Koshevichi ( Belorussian. Kashevichy ) is a village in the Luchitsky village council of the Petrikovsky district of the Gomel region of Belarus .
| Village | |
| Koshevichi | |
|---|---|
| Belor. Kashevichy | |
| A country | |
| Region | Gomel |
| Area | Petrikovsky |
| Village Council | Luchitsky |
| History and Geography | |
| First mention | XIX century |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 472 people ( 2004 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +375 2350 |
Around the forest.
Content
Geography
Location
62 km north-east of Petrikov , 45 km from the Ptich railway station (on the Luninets - Kalinkovichi line ), 208 km from Gomel .
Transportation Network
Transport links along the country road, then the Komarovichi - Kopatkevichi road . The layout consists of a rectilinear meridional street intersected by a short street in the south, to which 2 rectilinear streets join from the west. Two-sided building, wooden, manor type. In 1987, brick houses with 50 apartments were built, which housed immigrants from places contaminated with radiation after the disaster at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant .
History
It has been known from written sources since the 16th century . In 1515, Prince Yaroslavich presented the village to V. Fursanov. In the Lithuanian metric, under 1561, the estate Kosevichskoe (Kashevichskoe) is mentioned. The foundation of the neighboring village of Evseevichi dates back to the 16th century. In 1642, a wooden Assumption Church was built on a plot of land between these villages. In 1868, a bell tower was attached to her log house. The village was in the possession of the Jesuits, the treasury, since 1777 the Bishop of Vilnius I. Masalsky.
After the 2nd division of the Commonwealth (1793) as part of the Russian Empire . According to the revision materials of 1816, the possession of F. Yelensky. It is marked on the map of 1866, which was used by the Western Land Reclamation Expedition, which worked in these places in the 1890s. In 1908, a school was opened, which was located in a hired peasant house.
From August 20, 1924 until July 16, 1954, the center of the Koshevich village council of Kopatkevichy , from July 8, 1931 Petrikovsky, from February 12, 1935, the Kopatkevichsky district of Mozyr (until July 26, 1930, and from June 21, 1935 to February 20, 1938), from February 20, 1938, Polesskaya , from January 8, 1954, Gomel regions.
In 1931 a collective farm was organized. During the Great Patriotic War in 1941, the invaders burned the village and killed 37 residents. In the battles near the village, 52 Soviet soldiers and partisans died (buried in a mass grave in the center of the village). 78 residents died at the front. In 1974, the neighboring village of Evseevichi was annexed. The center of the collective farm "New Way". There are a vegetable-drying plant, a secondary school, a club, a library, a feldsher-midwife station, 3 shops, and a communications department .
Population
Strength
- 2004 - 197 households, 472 inhabitants.
Dynamics
- 1795 - 40 yards.
- 1816 - 153 inhabitants.
- 1897 - 66 yards, 408 residents (according to the census).
- 1908 - 90 yards, 579 residents.
- 1921 - 138 yards, 713 inhabitants.
- 1959 - 557 inhabitants (according to the census).
- 2004 - 197 households, 472 inhabitants.
Famous Natives
- A. S. Fedosik - Doctor of Philology, Honored Scientist of Belarus, Professor, Laureate of the State Prize of the BSSR.
- V.P. Romanovsky - Doctor of Historical Sciences.
- V.P. Tsikhan - Master of Musical Arts, People's Artist of Belarus.
See also
- City villages of Belarus
- Cities of Belarus
Notes
Literature
- Garady and Belarus Belarus: Encyclapedia. T.2, book 2. Gomel oblast / S. V. Marzeleў; Redlegal: G.P. Pashkoў (halogen redactar) і інш. - Mn .: BelEn, 2005.520s .: il. 4000 copies ISBN 985-11-0330-6 ISBN 985-11-0302-0