Leshchenyaty ( Belorussian. Leschanyaty , Polish. Leszczenięta ) is a village in the Smorgon district of the Grodno region of Belarus .
| Village | |
| Sweethearts | |
|---|---|
| Belor. Leschanyaty | |
| A country | |
| Region | Grodno |
| Area | Smorgon |
| Village Council | Vishnevsky |
| History and Geography | |
| Square | 0.3249 km² |
| NUM height | 172 [1] m |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 82 people ( 1999 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +375 1592 |
| Postcode | 231004 [2] |
| SOATO | 4 256 808 086 |
It is part of the Vishnevsky village council [3] .
Located in the north-eastern part of the district. The distance to the regional center of Smorgon by road is about 26.5 km, to the center of the village council of the agricultural town of Vishnevo in a straight line, a little more than 10.5 km. The nearest settlements are Miluti , Semenki , Telaki [4] . The area occupied is 0.3249 km², the length of the borders is 3620 m [5] .
Content
History
The village is marked on the map of Schubert (mid-19th century) as part of the Voistom parish of the Sventsian district of the Vilnius province [6] . In 1866, Leshchenyats numbered 10 yards and 71 residents of the Catholic religion [7] .
After the Soviet-Polish war , which ended with the Riga Treaty , in 1921, Western Belarus moved to the Polish Republic and the village was included in the newly formed rural commune by the Wojst of the Sventsian Poveet of the Vilnius Voivodeship. On January 1, 1926, the commune of Wojstom was transferred to the Vileika County. [eight]
In 1938, the Baptists counted 28 smokes (yards) and 136 souls [9] .
In 1939, according to a secret protocol concluded between the USSR and Germany , Western Belarus was in the sphere of interests of the Soviet state and the territory of the Red Army occupied its territory. The village became part of the newly formed Smorgon district of the Vileika region of the BSSR . After the reorganization of the administrative-territorial division of the BSSR, the village was included in the new Molodechno region in 1944. In 1960, due to the new organization of administrative-territorial division and the abolition of the Molodechno region, Leshchenyat became part of the Grodno region.
Population
According to the census, the population of the village in 1999 was 82 residents [10] .
In 2004, the population was 62
Transport
The village is connected by local roads [11] :
- H6433 with Kurchi ;
- H7373 with Kruni ;
- H20001 with Abramovshchina-3
Regular bus routes pass through Leshchenyat [12] :
- Smarhoń - Vishnevo
- Smarhoń - Svaygini
Attractions
On the southern outskirts of Leshchenyat is a roadside chapel built in the late XIX - early XX centuries [13]
Notes
- ↑ Altitude
- ↑ Postal code of Leshchenyaty village (inaccessible link)
- ↑ Directory of Human Settlements in Belarus (SOATO)
- ↑ Map sheet N-35-54 Vileika . Scale: 1: 100,000. 1979 edition
- ↑ Decision of the Smorgon District Council of Deputies on May 15, 2012 No. 104
- ↑ Schubert's Three-Tier
- ↑ Leszczenięta (Polish) in the Geographical Dictionary of the Kingdom of Poland and other Slavic countries , volume V (Kutowa Wola - Malczyce) from 1884
- ↑ Decree of the Council of Ministers of June 20, 1925 “On changing the boundaries of districts in the territory of the Vilna administrative district” (Polish) (unavailable link) . Date of treatment February 23, 2015. Archived March 6, 2016.
- ↑ List of settlements of the Republic of Poland. Volume I. Vilnius Voivodeship . “Main Department of Statistics”, Warsaw, 1938 S. 62. (Polish)
- ↑ Based on 1999 census results. Data source - “Demographic GIS of the rural population of the Republic of Belarus”.
- ↑ The list of roads with bearing capacity of pavement of 10 tons and 6 tons per axle according to Smorgonsky DRSU 134
- ↑ Schedule of movement of suburban and intercity passenger vehicles DUP "AtP No. 17", Smorgon Archived on June 1, 2013.
- ↑ Caught on Globus.tut.by