Ivanovo village village is a municipality in the Salsky district of the Rostov region of the Russian Federation .
| Rural Settlement of Russia (MO 2nd level) | |
| Ivanovo rural settlement | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| The subject of the Russian Federation | Rostov region |
| Area | Salsky |
| Includes | 3 settlements |
| Adm. center | Ivanovka |
| History and Geography | |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | ↘ 1607 [1] people ( 2017 ) (1.57%) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| OKTMO Code | 60650420 |
| OKATO Code | |
| Telephone code | +7 86372 |
| Official site | |
The administrative center is the village of Ivanovka .
Content
- 1 Geography
- 2 History
- 3 Composition of the rural settlement
- 4 population
- 5 Attractions
- 6 notes
- 7 See also
Geography
The village is located on an elevated spot near the Yegorlyk River. The prevailing wind directions are east and west.
History
The head of the Administration of the Ivanovo rural settlement is Beznisko Oleg Valerievich.
Ivanovo rural settlement includes the farm Sweet, Alexandrovsky, the village of Ivanovka - the center of the settlement.
The history of the village began with the farm of the rich Macegorov. In the 1840s, immigrants settled near the farm in separate estates. Subsequently, they formed the village of Matsegorovskoye. In 1851, when the church was built in honor of John the Theologian, the village became known as Ivanovsky.
By this time in the village there were 570 courtyards with 580 houses and a wooden church. Little Russians from the Kharkov province were indigenous inhabitants, and nonresident people came from the Voronezh, Ryazan and Kursk provinces.
There was a volost government in the village. The villagers were engaged in agriculture - they raised wheat, rye, barley, millet, etc. There were about 150 orchards here.
In the village there were 5 manufacturing shops, 3 small shops, 9 drinking houses, one water mill and 29 windmills, 2 oil mills. There was a one-class parish and elementary school of the Bolshederbetovsky ulus.
By 1914, there were about 12 thousand people in the village.
During the First World War, there was a famine in the village, an epidemic of typhus, which claimed the lives of many villagers. Farms fell into decline. The civil war finally ruined the peasant farms.
In 1921, a commune of seven families was formed in the village. In 1923, the Voskhod collective farm was formed in the village. Later there were 9 more collective farms. Since 1921, dekulakization has been carried out in the village.
During the Great Patriotic War, 838 people left the village for the front, 286 people did not return. July 30, 1942 the village was occupied by the Germans. January 22, 1943 it was released.
In 1950, the three collective farms merged into one - the collective farm named after Malenkov, and the two remaining collective farms - into the Victory collective farm. In 1951, these collective farms merged into the collective farm named after Malenkov, which was renamed the collective farm Soviet Russia.
In 1991, the Soviet Russia collective farm was transformed into the Ivanovskoye partnership, and later on, the Ivanovskoye joint-stock company. In 2002, the Ivanovskoye CJSC was bankrupt.
Currently, there are 746 households in the Ivanovo rural settlement. About 1760 people live here.
Behind the settlement are 10,100 ha. arable land. There are 5 shops, a bakery, a brick factory, a secondary school, a kindergarten, a cultural center, and an outpatient clinic.
Composition of a rural settlement
| No. | Locality | Type of settlement | Population |
|---|---|---|---|
| one | Alexandrovsky | farm | 12 [2] |
| 2 | Ivanovka | village, administrative center | ↘ 1720 [2] |
| 3 | Sweet | farm | 41 [2] |
Population
| Population size | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 [2] | 2012 [3] | 2013 [4] | 2014 [5] | 2015 [6] | 2016 [7] | 2017 [1] |
| 1773 | ↘ 1725 | ↗ 1728 | ↘ 1691 | ↘ 1666 | ↘ 1629 | ↘ 1607 |
Attractions
- The memorial "Mother - Homeland" to soldiers - fellow villagers who died during the Civil and Great Patriotic Wars. The memorial is located in the village of Ivanovka, in its park zone. The memorial was created on May 9, 1987 and is a culture of a woman-mother made of monolithic concrete 3.5 meters high. On the pedestal of the monument 2.5 meters high the words are written: "Forever alive . " The architect of the memorial is Tsinkevich. On two sides of the monument are two horizontal steles. They are written on 243 names that fell during the Civil and Great Patriotic Wars and in Afghanistan. On the steles there is an inscription: “In memory of the dead - bow”, “Fidelity to the Fatherland!”
- Monument on a mass grave (1950) to a soldier - liberator. The soldier at the monument holds a gun in his hand.
- Mass grave of those killed during the Civil and World War II in the village of Ivanovka [8] . There are two graves in the village. The first burial of Soviet soldiers was made in 1943 in the center of the village. On the mass grave in 1950, a monument was erected to a soldier with a machine gun in his hand. The monument is crowned with a laurel wreath. In 1987, a soldier from the center of the village was solemnly reburied in a rural cemetery. The names of the soldiers are not known. The words were written on the obelisks in the village: "Eternal glory to the Heroes who fell for their homeland in the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945."
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2017 (July 31, 2017). Date of treatment July 31, 2017. Archived July 31, 2017.
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 Results of the 2010 All-Russian Population Census. Volume 1. The number and distribution of the population of the Rostov region
- ↑ Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities. Table 35. Estimated resident population as of January 1, 2012 . Date of treatment May 31, 2014. Archived May 31, 2014.
- ↑ The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2013. - M.: Federal State Statistics Service of Rosstat, 2013. - 528 p. (Table 33. The population of urban districts, municipalities, urban and rural settlements, urban settlements, rural settlements) . Date of treatment November 16, 2013. Archived November 16, 2013.
- ↑ Table 33. The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2014 . Date of treatment August 2, 2014. Archived on August 2, 2014.
- ↑ The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2015 . Date of treatment August 6, 2015. Archived on August 6, 2015.
- ↑ Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2016
- ↑ Monuments. Ivanovo rural settlement.
See also
- Administrative division of the Rostov region
- Settlements of the Rostov region