Mikhnevsky district is an administrative-territorial unit within the Moscow region of the RSFSR that existed in 1929-1959 .
| area | |
| Mikhnevsky district | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Entered into | Moscow region |
| Adm. center | Mikhnevo |
| History and Geography | |
| Date of formation | 1929-1959 |
| Area | 1218 km² |
| Population | |
| Population | 37.9 thousand people ( 1931 ) |
Mikhnevsky district was formed on July 12, 1929 as part of the Serpukhov district of the Moscow region. It included the following village councils of the former Moscow province :
- from Bronnitsky district :
- from Zhiroshkinskoy volost: Obraztsovsky
- from Lobanovsky volost: Vertkovsky, Kuzovlevsky, Lobanovsky, Lyakhovsky
- from Trinity-Lobanovsky volost: Kuzovlevsky (at the same time he was immediately attached to Kuzovlevsky s / s)
- from Kashira county :
- from Zhilevsky volost: Aleevsky, Verzilovsky, Ivanovsky, Kiyasovsky, Kolyupanovsky, Savelyevsky, Sitne-Shchelkanovsky, Starosytnensky, Shmatovsky
- from Podolsky County :
- from Shebantsevsky volost: Barybinsky, Belostolbovsky, Rastunovsky, Shebantsevsky, Yusupovsky
- from Serpukhov district :
- from Mikhnevsky volost: Vasilievsky, Velyaminovsky, Glotaevsky, Golubinsky, Dvoryaninovsky, Kishkinsky, Kuzminsky, Lipitinsky, Mikhailovsky, Mikhnevsky, Myasnovsky, Nazarovsky, Safronovsky, Stepygin, Stupinsky, Tatarinovsky
- from Semenov volost: Ivanovsky, Petrishchevsky, Semenovsky, Chirkovsky
- from the Khatun volost: Antipinsky, Kalyaninsky, Matveykovsky, Myshensky, Pochinkovsky, Torbeevsky, Khatunsky.
On May 20, 1930, the Savelyevsky s / s was transferred from the Mikhnevsky district to the Malinsky district , the Stepyginsky s / s to the Lopasnensky district, and the Starositnevsky s / s to the Kashirsky district .
As of January 1, 1931, the territory of the district was 1218 km², and the population was 37,900 people. The district included 45 village councils and 951 settlements [1] .
On November 2, 1931, the Bolshe-Kaverinsky s / s was transferred from the Malinsky district to Mikhnevsky.
In 1935 Myasnovsky s / s was abolished.
On August 21, 1936 Antipinsky, Bolshe-Kaverinsky, Vertkovsky, Kalyaninsky, Lipitinsky, Mikhailovsky, Stupinsky and Torbeevsky s / s were abolished. Pochinkovsky s / s was renamed Lapinsky.
On July 17, 1939, the Kolyupanovsky, Mikhnevsky, Myshensky, Petrishchevsky and Shmatovsky s / s were abolished. Dvoryaninovsky s / s was renamed Novoselkovsky.
March 15, 1944 Aleevsky, Lapinsky, Matveykovsky and Sitne-Shchelkanovsky s / s were transferred to the administrative subordination of the city of Stupino .
As of January 1, 1953, there were 26 village councils in the district: Barybinsky, Belo-Stolbovsky, Vasilyevsky, Velyaminovsky, Verzilovsky, Glotaevsky, Golubinsky, Ivanovsky, Kishkinsky (center - v. Konstantinovsky), Kiyasovsky, Kuzovlevsky (center - v. Vertkovo), Kuzminsky , Lobanovsky, Lyakhovsky (center - the village of Ilinsky), Mikhnevsky, Nazarovsky, Novoselkovsky (center - the village of Ivanovo), Obraztsovsky, Rastunovsky, Safronovsky, Semenovsky, Tatarinovsky, Khatunsky, Chirkovsky, Shebantsevsky, Yusupovsky (center - the village of Shishkino ) [ 2] .
On June 14, 1954, Vasilyevsky, Verzilovsky, Glotaevsky, Golubinsky, Kishkinsky, Kiyasovsky, Kuzovlevsky, Lobanovsky, Nazarovsky, Obraztsovsky, Chirkovsky, Shebantsevsky and Yusupovsky s / s were abolished. Formed by Shakhovsky s / s.
On November 15, 1956, the working village of Mikhnevo was formed.
December 7, 1957 Novoselkovsky s / s was transferred to the administrative subordination of the city of Stupino.
On April 15, 1959, the Khatunsky s / s was abolished.
June 3, 1959 Mikhnevsky district was abolished. At the same time Mikhnevo and village councils Ivanovsky, Kuzminsky, Safronovsky and Semenovsky left to Stupinsky district , and Barybinsky, Belostolbovsky, Veliaminovsky, Lyakhovsky, Rastunovsky, Tatarinovsky and Shakhovsky s / s - to Podolsky district [3] .
Notes
- ↑ Administrative territorial division of the USSR. - M .: “The Power of the Soviets”, 1931. - 317 p.
- ↑ Moscow region. Administrative division. - M .: “Moscow Worker”, 1953. - 132 p.
- ↑ Handbook of administrative-territorial division of the Moscow Region 1929-2004 .. - M .: Kuchkovo field, 2011. - 896 p. - 1,500 copies - ISBN 978-5-9950-0105-8 .