Beloberezhskaya Rudnya ( Belor. Belabarezhskaya Rudnya ) is a village in the Verbovichsky village council of the Narovlya district of the Gomel region of Belarus .
Village | |
Beloberezhskaya Rudnya | |
---|---|
belor Belabarezhskaya Rudnya | |
A country | ![]() |
Region | Gomel |
Area | Narovlya |
Village council | Verbovichsky |
History and geography | |
First mention | XVIII century |
Timezone | UTC + 3 |
Population | |
Population | 0 people ( 1986 ) |
Digital identifiers | |
Telephone code | +375 2355 |
Due to radiation pollution after the disaster at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, residents (124 families) were resettled in 1986 to clean places, mainly in the village of Skrygalov in the Mozyr district .
Content
Geography
Location
On the territory of the Polesye Radiation and Ecological Reserve .
15 km south of Narovlya , 40 km from the railway station Yelsk (on the Kalinkovichi - Ovruch line ), 196 km from Gomel .
Hydrography
On the river Slovechna (tributary of the river Pripyat ).
Transportation Network
Transport links along the country road, and then the Kirov -Narovlya highway. The layout consists of 2 streets parallel to each other and oriented from the southeast to northwest, connected by 2 lanes and crossed by a short street. The building is two-sided, mostly wooden, of the estate type.
History
According to written sources, it has been known since the 18th century as a village in the Mozyr district of Minsk province of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania . After the 2nd partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1793) as part of the Russian Empire . The mill was in the possession of A. N. Kut and the ore smelter, in the possession of the landowner Brasin. In 1879, it is mentioned among the settlements of the Verbovichsky parish . At the beginning of the 20th century, a steam mill was in operation. In 1908, in the Narovlyanskaya parish of Rechytsa district of Minsk province . In 1913, a school was opened, which was located in a hired peasant house, and in 1921, residents built a school building at their own expense.
In 1930 the Belarusian Fighter kolkhoz was organized, the forge was working. During World War II , there was an underground group (led by E. Malukha). On December 10, 1942, partisans defeated a German stronghold, which was located in a brick school building. 57 residents died at the front. In 1986, it was the center of the Vostok collective farm. There was an eight-year school, a club, a library, a first-aid station, a veterinary site, a kindergarten, a forestry, a sewing workshop, a liaison office , a shop.
Population
Strength
- 1986 - residents (124 families) relocated.
Dynamics
- 1795 - 4 yards, 34 inhabitants.
- 1850 - 48 inhabitants.
- 1897 - 48 yards, 335 inhabitants (according to the census).
- 1908 - 62 yards, 518 inhabitants.
- 1959 - 475 inhabitants (according to the census).
- 1986 - 124 yards, 300 inhabitants.
- 1986 - residents (124 families) relocated.
Famous natives
- A. N. Kulazhenko - Hero of Socialist Labor .
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