Adoevschina - a village in the Radishchevsky district of the Ulyanovsk region , as part of the Radishchevsky urban settlement .
| Village | |
| Adoevschina | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Ulyanovsk region |
| Municipal District | Radischevsky |
| Urban settlement | Radishchevskoe |
| History and Geography | |
| Timezone | UTC + 4 |
| Population | |
| Population | 684 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Postal codes | 433914 |
| OKATO Code | |
| OKTMO Code | |
Content
History
It was founded at the beginning of the 18th century by Prince Odoevsky (later the estate of the Zakrevsky nobles). In 1912, in the village of A. (Odoyevshchina, Znamenskoye) there were 444 courtyards, 2625 inhabitants, a wooden Znamenskaya church built in 1901 (preserved, the architectural appearance was changed during the rebuild into a warehouse), parish and parish schools .
According to information for 1859, in the List of Populated Places of the Russian Empire, it is mentioned as the owner's village of Odoeshchina (aka Znamenskoye ) of the Khvalynsky district of the Saratov province , located at the Tereshka river along the country road from Khvalynsk to the city of Kuznetsk at a distance of 50 miles from the county town . In the village there were 370 yards, 1113 men and 1201 women lived, there was an Orthodox church, a fair, a bazaar and a shepherd [2] .
According to the census of 1897, 2178 residents (1062 men and 1116 women) lived in the Adoyevshchina, of which 2099 were Orthodox [3] .
According to the List of populated areas of the Saratov province of 1914, Adoyeshchyna was a volost village of Adoyevshchinsky volost . According to information from 1911, the former landowner peasants lived in the village, the Great Russians , who made up two rural societies , in the first there were 285 households (households), 821 men and 841 women lived, in the second - 159 households, 478 men and 475 women. In the village there were a church, parish and zemstvo schools [4] .
Population
Population dynamics by years:
| Years | 1859 [2] | 1897 [3] | 1911 [4] | 1989 [5] | 2002 [6] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Population | 2314 | 2178 | 2625 | ≈820 | 778 |
| Population |
|---|
| 2010 [1] |
| 684 |
- National composition
According to the 2002 census, Russians made up 97% of the village population [6] .
Infrastructure
School, house of culture, library, first-aid post, board of JSC "Red Star" (former collective farm of the same name).
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 2010 All-Russian Population Census. Settlements of the Ulyanovsk region and the number of people living in them by age . Date of treatment May 14, 2014. Archived on May 14, 2014.
- ↑ 1 2 Lists of populated areas of the Russian Empire, compiled and published by the Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. Vol. 38: Saratov province: ... according to 1859 . - SP (b), 1862. - S. 100. - 130 p.
- ↑ 1 2 N.A. Troitsky. Populated places of the Russian Empire of 500 or more inhabitants, indicating the total population in them and the number of inhabitants of the predominant faiths, according to the first general census of 1897 . - St. Petersburg: printing house "Public benefit", 1905. - S. 197.
- ↑ 1 2 Lists of the inhabited places of the Saratov province. Khvalynsky uyezd / Estimated-stat. Dep. Sarat. lips. land councils. - Saratov: Zemsky printing house, 1914. - S. 2-3. - 37 p.
- ↑ Topographic maps of the USSR N-39 (B) 1: 100000. Samara Region. . This is the place .
- ↑ 1 2 Koryakov Yu. B. Database “Ethno-Linguistic Composition of Settlements of Russia” .