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Poissier (Moscow)

Pesye is a village in the Trinity administrative district of Moscow (until July 1, 2012 it was part of the Podolsky district of the Moscow region ). Included in the settlement Schapovskoe .

Village
Play
A country Russia
Subject of the federationMoscow
Administrative DistrictTrinity
SettlementSchapovskoe
History and Geography
Former namesChristmas
Center height157 m
TimezoneUTC + 3
Population
Population↗ 94 [1] people ( 2010 )
Digital identifiers
Postcode142144
OKATO Code45298583112

Population

Population
1859 [2]1890 [3]1899 [4]1926 [5]2002 [6]2006 [7]2010 [1]
249↘ 228↘ 204↗ 326↘ 33↘ 32↗ 94

According to the All-Russian Census , in 2002, 33 people lived in the village (16 men and 17 women) [6] . According to 2005 data, 32 people lived in the village [7] .

Geography

The village of Pesye is located in the north-eastern part of the Trinity administrative district, about 48 km south-west of the center of Moscow , on the Lubyanka River of the Pakhra basin.

3 km south-east of the village is the Warsaw highway , 8 km to the west - the Kaluga highway A130 , 3 km to the south - the Moscow small ring A107 , 10 km to the east - the line of the Kursk direction of the Moscow railway .

There are two streets in the village - Prudnaya and Yuzhnaya, two gardening associations (SNT) are attributed [8] . The nearest settlements are Shchapovo village, Ivankovo and Aleksandrovo villages.

Half a kilometer north of the village is the main site of the agricultural enterprise "Shchapovo" - dairy farm Pesye [9] .

History

The settlement is mentioned in the scribal book of 1627 as the village of Piesie . The name, presumably, came from the anthroponym [10] . In the second half of the XVII century, the village already had a wooden church of the Nativity of the Virgin, whose construction time is unknown [11] . From this moment, the village is mentioned in the annals as Christmas, Doge identity . Starting from the 1926 census, it appears in the documents as the village of Pesye [10] .

... for the boyar, Prince Volodimir Timofeevich Dolgorukim, the village of Pesye, on the river Lubenk, and in the village yard of his assistant with the man, two. prikashchikov, dv. dѣlovago man and 3 dv. peasant; but he owns, boyar Prince. Volodimіr Dolgorukov тѣмъ homestead according to the import certificate 127 (1619)

- Historical materials about churches and villages of the XVI — XVIII centuries. [eleven]

In 1633, the owner of the village was Duma clerk Ivan Gryazev, in 1634 - Ivan Gavrenev, in 1669 - boyar Afanasy Lavrentievich Ordin-Nashchokin , in 1677-1678. - his son Voin Afanasevich Ordin-Nashchokin , in 1679 - the duma clerk Averky Kirillov, after the death of which his son Yakov in 1693 exchanged a village in the Donskoy Monastery for Archimandrite Anthony [11] .

In 1646, there was a court yard of the estate and 7 peasant households in the village, in 1678 - the court of the estate, 4 backyards and 21 peasant households, in 1704 - a monastery, livestock and stables, as well as 40 peasant households [11] .

In the “List of Populated Places” of 1862, Rozhdestvenno (Pesye) - the state village of the 1st camp of the Podolsky district of the Moscow province on the right side of the Moscow-Warsaw highway, from Podolsk to Maloyaroslavets, 11 versts from the county town and 20 versts from the flat, the Lubyanka River, with 37 yards and 249 residents (113 men, 136 women) [2] .

According to the data for 1890 - the village of the Red-Pahorsky volost of the Podolsk district with 228 inhabitants [3] .

In 1913 - 46 yards [12] .

According to the materials of the 1926 All-Union Population Census, the center of the Posyevsky village council of the Red-Pahorsky volost of the Podolsky district 3.2 km from the Warsaw highway and 11.7 km from the Grivno Kursk railway station, 326 residents lived (135 men, 191 women), there were 59 peasant farms, there was an agricultural point [5] .

1929-1946 - A settlement in the Krasnoyarsk region of the Moscow region.

1946-1957 - as part of the Kalinin district of the Moscow region.

1957-1963, 1965-2012 - as part of the Podolsky district of the Moscow region.

1963-1965 - as part of the Leninsky enlarged rural area of ​​the Moscow region [13] .

Since 2012 - as part of the city of Moscow.

Notes

  1. ↑ 1 2 The number of rural population and its distribution in the Moscow Region (results of the 2010 All-Russian Population Census). Volume III (Neopr.) (DOC + RAR). M .: Territorial authority of the Federal State Statistics Service for the Moscow Region (2013). Date of treatment October 20, 2013. Archived October 20, 2013.
  2. ↑ 1 2 Lists of populated places of the Russian Empire. Moscow province. According to the information of 1859 / Art. ed. E. Ogorodnikov. - Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. - SPb. , 1862. - T. XXIV.
  3. ↑ 1 2 Shramchenko A.P. Reference book of the Moscow province (description of counties) . - M. , 1890. - 420 p.
  4. ↑ Memorial book of the Moscow province for 1899 / A.V. Avrorin. - M. , 1899.
  5. ↑ 1 2 Handbook on populated areas of the Moscow province . - Moscow Statistics Division. - M. , 1929. - 2000 copies.
  6. ↑ 1 2 Data from the 2002 All-Russian Population Census: table No. 02c. Population and prevailing nationality for each rural locality. M .: Federal State Statistics Service, 2004
  7. ↑ 1 2 Alphabetical list of settlements of municipal districts of the Moscow Region as of January 1, 2006 (unopened) (RTF + ZIP). The development of local government in the Moscow region. Date of treatment February 4, 2013. Archived January 11, 2012.
  8. ↑ Classifier of addresses of the Russian Federation (neopr.) . The state register of addresses of the Federal Tax Service of Russia. Date of treatment June 4, 2015.
  9. ↑ Veterans in Ryzhovo and Pesie (neopr.) (Inaccessible link) . Land of Podolsk (August 19, 2010). Date of treatment May 3, 2015. Archived March 4, 2016.
  10. ↑ 1 2 Pospelov E. M. Toponymic Dictionary of the Moscow Region. - M .: Profizdat, 2000 .-- S. 196. - 206 p. - 5,000 copies. - ISBN 5-255-01342-0 .
  11. ↑ 1 2 3 4 Kholmogorov V.I., Kholmogorov G.I. Historical materials about churches and villages of the XVI — XVIII centuries Issue 7: Peremyshl and Hotun tithes . - M. , 1889. - S. 71-72. - 166 p.
  12. ↑ Populated areas of the Moscow province / B.N. Penkin. - Moscow Metropolitan and Provincial Statistical Committee. - M. , 1913 .-- 454 p.
  13. ↑ Handbook of administrative-territorial division of the Moscow region 1929-2004 . - M .: Kuchkovo field, 2011 .-- 896 p. - 1,500 copies - ISBN 978-5-9950-0105-8 .


Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pieux_(Moscow )&oldid = 100331907


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