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Sudan County

Gornalsky St. Nicholas Belogorsky Monastery

Sudzhan County - an administrative-territorial unit of the Russian Empire , the Russian Empire and the RSFSR . The county was part of the Belgorod province (1727-1779), the Kursk governorship (1779-1796) and the Kursk province (1796-1928). The county seat was the city of Suja .

Sudan County
A country Russian empire
ProvinceKursk province
County townSuja
History and Geography
Date of formationXVII century
Date of Abolition1924
Square2,461.9 verstΒ² (β‰ˆ2,801.7 kmΒ²) kmΒ²
Population
Population150 263 (1897) [1] people
Sudzhan county on the map

Content

History

 
Suburbs of Sudan
 
Windmills

Sudan district is known for its scribe descriptions as an administrative-territorial unit from the middle of the XVII century [2] . The county seat was the fortress of Suja, founded by order of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich in 1664. In the XVII - early XVIII centuries, the Sudan district was an independent administrative and territorial unit, governed by the governor [3] .

Sudzhansky Uyezd was abolished as an administrative-territorial unit in 1708 during the regional reform of Peter I , Suja became part of the Kiev province [4] .

In 1719, the provinces were divided into provinces , Suja moved to the Belgorod province.

In 1727, the Belgorod province , consisting of the Belgorod, Orel and Sevsk provinces, was separated from the Kiev province. Sudzhansky district was restored and was part of the Belgorod province of the Belgorod province.

In 1779, as a result of the provincial reform of Catherine II, the Belgorod province was abolished. Sudzhansky district, whose borders were revised, became part of the Kursk governorship .

In 1796, the Kursk governorship was transformed into the Kursk province . The counties were enlarged. Large territories of the abolished Khotmyzhsky and Miropolsky (including the city of Miropolye ) counties, which were formerly part of the Kharkiv governorate, were annexed to the Sudzhan Uyezd.

In 1802, in connection with the disaggregation of administrative-territorial units, the borders of the Sudan district were revised.

In the spring of 1918, most of Sudzhan County was occupied by troops of the German Empire . The city of Suja was in the so-called "neutral zone" established by the armistice on the German-Ukrainian front on May 5, 1918.

Between 1918 and 1924, the composition and names of volosts and village councils included in the county were repeatedly revised.

According to the decree of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of May 12, 1924, the Sudzhansky district was abolished, and its territory was divided between Lgovsky and the newly formed Borisovsky district . The city of Sudzha became part of the Lgovsky district.

On October 16, 1925, the territory of the Krenichansky volost, which was part of the Sudan district, was transferred to the Ukrainian SSR .

In 1928, after the liquidation of the Kursk province and the transition to the regional , district and district divisions, the Sudzhansky district was created, which entered the Lgovsky district of the Central Chernozem region .

Administrative division

The composition of the county was very different from century to century

Sudan County

1720s

G. Suja, p. Pushkarskoe, with. Martynovka, p. Porechnoye, village Biryukovka, with. Soldatsky, s. Skorodnoye, village of Kamenets , s. Watchdog, village of Mokhovoy Well, s. Rostvorovo, p. Kozyrevka, village Samoryadovo, village Budishche, s. Cherny Olekh, village of Osipova Luka, village of Khotyaz Kolodez, s. Belitsa, village Makhovaya, village Konapelka, s. The bosom.

1699

with. Porechnoye, village Biryukovka, with. Kozyrevka, village of Mokhovy well, s. Saldatsky, s. Skorodnoye, village of Kamenets , village of Watchdog, s. Rostvorovo, the village of Samoryadovo, the village of Hotesh well, the village of Budishi, s. Chorny Alekh, s. Belitsa, the village of Makhovaya, the village of Osipova Luka, the settlement of Konopelka, s. Pushkarnoye, with. Martinovka, p. Guiva.

1686

with. Moving down Polyana - Belitsa identity, d. Makhova, d. Osipova Luka, s. Black Alekh, s. Guiva, village of Budishi, village of Samoryadovo, s. Rostvorovo, village of Storozhevaya, village of Khotezh Kolodez, s. Kozyrevka, village of Biryukovka, village of Mokhovy well, s. Saldatskoye, village of Kamenets , s. Skorodnoye, with. Porechny, settlement Konopelka, s. Pushkarnoye. [five]

Notes

  1. ↑ Weekly Demoscope. First General Census of the Russian Empire in 1897. The present population in the provinces, counties, cities of the Russian Empire (excluding Finland) (Neopr.) . Date of treatment December 25, 2009. Archived February 19, 2012.
  2. ↑ Tanks, A. A. The historical annals of the Kursk nobility . - M .: Publication of the Kursk nobility, 1913. - T. 1.
  3. ↑ Razdorsky, A. I. Princes, governors and governors of the Kursk Territory of the 11th β€” 18th centuries . - Kursk: Region-Press, 2004. - 125 p. - ISBN 5-86354-067-2 .
  4. ↑ Russian legislation of the X β€” XX centuries / A. G. Mankov. - M .: Legal literature, 1986. - T. 4. - P. 167. - 515 p.
  5. ↑ Lists of settlements of southern districts of Russia in the XVII - early XVIII centuries. (unspecified) . www.evsyukov.ru. Date accessed August 22, 2019.

Literature

  • Suja // Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary : in 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - SPb. , 1890-1907.
  • Larionov S. I. Description of the Kursk governorate from ancient and new different news about him briefly collected . - Moscow: free printing house of Ponomarev, 1786. - 191 p. Archived July 11, 2009 on Wayback Machine

Links

  • The history of the Kursk region on the website of the regional administration
  • Old maps of Sudan County


Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sujan district&oldid = 101743970


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Clever Geek | 2019