Noshino is a village in the Aban district of the Krasnoyarsk Territory . It is part of the Berezovsky village council [2] .
| Village | |
| Noshino | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Krasnoyarsk region |
| Municipal District | Abansky |
| Rural settlement | Berezovsky Village Council |
| History and Geography | |
| Based | 1710 |
| Former names | until 1730 - Alatskaya until 1750 - Alatskaya-Noshenskaya |
| Climate type | Continental climate |
| Timezone | UTC + 7 |
| Population | |
| Population | ↘ 270 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
| Katoykonim | noshintsy nosynets |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +7 (391) 63 |
| Postcode | 663747 |
| OKATO Code | 04201804003 |
| OKTMO Code | |
Content
History
The village was founded around 1710 by Russian immigrants ( chalds ) - Don Cossacks as the Taseevskaya settlement Alatskaya . Subsequently, in search of the most convenient place for settlement, it was twice transferred and therefore it was first called Alatskaya-Noshenskaya , later Noshenskaya and eventually Nosheno . At the moment, due to a typo, another name for the village has been approved - Noshino . (This is the version of the history of the settlement by local historians) .
The first settlers, according to the third revision of 1762, were: Sukhotiny, Prutovye and Pashennye (apparently from arable peasants ) - 18 yards that came from the Maklakovskaya volost of the Yenisei district , and later the Belogolovs (they were still in the middle class) in internal migration. For the 1850th year (IX revision) in the village there were families / households: Sukhotiny - 17, Prutovy - 17, Pashennye - 13 and White-headed - 11.
However, in the book "List of Populated Places of the Siberian Territory. Volume 2. District of North-Eastern Siberia" the year of foundation of the village of Noshino is indicated 1576th . (on p. 734) In Revizsky tales IX and X, records were kept in the village of Noshina , the name was also recorded in church metric books until 03.1880, and later it was written: the village of Noshenskoye / Noshinskoye. ( Ustyansky volost , Kansky district ) And if you check other settlements, you will also see: the village of Pinchuga — founded in 1556, and in the Irkutsk region the village (ulus): Tugutuy — 1425 — earlier.
This is not in contradiction with the “conquest of Siberia by Ermak, ” since the first settlers, by the assumption of G.F. Bykoni, were for the most part not state people , but hunting people : “... the theory of free-colonization was substantially refined. It was proved that the main the mass of immigrants left Pomerania and that a significant role in the growth of the Siberian population in the 18th - first half of the 19th centuries was played by a natural increase ... "
There is reason to believe that the village was moved opposite the asanus ulus and received the year of foundation in the local settlement. The village was old-fashioned and rich. As a rule, new settlers were not accepted; everything was decided at the gathering. She had 10 houses - summer dwellings, some of which (later at the end of the 20th century by Stolypin settlers) turned into villages: Oblava - the village of Arkhangelskoye ; Rudyanaya - v . Rudyanoye ; Togashinka - village of Tagashi ; Berezovsky - v . Berezovka ; Machina Zaimka - d.Machino ; Tulcet ; Kalennikovo; Sukhotin; Makashikha; Itanatskaya.
In 1876, on the initiative of the merchant of the second guild Timofeev Semyon Timofeevich, the church of the Intercession parish was built. The donation capital donated by the merchant was 1000 rubles, from which the interest went in favor of the clergy to commemorate the donor. It is possible that since March 1880, services were held without baptism, weddings, and funeral services, and in 1905 the Noshinsky Pokrovskaya Church began to work fully. The feast day was on October 14 on the feast of the Protection of the Virgin.
According to 1929, the village had: SelSoviet, first-level school, credit partnership, consumer society shop. Later, after the destruction of the church (it was burned in 1936 by local residents: Pashin Ilya Ivanovich, Belogolov Fedor) and the repressions of the indigenous locals, the village / village began to grow thin and the village council in 1968 moved to the former Berezovka settlement.
Population
| Population | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1762 | 1781 | 1859 | 1911 | 1926 [3] | 2002 | 2010 [1] |
| 94 | ↗ 200 | ↗ 563 | ↗ 966 | ↗ 1327 | ↘ 302 | ↘ 270 |
Infrastructure
The streets of the village: Zarechnaya, Pervomaiskaya, Sovetskaya.
The house of culture, built in 1989, with an auditorium with 80 seats, a library with a book fund of 7656 copies, an elementary educational school.
The main street of the village is asphalt . In 1982, an ethnographic museum was opened in the village [4] by Krivonosov Viktor Mikhailovich , a teacher, historian and local historian.
Today the school and museum are closed.
People Associated with the Village
- Sukhotin, Alexander Mikhailovich (1940 gr) - candidate of physical and mathematical sciences, associate professor of Tomsk Polytechnic University.
Attractions
In the courtyard of the school is the grave of Andrei Semenovich Smirnov, a partisan scout who was shot by Kolchak in December 1919, has the status of a cultural heritage of the Krasnoyarsk Territory [5] .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 2010 All-Russian Population Census. Results for the Krasnoyarsk Territory. 1.10 The population of the city districts, municipal districts, mountains. and sat down. settlements and settlements . Date of treatment October 25, 2015. Archived October 25, 2015.
- ↑ Territories of the Krasnoyarsk Territory (Unavailable link) . Date of treatment July 19, 2012. Archived May 31, 2014.
- ↑ List of settlements of the Siberian Territory. volume 2. District of North-Eastern Siberia. Novosibirsk 1928
- ↑ Best in profession (inaccessible link)
- ↑ Protection of cultural heritage sites (Inaccessible link) . Date of treatment July 19, 2012. Archived February 3, 2013.
Literature
- List of settlements of the Siberian region. Volume 2. District of North-Eastern Siberia. Siberian Regional Executive Committee. Novosibirsk 1929