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Kingat

Kingat ( Ukrainian Kingat , Crimean-Tat. Kiñğat, Kinguat ) - a disappeared village in the Nizhnegorsky district of the Republic of Crimea , located in the north of the district, on the right bank of one of the channels of the mouth of Salgir , half a kilometer south-west of the modern village of Izobilnoye [4] .

the village now does not exist
Kingat †
Ukrainian Kingat , Crimean Tat. Kiñğat
A countryRussia / Ukraine [1]
RegionRepublic of Crimea [2] / Autonomous Republic of Crimea [3]
AreaNizhnegorsky district
History and Geography
First mention1784
TimezoneUTC + 3
Official languageCrimean Tatar , Ukrainian , Russian

History

The first documented mention of the village is found in the Cameral Description of the Crimea ... 1784, judging by which, in the last period of the Crimean Khanate, Kan At entered the Kuchuk Karasovsky Kadylyk of the Karasbazar Kaymakanism [5] . After the annexation of Crimea to Russia on February 8, 1784, the village was assigned to the Levkopol district of the Tauride region [6] , and after the liquidation of Levkopolsky [7] in 1787 to the Feodosia district . After the Pavlovsk reforms, from December 12, 1796 to 1802, it was part of the Akmechet district of Novorossiysk province [8] . According to the new administrative division, after the creation of the Tauride province on October 8 (20), 1802 [9] , Kingat was included in the Uruskodzha volost of Theodosia district.

According to the Vedomosti on the number of the village, the names thereof, the yards in them ... consisting in Theodosia County on October 14, 1805, there were 10 yards and 57 inhabitants in the village of Kingat [10] . On the military topographic map of Major General S. A. Mukhin in 1817, the village of Kingat is indicated with 15 courtyards [11] . After the reform of the volost division of 1829, Kincatch , according to the “Vedomosti on state volosts of the Tauride province of 1829” , was assigned to the Buryuk volost (renamed from Uruskodzhinsky) [12] . On the map of 1842, 23 yards are indicated in the village of Kingat [13] .

In the 1860s, after the Zemstvo reform of Alexander II , the village was assigned to the Sheikh-Monk volost . According to the Memorial Book of the Tauride Province for 1867 , the village of Kingat was abandoned by residents in 1860-1864, as a result of the emigration of Crimean Tatars, especially masses after the Crimean War of 1853-1856, to Turkey [14] and remained in ruins [15] . On a three-verst map of 1865-1876, the village of Kingat is marked with 5 yards [16] . According to the "... Memorial Book of the Tauride Province for 1892" in the landless village of Kingat, which was not part of any rural society , there were 19 residents who did not have households [17] . In the future in accessible sources it does not occur

Notes

  1. ↑ This settlement was located on the territory of the Crimean peninsula , most of which is now the subject of territorial disagreements between Russia , which controls the disputed territory, and Ukraine , within the borders of which the disputed territory is recognized by the international community. According to the federal structure of Russia , the subjects of the Russian Federation are located in the disputed territory of Crimea - the Republic of Crimea and the city ​​of federal significance Sevastopol . According to the administrative division of Ukraine , the regions of Ukraine are located in the disputed territory of Crimea - the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city ​​with special status Sevastopol .
  2. ↑ According to the position of Russia
  3. ↑ According to the position of Ukraine
  4. ↑ Three-layout of Crimea (map of the Tauride province). Military Topographic Depot. 1865
  5. ↑ Lashkov F.F. of the Kaymakanstvo and who are the members of the Kaymakan // Cameral description of the Crimea, 1784 . - Simferopol: Bulletin of the Taurida Scientific Archival Commission, 1888. - T. 6.
  6. ↑ Administrative and territorial division of Crimea (neopr.) (Inaccessible link) . Date of treatment April 27, 2013. Archived April 29, 2013.
  7. ↑ Kireenko G.K. On warrants of Prince Potemkin ..., p. 1-35 . - Proceedings of the Tauride Scientific Archival Commission, 1888. - T. 6.
  8. ↑ About the new division of the State in the Province. (Named given to the Senate.)
  9. ↑ Crimea, 1783-1998, p. 134. From the Decree of Alexander I to the Senate on the Creation of the Tauride Province
  10. ↑ ITUAC, vol. 26, p. 135. Lashkov F.F. Historical outline of the Crimean Tatar land tenure
  11. ↑ Map of Mukhin in 1817.
  12. ↑ Crimea, 1783-1998, Bulletin of official volosts of the Tauride province, 1829, p. 134
  13. ↑ Map of Betev and Oberg. Military Topographic Depot, 1842
  14. ↑ Seydametov E. Kh. Emigration of Crimean Tatars in the 19th — early XX centuries // Culture of the peoples of the Black Sea, No. 68 . - Simferopol: Taurida National University, 2005. Archived on October 19, 2013. Archived October 19, 2013 on Wayback Machine
  15. ↑ Memorial book of the Tauride province for 1867, p . 426 ( unopened ) (inaccessible link - history ) .
  16. ↑ Three-verst map of Crimea VTD 1865-1876. Sheet XXXII-13-f
  17. ↑ 1892. Calendar and Memorial Book of the Tauride Province for 1892. Page 95 (unopened) (inaccessible link) . Archived on October 6, 2014.
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kingat&oldid=100821629


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