Vereteninsky volost is a abolished administrative-territorial unit that existed as part of the 1st camp of Dmitrovsky district of the Oryol province in 1861-1923.
| Volost of the Russian Empire (AE 3rd level) | |
| Veretenin volost † | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Province | Oryol province |
| County | Dmitrovsky district |
| Adm. Centre | Veretenino |
| Includes | 11 NP |
| Population ( 1877 ) | 3760 people |
| Density | 29.5 people / km² |
| Ethnic composition | Great Russians |
| Confessional composition | Orthodox |
| Square | 127.3 km² (5th place) |
| • percentage of the county’s area - 5.56% | |
| Center coordinates | |
| Date of formation | 1861 year |
| Date of Abolition | February 14, 1923 |
The administrative center was the village of Veretenino .
Content
Geography
Located in the southern part of the county. In the south and south-west it bordered on the Kursk province , part of the border passed along the rivers Svapa and Ponashevka . It was the 5th largest county parish. In the north, it bordered with Dolbenkinsky volost, in the east - with Bolshebobrovskaya . Since 1928, the territory of the volost is part of the Mikhailovsky, now Zheleznogorsk district of the Kursk region .
History
It was formed during the peasant reform of 1861. Between 1866 and 1877, the Razvetyevsky volost was added to Vereteninsky volost.
By the beginning of the 20th century, the village of Kurbakino was transferred from the Bolshebobrovsky volost to Vereteninsky volost. In March 1919, an anti-Soviet uprising broke out on the territory of the volost, subsequently suppressed [1] . In the same year, the Vereteninsky volost council was headed by Pavel Tikhonovich Marichev, a native of the village of Tolchenoye .
It was abolished on February 14, 1923 during the enlargement and regrouping of volosts by joining the Dolbenka volost [2] .
Settlements
As of 1877, the Veretenin volost included 12 rural societies concentrated in 11 settlements (the list is incomplete): [3]
| No. | Locality | Type of settlement |
|---|---|---|
| one | Veretenino | village, adm. Centre |
| 2 | Azhovo | village |
| 3 | Gnan | village |
| four | Nikolaevsky | farm |
| five | Ostapovo | village |
| 6 | Affection | village |
| 7 | Soldiers | village |
| eight | Pushed | village |
| 9 | Chernyakovo | village |
See also
- Vereteninsky Village Council
Notes
- ↑ Rebels and robbers, 2012 , p. 20.
- ↑ History of the place. Part 2 . Date of treatment March 14, 2013. Archived March 16, 2013.
- ↑ Volosts and the most important villages of European Russia, 1880 , p. 213.
Literature
- Volosts and the most important villages of European Russia. Issue 1. Provinces of the central agricultural region. - Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. St. Petersburg, 1880 .-- 413 p.
- Surguchev S.A. Rebels and robbers. - LLC “Teacher”, 2012. - 324 p.
- Alexandrov G.N., Surguchev S.A. History of the villages of Zheleznogorye. Part 2. The villages. - 2015.