Pryluky ( Belor. Prylukі ) is a village in the Brest district of the Brest region of Belarus . It is part of the Znamensky Village Council , until 2013 it belonged to the Stradechsky Village Council . The population of 605 people (2009) [1] .
Village | |
Priluki | |
---|---|
belor Pryluki | |
A country | Belorussia |
Region | Brest |
Area | Brest |
Village council | Znamensky |
History and geography | |
Timezone | UTC + 3 |
Population | |
Population | 605 people ( 2009 ) |
Digital identifiers | |
SOATO | 1 212 804 031 |
Content
Geography
Priluki village is located 12 km south of the city center of Brest , on the right bank of the Western Bug River , along which the border with Poland passes here. The P94 (Brest - Tomashovka ) road and the Brest - Tomashovka railway line pass through Priluki. In the village there is a railway platform [2] .
Etymology
The name of the village Pryluky comes from the location of the settlement - by the river, near the bows [3] .
History
According to written sources, the settlement has been known since the 16th century as the property of the treasury in the Troksky voivodship of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania , and after the administrative-territorial reform of the mid-16th century in the Berestie voivodship [3] .
In 1669, King Michael Vishnevetsky bestowed a piece of land in the village to the Jesuits. Since 1682, the estate of Priluki is the property of Haynovskog, Danilovich, Kulesh, since 1721 - K. Bosatsky.
After the third section of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1795) in the Russian Empire, from 1801 - in the Grodno province . In 1870, the locals built the Orthodox wooden church of the Intercession with a bell tower (preserved). At the end of the XIX century in the village acted parochial school and public school [3] .
In the First World War since 1915, it was occupied by German troops. According to the Riga Peace Treaty (1921), the village became part of interwar Poland , where it belonged to the Brest povet of the Polesye voivodship . In 1921, the village had 61 yards and 383 inhabitants. Since 1939 as part of the BSSR .
During the Great Patriotic War, the Nazis destroyed 20 yards, killed 21 inhabitants, 14 villagers died at the front. In the northern part of the village there is a mass grave of 6 border guards who died on June 22, 1941, and 7 civilians killed by the Nazis. In 1975, a stela was installed on the grave [4] .
Attractions
- Church of the Intercession. Built of wood in 1870.
- Archaeological site. 2 km south of the village on the right bank of the Western Bug River . Found a large number of flint tools and remnants of dishes.
- Mass grave of Soviet border guards and victims of fascism.
All three objects are included in the State List of Historical and Cultural Values of the Republic of Belarus [5] .
Notes
- ↑ Census results
- ↑ Map Sheet N-34-144 Brest . Scale: 1: 100,000. State of the area in 1982. 1986 edition
- ↑ 1 2 3 Garady and all Belarus: Entsyklapedya ў 15 tamah. T. 3, Vol. 1. Brestskaya voblasts / pad navuk. red A.I. Lakotki. - Minsk: BelEn, 2006. ISBN 985-11-0373-X
- “The collection of monuments of history and culture of Belarus. Brest region". Minsk, publishing house Belarusian Soviet Encyclopedia named after Petrus Brovka, 1990
- ↑ Dzyarzhna sp_s g_storyka-cultural kashtoўnaszey RB