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Knyagininsky County

Knyagininsky Uyezd is an administrative-territorial unit within the Nizhny Novgorod province of the Russian Empire and the RSFSR , which existed in 1779-1923 . The county town is Knyaginin .

Knyagininsky County
A country Russian empire
ProvinceNizhny Novgorod province
County townPrince
Population106 191 [1] ( 1 897 ) people
Square2595.5 miles Β²
Educated1779
Nizhegorodskaya gubernia Knyagininsky uezd.png

Content

History

Knyagininsky Uyezd as a part of Nizhny Novgorod Viceroyalty was formed in 1779 during the administrative reform of Catherine II . In 1796, the county was abolished, but in 1802 it was restored as part of the Nizhny Novgorod province [2] [3] .

In 1923 the Knyagininsky district was abolished, its territory was divided between Lyskovsky and Sergach counties.

Administrative Division

In 1913 there were 18 volosts in the county [4] :

  • Bakaldskaya
  • Bolshe-Kemarskaya,
  • Bolshe-Murashkinskaya ,
  • Bolshe-Yakshenskaya
  • Buturlinskaya ,
  • Ivanovskaya
  • Ichalkovskaya
  • Cossack Slobodskaya,
  • Kamkinskaya,
  • Knyagininskaya (center - Zaprudnaya settlement),
  • Kochunovskaya
  • Ostrovskaya
  • Pokrovskaya
  • Potapovskaya
  • Revezenskaya
  • Tanaykovskaya
  • Uvarovskaya,
  • Yakovlevskaya.

Population

According to the 1897 census , 106,191 [1] people lived in the county. Including Russians - 98.0%; Tatars - 1.9%. In the county town of Knyaginin , 2737 people lived, in the uninterrupted Carriage - 770 people.

Famous Natives

  • Dementiev, Alexander G. (1904-1986) - Russian Soviet literary critic, critic, editor.
  • Shebuyev, Georgy Nikolaevich (1850-1900) - Russian mathematician, physicist, mechanic, surveyor, teacher.

Notes

  1. ↑ 1 2 The first general census of the population of the Russian Empire in 1897 (neopr.) . Archived on August 27, 2011.
  2. ↑ Map of the Knyaginsky district with soil applied according to the β€œReport” of Professor V.V. Dokuchaev. Scale: in English inchΡ£ 10 versts. Drew by O. Yu. Kaminsky. Typography and lithography of Royskago and Dushin, in Nizhny Novgorod. // Nizhny Novgorod Collection, published by the Nizhny Novgorod Provincial Statistical Committee, edited by the active member and secretary of the committee A. S. Gatsiskago . Volume I - Volume X. 1867-1891. Nizhny Novgorod. (unspecified) .
  3. ↑ Soil map of the Knyaginsky district of the Nizhny Novgorod province. Compiled on the basis of studies by prof. V. Dokuchaev, A. Ferkhmin, N. Sibirtsev and the data collected by the Nizhny Novgorod Zemsky Statistical Bureau, N. Sibirtsev. Scale: in English three inches. Publishing of the Princely Zemstvo Zemstvo. Nizhny Novgorod. 1891. Photocopy of N. A. Demchinskago S. P. B. Nevskiy pr. No. 88. Cartographic establishment of A. Ilyin v. S. PETERSBURG. (unspecified) .
  4. ↑ 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.

Links

  • Knyaginin // Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Efron : in 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - SPb. , 1890-1907.
  • Nizhny Novgorod province of the end of the XVIII - the end of the XIX centuries: Maps of the Knyagininsky district
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Knyagininsky_ uyezd&oldid = 100341430


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Clever Geek | 2019