Kozyulkina is a village in Zheleznogorsky district of the Kursk region . It is a part of the Ryshkovsky Village Council .
Village | |
Kozyulkina | |
---|---|
A country | Russia |
Subject of the federation | Kursk region |
Municipal district | Zheleznogorsky |
Rural settlement | Ryshkovsky Village Council |
History and geography | |
Center height | 160 m |
Timezone | UTC + 3 |
Population | |
Population | ↘ 14 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
Nationalities | Russians [2] |
Digital identifiers | |
Telephone code | +7 47148 |
Zip Codes | 307162 |
OKATO code | 38210806004 |
OKTMO code | |
Content
Geography
Located 26 km south-east of Zheleznogorsk on the Linchik stream, not far from the place of its confluence with Usozhu . Height above sea level - 160 m [3] .
History
The founders and the only inhabitants of the village, at least until the 1880s, were the houses of Alferov. On the plan of the general survey of Fatezhsky district in 1785, Kozyulkina’s location is indicated as part of the village of Shatokhino . Before the 1917 revolution, the village was part of the parish of the Shatohinsky Church of the Archangel Michael.
In 1862, there were 8 courtyards in the former government village Kozyulkina, 106 people lived (54 males and 52 females) [4] . According to the zemstvo census of 1883, the village consisted of 5 courtyards, which were inhabited by 113 former Alfiorov houses. Kozyulkina at that time consisted of 1 community [5] . At the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries, the village was part of the Nizhnereutsk volost of the Fatezhsky district . In 1905, 216 people lived in the village (107 males and 109 females) [6] . At the beginning of the 20th century, Koziulkina from the village of Kolesnikova, through civilian workers, entered the field for the production of wheels for carts and carriages [7] .
After the establishment of Soviet power, Kozyulkina joined the Basovskiy Village Council . Since 1928 as part of the Fatezhsky district. In 1937 there were 23 courtyards in the village [8] . During the Great Patriotic War, from October 1941 to February 1943, it was in the zone of the German fascist occupation. In December 1991, Kozyulkina, together with Basovsky village council, was transferred from the Fatezhsky district to Zheleznogorsky . In 2017, with the abolition of the Basovskiy Village Council, the village was transferred to the Ryshkovskiy Village Council .
Population
Population | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1862 [9] | 1883 [10] | 1905 [11] | 1979 [12] | 2002 [13] | 2010 [1] |
106 | ↗ 113 | ↗ 216 | ↘ 45 | ↘ 15 | ↘ 14 |
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 The 2010 All-Russian Population Census. Volume 1. The number and location of the population of the Kursk region . The date of circulation is January 31, 2014. Archived January 31, 2014.
- ↑ Database "Ethno-linguistic composition of settlements of Russia"
- ↑ weather-in.ru - weather in the village Kozyulkina (Kursk region, Zheleznogorsk district)
- ↑ List of populated areas, 1868 , p. 159.
- ↑ Collection of statistical information on Kursk province, 1885 , p. 149.
- ↑ Kursk collection. Issue 5, 1907 , p. 28
- ↑ Materials on the study of the handicraft industry, 1904 , p. 9.
- ↑ Kozyulkina on the map of the Red Army N-36 (D), 1937
- ↑ Kursk province: list of populated places according to 1862. - SPb. : Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, 1868. - 174 p.
- ↑ Collection of statistical information on the Kursk province. - Kursk: Kursk province zemstvo, 1885. - V. 1. - 413 p.
- ↑ Kursk collection. Issue 5. - Provincial Statistical Committee, 1907. - 76 p.
- ↑ Map of the General Staff N-36 (G) 1981
- ↑ Database "Ethno-linguistic composition of settlements of Russia"
Literature
- List of populated places of Kursk province according to 1862. - SPb. : Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior, 1868. - 174 p.
- Collection of statistical information on the Kursk province. - Printing house of provincial government, 1885. - T. 1.
- N. A. Annunciation . Quarterly right. - Tipo-lithographs of the Partnership I. N. Kushnerev and Co., 1899. - 538 p.
- Materials on the study of handicraft industry in the Kursk province. - Printing house of the Kursk province zemstvo, 1904. - 342 p.
- N. I. Zlatoverkhovnikov. Kursk collection. Issue 5. - Printing house of provincial government, 1907. - 76 p.