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Kablukovo (Moscow region)

Kablukovo is a village in the Shchelkovsky district of the Moscow region of Russia . Refers to the rural settlement of Ogudnevskoye .

Village
Kablukovo
A country Russia
Subject of the federationMoscow region
Municipal DistrictSchelkovsky
Rural settlementOgudnevskoe
History and Geography
Former namesKlementyevsky, Spassky, Klobukovo
TimezoneUTC + 3
Population
Population↗ 135 [1] people ( 2010 )
Digital identifiers
Postcode141133
OKATO Code
OKTMO Code

Content

Geography

It is located on the right bank of the Vori River (a tributary of the Klyazma ) to the north-east of Moscow at a distance of 41 km from the center (35 km from the Moscow Ring Road ), 15 km to the north-east of the regional center - Shchelkovo . Fryanovskoe highway P110 passes through the village. Directly near the Kablukovo border there is a road bridge across the river. I'm stealing .

  •  

    River vorya

The nearest settlements: the village of Sutoki and the villages of Litvinovo and Cranberry .

In the village are the Goncharovykh Street, 1st and 2nd Field Passages, River and Spasskaya Streets, 8 gardening associations (SNT) and 2 summer house building cooperatives (DSC) are also assigned to it [2] .

Population

Population
1646 [3]1678 [3]1852 [4]1859 [5]1869 [6]1886 [7]1899 [8]
3↗ 9↗ 186↗ 221↗ 251↘ 178↘ 76
1926 [9]2002 [10]2006 [11]2010 [1]
↗ 292↗ 713↘ 82↗ 135

History

It was first mentioned in 1586 as the village of Klementyevo , which was owned by Grigory Ivanovich Klobukov. In 1623, the estate of Ivan Leontyevich Lgovsky and Ivan Nikiforovich Bestuzhev.

In 1646 - 2 peasant households (3 people). Around 1648, it received the subordinate name Klobukovo by the name of the previous owner.

In 1678 - the estate court (5 people transferred peasants and 4 people business people).

In 1702, the wooden Spasskaya Church was built under Alexei Ivanovich Dashkov . In 1704, it burned down, and a new one was built in its place. In the same year - 15 peasant households [3] .

In the middle of the 19th century, the village of Kablukovo (Spasskoye) belonged to the 2nd camp of the Bogorodsky district of the Moscow province and belonged to the college secretary Semen Ivanovich Doroshevich. In the village there was a church, 18 yards, peasants 84 male souls and 102 female souls [4] .

In the "List of Populated Places" of 1862 - the owner's village of the 2nd camp of the Bogorodsky district of the Moscow province on the left side of the Stromynsky tract (from Moscow to Kirzhach ), 27 versts from the county town and 15 versts from the stand-alone apartment, at the river Vor , from 27 courtyards and 221 residents (110 men, 111 women) [5] .

According to data from 1869, the village of Ivanovo Volost of the 3rd camp of Bogorodsky Uyezd with 42 yards, 41 wooden houses, a church, a shop, a drinking house and a cloth factory and 251 residents (116 men, 135 women), of which 20 are literate men and 8 women. There were 34 horses, 35 units of cattle and 17 small cattle, the land was 145 acres and 1200 saplings, including 60 acres of acres [6] . The fair was held on August 16th.

In 1886, 27 courtyards, 178 residents, 2 shops, an inn, a tannery and a cloth factory [12] .

In 1913, the village of Kablukovo with the Leshkovs estate, with it a parish school, a state wine shop and a tavern [13] .

According to the materials of the 1926 All-Union population census , the village of Kablukovo-Spasskoye , the center of the Kablukovsky village council of the Ivanovo volost of the Bogorodsky district on the Fryanovsky highway and 18 km from the Shchelkovo station of the Northern Railway, 292 residents (140 men, 152 women) lived, there were 55 households (54 peasant), there was a school of the 1st level, a postal agency, machine and land reclamation partnerships [9] .

In 1994-2006, the village belonged to the Ogudnevsky rural district .

Transport

The following bus routes stop in the village:

  • 29 ( Fryazino - Shchelkovo Recreation Center)
  • 335 ( Moscow ( metro Shchelkovskaya ) - Fryanovo)
  • 35 (station Shchelkovo - Fryanovo )
  • 37 (station Shchelkovo - Petrovskoe )
  • 39 ( Fryazino - Alekseevka )

Temples of Kablukov

  •  

    Church.

  •  

    Chapel. In the background is the church of the Prophet Elijah.

In the village there is a parish of the Russian Orthodox Church , belonging to the Shchelkovsky deanery district of the Moscow diocese , temples and chapels: [14]

  • Church of the Savior Not Made by Hands (1785).
  • Church of the Prophet Elijah (2002), wooden, attributed to the Church of the Holy Savior.
  • Chapel of the Blessed Matrona of Moscow (1999), wooden, attributed to the Church of the Holy Savior.

