Kalvariysky Uyezd is an administrative unit of the Augustow Voivodeship , the Augustow Province and the Suwalkian Province of the Russian Empire . The center is the city of Calvaria .
| Calvary County | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Province | Suwalk province |
| County town | Calvaria |
| Population | 70 425 [1] (1 897) people |
| Area | 1,167.9 miles Β² |
| Educated | 1795 |
Content
- 1 History
- 2 population
- 3 Administrative divisions
- 4 notes
- 5 Links
History
Calvary County was formed in 1795 as part of Prussia . In 1807 he moved to the Duchy of Warsaw , and in 1816 to the Augustow Voivodeship of the Russian Empire. In 1837 it was assigned to the Augustow province, and 1867 - to the Suwalk province.
In 1919, Calvary County moved to Lithuania .
Population
According to the census of 1897, 70.4 thousand people lived in the county. Including Lithuanians - 72.6%; Poles - 10.1%; Jews - 9.3%; Russians - 3.7%; Germans - 3.6%. In the county town of Calvaria, 9378 people lived. [2]
Administrative Division
In 1913 there were 15 communes in the county: Balkuns (center - the Lysaya Gora estate), Kalvaria (center - the Pyaskino estate), Kirsna, Krakopol, Krasna, Lyubovo (the center - the village of Lyubovo ), Ludvinovo, Nadneman (the center - the village of Dubyani ), Olita (the center is the village of Olita ), Podavine, Raudan (the center is the village of Nemonaitse), Simno, Udria, Urdomin, Yanovo (the center is the village of Yanovka) [3] .
Notes
- β Weekly Demoscope. The first general census of the population of the Russian Empire in 1897. Available population in the provinces, counties, cities of the Russian Empire (without Finland). Suwalk province .
- β Demoscope Weekly - Application. Statistics Handbook
- β Volostnaya, stanichnaya, rural, communal governments and administrations, as well as police camps throughout Russia with the designation of their location . - Kyiv: Publishing House of the L.A. M. FishLyudvinov, 1913.
Links
- Kalwaria, a county town // Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary : in 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - SPb. , 1890-1907.