Ozolmuizhsky volost ( Latvian. Ozolmuižas pagasts ) is one of the twenty-five territorial units of the Rezekne region of Latvia . Located in the central part of the region. It borders the city of Rezekne , Sakstagaly , Ozolayn and Audra volosts of its own region.
| Parish | |
| Ozolmuizha parish | |
|---|---|
| Latvian. Ozolmuižas pagasts | |
| A country | |
| Enters into | Rēzekne region |
| Adm Centre | Ozolmuiža |
| History and geography | |
| Date of education | |
| Square | 49 km² |
| Timezone | UTC + 2 |
| Population | |
| Population | 1063 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
| Density | 21.7 persons / km² |
The largest settlements of the volost are the villages: Ozolmuiža (volost center), Lielie Garanchi, Bumbishkas, Skujas, Krievu Sloboda, Krivini, Jaunsimnieki.
Ozolmuizhsky volost crosses Rezekne A15 bypass, which is part of the European route E262 and the A12 road, which is part of the European route E22 [2] .
The rivers Rezekne, Chechera, Medina, and Yaunive flow along the territory of the parish. The formerly Uzulmuyzhskoye lake was drained in 1965.
History
The current Ozolmuizhsky volost occupies the lands that were once part of the Ozolai and Makashen volosts on the left bank of the Rezekne River.
In 1945, the Bekshsky, Bumbishsky, Ozolinsky and Sloboda rural councils were established in the Ozolainsky volost of Rezekne district (until 1930 called Ozolmuizhsky). After the abolition of the volost division in 1949, the Slobodsky village council was part of the Rezekne district .
In 1950, the territory of the liquidated Ratnieki and Bumbishka village councils was annexed to the Sloboda village council. In 1971 - the territory of the state farm "Soviet Latvia" of the Mezharsky Village Council. In 1973 - part of the territory of the Ozolayn village council. In 1974, part of the territory of the Sloboda village council, with a population of about five hundred people, was incorporated into the city of Rezekne [3] .
In 1990, the Slobodsky village council was reorganized into a volost. In the autumn of the same year, the Sloboda volost was renamed Ozolmuizhskaya. In 2009, at the end of the Latvian administrative-territorial reform, the Ozolmuizhskaya volost became part of the Rezekne region.
Notes
- ↑ Population size in local governments as of 01/01/2011 (Latvian) . Office of Citizenship and Migration Affairs. The appeal date is April 1, 2011. Archived August 10, 2012.
- ↑ Latvijas autoceļu atlants. Karšu izd. Jāņa sēta ISBN 978-9984-07-411-5
- ↑ Latvijas pagasti. Enciklopēdija. A / S Preses nams, Rīga, 2001—2002 ISBN 9984-00-412-0
Links
- Homepage of Ozolmuizhsky volost (Latvian)
- Informative portal of the Rezekne region (Latvian) (rus.) (English)