Monuments of Archeology

Between the village of Kablukovo and the village of Sutoki, to the south-west of the church, there are burial mounds with burials of the Krivichs of the 11th – 12th centuries. In 1967, a number of mounds were excavated here by the Slavic architectural expedition of Moscow State University under the leadership of L. R. Kyzlasov and A. A. Konovalov [15] . According to 7 graves, it is recognized that the mounds are left belonging to the ethnos of Smolensk and Polotsk Krivichi [16] , their settlement is characteristic of the entire left bank of the river. Klyazma .

100 m south of the church, on the right bank of the river. Vori is located " Village 1" XI — XIII, XIV — XVII centuries. 0.9 km to the GCC from the north. the outskirts of the village, to the NE from the road to the village of Voria-Bogorodskoye , the right bank of Vori “Selishche 2” of the XI — XIII, XIV — XVII centuries. During excavations, pottery ceramics of Old Russian, as well as late medieval, including white clay, were found. It is associated with the remains of the medieval "village of Oblava on Klabukovo".

Famous People

In the village there is a house - a summer residence of fashion designer V. M. Zaitsev [17] . He has been living here for more than 20 years and recently he was awarded the sign "Honorary Citizen of the Ogudnevskoye Rural Settlement".

Notes

  1. ↑ 1 2 The number of rural population and its distribution in the Moscow Region (results of the 2010 All-Russian Population Census). Volume III (Neopr.) (DOC + RAR). M .: Territorial authority of the Federal State Statistics Service for the Moscow Region (2013). Date of treatment October 20, 2013. Archived October 20, 2013.
  2. ↑ Classifier of addresses of the Russian Federation (neopr.) . The state register of addresses of the Federal Tax Service of Russia (relevance of the database: 2016.09.01). Date of treatment September 4, 2016.
  3. ↑ 1 2 3 Kholmogorov V.I., Kholmogorov G.I. Historical materials about churches and villages of the XVI — XVIII centuries Issue 5: Radonezh Tithing . - M. , 1886.
  4. ↑ 1 2 Nistrem K. Index of villages and residents of counties of the Moscow province. - M. , 1852. - 954 p.
  5. ↑ 1 2 Lists of populated places of the Russian Empire. Moscow province. According to the information of 1859 / Art. ed. E. Ogorodnikov. - Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. - SPb. , 1862. - T. XXIV.
  6. ↑ 1 2 Information about the villages and inhabitants of the Moscow province. Part I. Bogorodsky district . - Moscow Metropolitan and Provincial Committee. - M. , 1873. - 351 p.
  7. ↑ Volosts and the most important villages of European Russia. Issue II: Provinces of the Moscow Industrial Region. Moscow, Tver, Yaroslavl, Kostroma, Nizhny Novgorod, Vladimir . - Central Statistical Committee. - SPb. , 1886. - 317 p.
  8. ↑ Memorial book of the Moscow province for 1899 / A.V. Avrorin. - M. , 1899.
  9. ↑ 1 2 Handbook on populated areas of the Moscow province . - Moscow Statistics Division. - M. , 1929. - 2000 copies.
  10. ↑ 2002 All-Russian Census Data: Table No. 02c. Population and prevailing nationality for each rural locality. M .: Federal State Statistics Service, 2004
  11. ↑ Alphabetical list of settlements of municipal districts of the Moscow Region as of January 1, 2006 (Neopr.) (RTF + ZIP). The development of local government in the Moscow region. Date of treatment February 4, 2013. Archived January 11, 2012.
  12. ↑ Volosts and the most important villages of European Russia. Issue II: Provinces of the Moscow Industrial Region. Moscow, Tver, Yaroslavl, Kostroma, Nizhny Novgorod, Vladimir . - Central Statistical Committee. - SPb. , 1886. - S. 21. - 317 p.
  13. ↑ Populated areas of the Moscow province / B.N. Penkin. - Moscow Metropolitan and Provincial Statistical Committee. - M. , 1913. - S. 100. - 454 p.
  14. ↑ Official site of the Moscow diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church. Monasteries and temples. Schelkovo district .
  15. ↑ Nedoshivina N.G. The Old Russian burial ground of Kablukovo in the Moscow Region. Archeology of the Moscow Region. IA RAS 3. M., 2007.S. 124.
  16. ↑ Nedoshivina N.G. The Old Russian burial ground of Kablukovo in the Moscow Region. Archeology of the Moscow Region. IA RAS 3. M., 2007.S. 145.
  17. ↑ Site of the News Agency of the Moscow Region

Literature

  • Nedoshivina N. G. The Old Russian burial ground Kablukovo in the suburbs. // Archeology of the Moscow Region. IA RAS Issue 3. M., 2007. P. 124-145.
  • Konovalov A. A. Report on the excavation of the Krivichsky mounds near the village of Kablukovo, Shchelkovo district, Moscow region. in 1967 // IA Archive: R — 1, No. 4275.

Links

  • Site of the Cathedral of the Savior Not Made by Hands in the village of Kablukovo. Photo Gallery
  • Archpriest Sergius Dubinin. When a person ceases to sin, he contributes to the transformation of the world . Newspaper "Schelkovchanika".
  • The official website of the Moscow diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church. Church of the Savior Not Made by Hands .
  • The village of Kablukovo (Schelkovo district) is overgrown with Sosnowski cow parsnip (video)
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kablukovo_(Moskovskaya_region)&oldid=101399958


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