Zimenki (Zimenki) is a village in the Novomoskovsk administrative district of Moscow (until July 1, 2012 it was part of the Leninsky district of the Moscow region ). Included in the settlement of Sosenskoye .
| Village | |
| Zimenki | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Moscow |
| Administrative District | Novomoskovsky |
| Settlement | Sosenskoe |
| History and Geography | |
| Center height | 166 m |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | ↗ 97 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Postcode | 142791 |
| OKATO Code | 45297574104 |
Population
| Population | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1859 [2] | 1890 [3] | 1926 [4] | 2002 [5] | 2006 [6] | 2010 [1] |
| 184 | ↘ 95 | ↗ 198 | ↘ 41 | ↘ 39 | ↗ 97 |
According to the All-Russian Census , in 2002, 41 people lived in the village (19 men and 22 women) [5] .
Geography
Zimenki village is located in the northern part of the Novomoskovsk administrative district, about 25 km southwest of the center of Moscow and 3 km southeast of the center of Moscow .
Zimenkovskaya Street [7] connects Zimenki with the neighboring village of Sosenki .
4 km north of the village is the Kiev M3 highway, 4 km southeast - the Kaluga A130 highway, 8 km northeast - the Moscow ring road , 9 km north - the line of the Kiev direction of the Moscow railway .
The village has 12 streets, 3 dead ends and 1 passage, a consumer cooperative is attributed [8] . The nearest settlements are the villages of Verkhnee Valuevo and Letovo .
The river of the same name Zimenka flows through the village, forming a cascade of ponds.
History
The name of the village, presumably, previously meant "a place to stay in winter " [9] .
In the “List of Populated Places” of 1862, Zimentsy (Zimenky) is the owner's village of the 1st camp of the Podolsky district of the Moscow province on the right side of the Old Kaluga tract, 18 versts from the county town and 34 versts from the flat, at the rivers Sosenka and Demek and wells, with 16 yards and 184 inhabitants (91 men, 93 women) [2] .
According to the data for 1890 - the village of Desenskaya volost of Podolsk district with 95 inhabitants [3] [comm. 1] .
In 1913 - 23 yards, the estate of Ivanova [10] [comm. 2] .
The materials of the 1926 All-Union Population Census indicate the villages of Zimenki Bolshoi and Zimenky Mali of the Letovsky village council of the Desenskaya volost of the Podolsky district, 3.2 km from Kaluga highway and 11.7 km from Butovo station of the Kursk railway:
- Zimenki Bolshoi - 150 inhabitants (64 men, 86 women), 26 peasant farms, a first-level school;
- Small Zimenki - 48 inhabitants (25 men, 23 women), 11 peasant farms [4] [comm. 3] .
From 1929 to 2012 - The settlement of the Moscow region as part of the Krasnoyarsk region (1929-1946); Kalinin district (1946-1957); Leninsky district (1957-1960, 1965-2012); Ulyanovsk district (1960-1963); Leninsky enlarged rural area (1963-1965) [11] .
Since 2012 - as part of the city of Moscow.
Comments
- ↑ In the “Reference book of the Moscow province” A.P. Shramchenko, the village of Zemenki with 43 inhabitants is also indicated.
- ↑ The book “Populated Areas of the Moscow Province” also lists the village of Zimenki with 10 yards.
- ↑ The total population of two villages is shown in the table in the “Population” section for 1926.
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 The number of rural population and its distribution in the Moscow Region (results of the 2010 All-Russian Population Census). Volume III (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.
- ↑ 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.
- ↑ 1 2 Shramchenko A.P. Reference book of the Moscow province (description of counties) . - M. , 1890. - 420 p.
- ↑ 1 2 Handbook on populated areas of the Moscow province . - Moscow Statistics Division. - M. , 1929. - 2000 copies.
- ↑ 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
- ↑ Alphabetical list of settlements of municipal districts of the Moscow Region as of January 1, 2006 (RTF + ZIP). The development of local government in the Moscow region. Date of treatment February 4, 2013. Archived January 11, 2012.
- ↑ “On the assignment of names to newly formed streets located on the territory of the Sosenskoye settlement”
- ↑ Classifier of addresses of the Russian Federation . The state register of addresses of the Federal Tax Service of Russia. Date of treatment July 22, 2015.
- ↑ Pospelov E. M. The geographical names of the Moscow region: a toponymic dictionary. - M .: AST, 2008 .-- 600 p. - 3000 copies. - ISBN 978-5-17-042560-0 .
- ↑ Populated areas of the Moscow province / B.N. Penkin. - Moscow Metropolitan and Provincial Statistical Committee. - M. , 1913 .-- 454 p.
- ↑ 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 .