і інш. - Mn. : BelEn , 2004 .-- 632 p.: Il. - 4000 copies. - ISBN 985-11-0303-9 , ISBN 985-11-0302-0 . (belor.)