Hlinitsa ( Belor. Glinitsa ) is a village in the Osovetskiy village council of the Mozyr district of the Gomel region of Belarus .
| Village | |
| Glynitsa | |
|---|---|
| belor Glіnіtsa | |
| A country | |
| Region | Gomel |
| Area | Mozyr |
| Village council | Osovetsky |
| History and geography | |
| First mention | XVII century |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 414 people ( 2004 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +375 2363 |
In the west it borders with the forest.
Geography
Location
50 km west of Mozyr , 20 km from the railway station Mulirovka (on the Luninets - Kalinkovichi line ), 184 km from Gomel .
Hydrography
It borders on the Glinichskoe reservoir (on the Skolodin river).
Transportation Network
Transport links by road Mozyr - Petrikov . The layout consists of a long straight street, oriented from the south-east to north-west, to which a curvilinear street and 3 lanes join from the south. The building is two-sided, mostly wooden, of the estate type. In 1986-94, brick houses for 50 families were built, in which immigrants from radiation-polluted sites after the 1986 Chernobyl NPP disaster settled.
History
The sites discovered by archaeologists (1.5 km north-east of the village, on the southern shore of the Glinitskoe reservoir) and the site of ancient settlement (2 km south-west of the village, on the shores of Svyatoi Lake) indicate the settlement of these places from ancient times. According to written sources known since the end of the XVII century . (marked on the map of the Minsk province of the late XVII - early XVIII century). It was in the possession of the Jesuits, then the treasury, and in 1777 it was sold to the Vilna bishop I. Masalsky.
After the 2nd partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1793) as part of the Russian Empire . In 1879 it was designated as a village in the Skrygalovsky parish . In 1906, a school was opened, which was located in a rented peasant house. In 1908, in the Sloboda-Skrygalovskaya parish of the Mozyr district of the Minsk province .
From July 26, 1930 to July 16, 1954, the center of the Glinitsky Village Council of Petrikovsky district of Mozyr (until July 26, 1930 and from June 21, 1935 to February 20, 1938) of the district, from February 20, 1938 to Polesia , from January 8, 1954, Gomel Oblast .
In 1929 a collective farm was organized. During the Great Patriotic War in December 1942, the invaders completely burned the village. 44 inhabitants were killed at the front, and 10 people in the partisan struggle. According to the census of 1959 in the composition of the state farm "Osovets" (center - the village Osovets ). Mozyr forestry forestry, secondary school, House of Culture, library, first-aid station, kindergarten, post office , shop are operating.
Population
Strength
- 2004 - 174 farms, 414 inhabitants.
Dynamics
- 1834 - 35 yards.
- 1897 - 59 households of 368 inhabitants (according to the census).
- 1908 - 428 inhabitants.
- 1917 - 514 inhabitants.
- 1925 - 84 court.
- 1940 - 144 yards, 722 inhabitants.
- 1959 - 595 inhabitants (according to the census).
- 2004 - 174 farms, 414 inhabitants.
See also
- Urban settlements of Belarus
- Cities of Belarus
Notes
Literature
- Garad and ёskі Belarus: Entsyklapedya. Т.2, кн.2. Gomel Voblast / S. V. Marzaleh; Redkalegiya: G.P. Pashko (halo redactar) and іnsh. - Minsk: BelEn, 2005. 520с .: іл. Tyrazh 4000 copies. ISBN 985-11-0330-6 ISBN 985-11-0302-0