Kenje-Kulak is a village [2] in the Turkmen district of the Stavropol Territory of Russia, the administrative center of the municipality "Rural Settlement Kenje-Kulak Village Council ."
| Village | |
| Kenge Fist | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Stavropol region |
| Municipal District | Turkmen |
| Rural settlement | Kenge-Kulak Village Council |
| History and Geography | |
| Based | 1904 |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | ↘ 1088 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
| Nationalities | Russians, Ukrainians |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +7 86565 |
| Postcode | 356552 |
| OKATO Code | 07256807001 |
| OKTMO Code | |
| Other | |
| Wikimapia.org | See map |
Title Options
- Kedzhe-Kulak,
- Kenge
- Fist,
- Kenge Kulau,
- Kenzhekulak [2] .
Geography
Located on the Kucherla River .
Distance to the regional center : 151 km.
Distance to the district center : 40 km.
History
Established: 1904
In April 1920, Kenje-Kulak became the center of the volost, which included the villages of Saban-Antust , Sharahalsun , Baychora .
In 1923, a pioneer detachment of 8 people was created here. There were 3 mosques in the volost. In 1924, in connection with the new regionalization, instead of the Kenje-Kulak volost Council, Kenje-Kulak and Sabansky village councils were formed. In the same year they created the TOZ “Svoy Trud”. In 1929-1930, organized the agricultural cartel "New Life" and "15 years of the Cheka-OGPU" (Kenge-Kulak aul), them. Molotov (aul Saban-Antusta ).
With the outbreak of World War II, hundreds of villagers went to the front. Many of them were awarded orders and medals for their heroism: V. N. Kleshchunov - Orders of Lenin, Red Star, NI Plotnikov - Orders of the Patriotic War of the 1st degree and Red Star, Ya. T. Chershembeev - Order of the Patriotic War 2- st degree and medals. 78 warriors did not return to Kenge Fist.
In 1950, the collective farm. Mikoyan and "15 years of the Cheka-OGPU" united in the collective farm. Mikoyan, in 1957 renamed to "40 years of October". In 1954, Kenge-Kulak and Saban-Antust village councils were united in Kenge-Kulak. Then the electrification of the village was completed, shops, a hospital, a school, a kindergarten were built.
With the abolition of the Turkmen district in 1956 [3] , the Kenje-Kulak village council with the settlements of Kenje-Kulak and Saban-Antust was transferred to the administrative-territorial subordination of the Arzgir region [4] .
The field of how the Turkmen district was restored in 1970 [5] , the Kenje-Kulak village council again became part of it [6] .
In the early 1990s, the collective farm “40 years of the October Revolution” was transformed into the Kenya-Kulakskoye agricultural complex.
Population
| Population | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1989 [7] | 2002 [7] | 2010 [1] |
| 1225 | ↘ 1135 | ↘ 1088 |
Infrastructure
- Kenge-Kulak Socio-Cultural Association [8]
- Agricultural enterprise "Kenge-Kulak". Opened on November 6, 1951 as the collective farm “40 years of October” [9]
- Canteen
- The shops
Education
- Kindergarten number 14 [10]
- Secondary school No. 11 [11]
Monuments
- Obelisk to civil war participants who died for the power of the Soviets. 1946 [12]
- Monument to fellow soldiers who died during the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945. 1966 [13]
Literature
- V.A. Shapovalov. History of cities and villages of Stavropol: Brief essays. 2007.
Links
- Map sheet L-38-88 Raguli . Scale: 1: 100 000. Indicate the date of issue / condition of the area .
- Kenje-Kulak village on wikimapia.org project
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Results of the 2010 All-Russian Population Census. Total population (including men, women) by municipalities and settlements of the Stavropol Territory : [ arch. 04/05/2015 ] // Website of the Office of the Federal State Statistics Service for the North Caucasus Federal District (North Caucasus Statistics). - Date of treatment: 04/05/2015.
- ↑ 1 2 Register of geographical names of objects registered in the AAGCG on 11/18/2011. Stavropol Territory : [ arch. 05/12/2017 ] // State catalog of geographical names .
- ↑ Chronicle of the main administrative-territorial changes in the Stavropol Territory in 1945-1991. // Industry of the Stavropol Territory in archival documents (1945-1991) / scientific. ed. T.A. Bulygin. - Stavropol: Committee of Stavropol. Territory for Archives, 2007. - S. 562-564.
- ↑ Stavropol Territory. Administrative division on March 1, 1966 / Executive Committee of the Stavropol Territory Council of Workers' Deputies; comp. S. T. Perepelyatnikov, ed. B. Chernov. - Stavropol: Stavropol book publishing house, 1966. - 64 p.
- ↑ Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR of December 11, 1970 "On the formation of the Grachevsky, Kirovsky, Kursavsky, Trunovsky and Turkmen districts in the Stavropol Territory" // Vedomosti of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR. - 1970. - No. 50. - S. 832.
- ↑ Stavropol Territory. Administrative division on January 1, 1983 / Executive Committee of the Stavropol Regional Council of Workers' Deputies; ed. Yu. V. Nikolaev. - Stavropol: Stavropol Book Publishing House, 1983. - 63 p.
- ↑ 1 2 Population for each urban and rural settlement of the Stavropol Territory on the date of VPN-1989 and VPN-2002 : [ arch. 12.01.2015 ] // Website of Stavropolstat. - Date of treatment: 01/12/2015.
- ↑ Kenge-Kulak socio-cultural association
- ↑ Calendar of state holidays of the Russian Federation, memorable dates and significant events in the Stavropol Territory for 2011 . Date of treatment January 17, 2015. Archived January 16, 2015.
- ↑ Kindergarten number 14
- ↑ Secondary school No. 11
- ↑ Obelisk to civil war participants who died for the power of the Soviets Archival copy of March 20, 2016 on Wayback Machine
- ↑ Monument to fellow soldiers who died during the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945. (inaccessible link)