Lysogorka is a village in the Kashar district of the Rostov Region .
| Village | |
| Lysogorka | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Rostov region |
| Municipal District | Kashar |
| Rural settlement | Kashar |
| History and Geography | |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 232 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
| Katoykonim | bald people |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +7 86388 |
| Postcode | 346203 |
| OKATO Code | 60224830008 |
| OKTMO Code | |
It is part of the Kashar rural settlement .
Content
- 1 Geography
- 1.1 Streets
- 2 population
- 2.1 Famous people
- 3 Attractions
- 4 notes
- 5 Links
Geography
Streets
- st. Makhrinova,
- st. Mill
- st. Peaceful
- st. Youth
- st. School.
Population
| Population size |
|---|
| 2010 [1] |
| 232 |
Famous People
Makhrinov was born in the village , Grigory Fedorovich - Hero of the Soviet Union .
Attractions
- Lysogorka - 1 - a small mound , the territory of which is located near the territory of the village of Lysogorka, Kasharsky district, Rostov Region. In the summer of 1990, the territory of Lysogorka-1 was explored by the Dono-Donetsk archaeological expedition, led by a scientist from St. Petersburg M.P. Chernopitsky. In 1986, this object was the first ancient mound to be explored in the Kashar region . This burial mound was the only burial place, which the researchers attributed to the number of catacomb cultures. In such graves, people belonging to the tribes of ancient pastoralists who lived here in the XX-XVII centuries BC were buried. The remains of an adult were found in the burial. The found elements suggest that in this place a rite of purification by fire was performed, which was the most common and characteristic of that era. The construction of the cemetery overlap is of particular interest to researchers. To create the burial, bricks were laid out in several layers. Between themselves they were connected by a solution. The bricks were rectangular in shape. For their manufacture, chernozem was used. This find serves as a refutation of the fact that many primitive pastoral tribes did not know the construction techniques. Researchers have speculated that the mound discovered in Kashar is older than the one found in Lysogorka. Mounds are an architectural structure that possessed both religious and cultural significance. Freight forwarders carried out certification of the discovered burial mounds of groups of single mounds, later they were mapped. Researchers had plans to unearth other mounds in the vicinity of Lysogorka in the summer of 1991 [2] .
Notes
Links
- Lysogorka (village) (inaccessible link)