Krasnoslobodsky district is an administrative-territorial unit within the Byelorussian SSR that existed in 1924-1959. The center is a place (since 1938 - an urban village) Krasnaya Sloboda .
| area | |
| Krasnoslobodsky district | |
|---|---|
| Chyrvonaslabodsk Raion | |
| A country | |
| Entered into | Belorussian SSR |
| Adm. center | Red Sloboda |
| History and geography | |
| Date of formation | 1924-1959 |
| Date of Abolition | |
| Area | 916 km² |
| Population | |
| Population | 30 141 people ( 1926 ) |
Krasnoslobodsky district was formed in 1924 as part of the Slutsk district . In 1926, the area of the district was 916 km², and the population was 30.1 thousand people. In 1927, the area with the liquidation of the Slutsk district was transferred to the Bobruisk district .
In 1930, when the district system was abolished, the Krasnoslobodsky district became directly subordinate to the BSSR. In 1935 it was included in the newly formed Slutsk district. With the introduction of the regional division in 1938, it was included in the Minsk region . In 1944-1954 he entered the Bobruisk region . After the liquidation of the latter returned to the Minsk region.
As of January 1, 1947, the district had an area of 0.7 thousand km². It included the urban village of Krasnaya Sloboda and 11 village councils: Belevichsky, Buchatinsky, Zhivoglodovichsky, Zhilikhovsky, Zamogilsky, Oktyabrsky, Malyshevichsky, Mokransky (the center is the village of Zadvorye), Semezhevsky, Smolichsky, Chaplitsky.
In August 1959, the Krasnoslobodsky district was abolished, and its territory was divided between the Kopylsky , Slutsky and Starobinsky districts.
Literature
- Belorussian SSR: A Brief Encyclopedia of 5 volumes / Ed. Coll .: P.U. Brovka et al. - Mn. : Ch. ed. Byelorussian. Owls Encyclopedias, 1979. - T. 1. History. Social and political system. Legislation and law. Administrative division. Settlements. International relations. - 768 p. - 50,000 copies.
- Belorussian SSR. Administrative division on January 1, 1947. - Mn. : Gos. Publishing House of the BSSR, 1947. - 300 p. - 10,000 copies.