Yelninsky Uyezd is an administrative unit of Smolensk governorate and Smolensk province , which existed in 1775 - 1796 and 1802 - 1928 . The center is the city of Yelnya .
| Elninsky County | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Province | Smolensk province |
| County town | Yelnya |
| History and Geography | |
| Date of formation | 1775 |
| Square | 4.9 thousand kmΒ² kmΒ² |
| Population | |
| Population | 137.9 thousand (1897) people. |
Administrative Division
In 1913, there were 17 volosts in the county: Arnishitskaya, Bogoroditskaya, Boltulinskaya, Volkovo-Yegoryevskaya (center - the village of Ozerensk), Gnezdilovskaya, Danilovichskaya, Dokudovskaya, Dubosischenskaya, Zabolotskaya, Ivoninskaya, Konoplinskaya, Markhotkinskaya, Oselskaya, Urigovskaya, Striginskaya, Ulvarov, Striginskaya, Striginskaya, Striginskaya Hmarskaya [1] .
By 1926, there were 8 volosts: Baltutinskaya, Elninsko-Prigorodnaya, Zabolotovskaya (center - the village of Zum), Ivoninskaya (center - the former estate of Yakovlevichi), Markhotkinskaya, Pavlinovskaya, Khmarskaya, Shmakovskaya.
History
Yelninsky district as part of Smolensk governorate was formed in 1775 during the administrative reform of Catherine II . In 1796, the county was abolished, but already in 1802 it was restored as part of the Smolensk province.
In 1928, the county was abolished.
Population
According to the 1897 census, 137.9 thousand people lived in the county. Including Russians - 96.7%; Belarusians - 2.7%. In the city of Yelnya, 2441 people lived. [2]
Natives
- Anisimov, Ivan Ivanovich
Notes
- 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. Fish, 1913.
- β Demoscope Weekly - Application. Statistics Handbook