Dmitrievsky Volost is the abolished administrative-territorial unit that existed as part of the Fatezh district of the Kursk province in 1861-1924.
| Volost of the Russian Empire (AE 3rd level) | |
| Dmitrievsky volost β | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Province | Kursk province |
| County | Fatezh County |
| Adm. center | Dmitrievskoe |
| Includes | 27 np |
| Population ( 1877 ) | 7620 people |
| β’ percentage of the county population - 6.88% | |
| Density | 32.6 people / kmΒ² |
| Ethnic composition | Great Russians |
| Confessional composition | Orthodox |
| Area | 233.82 kmΒ² (1st place) |
| β’ percentage of the countyβs area - 9.14% | |
| Center coordinates | |
| Date of formation | 1861 year |
| Date of Abolition | June 12, 1924 |
The administrative center was the village of Dmitrievskoye (now Upper Khalchi ).
Content
- 1 Geography
- 2 History
- 3 Composition of the volost
- 4 Volost foremen
- 5 notes
- 6 Literature
Geography
Located in the western part of the county. The area of ββthe volost as of 1877 was 21,402 tithing (about 234 sq. Km) - 1 place in the county [1] . The territory of the volost has repeatedly changed. According to the data of the beginning of the 20th century, it bordered on Dmitrievsky Uyezd (in the west), Nizhneereutsky volost (in the north), Mileninsky and Bolshezhirovsky volosts (in the east) and Sdobnikovsky volost (in the south). A tract from Fatezh to Dmitriev passed along the northern part of the volost [2] . Settlements of the volost were located mainly on the river Usog and its left tributaries - the Ore , Kholcha , Radubezhsky stream and Linkych . Also on the territory of the volost was located Kholchevskaya steppe .
Currently, the territory of the former volost roughly corresponds to the southeast of the Zheleznogorsk district , the southwest of Fatezhsky district and the extreme north-east of the Kurchatov district of the Kursk region .
History
It was formed during the peasant reform of 1861. By 1877, the northern part of Dmitrievsky volost (the village of Olshanets , the village of Nizhny Zhdanovo ) was transferred to the restored Nizhneereutsky volost , and the southern part (the village of Mukhino , the village of Nikolaevka and others) - to the Sdobnikovsky volost . At the same time, the village of Shakhovo was transferred to Dmitrievsky volost from Rozhdestvenskaya . By 1885, the western part of the abolished Christmas volost (village Soldatskoye and others) was annexed to Dmitrievsky volost, and the village of Shuklino was transferred from the Dmitrievskaya volost to Sdobnikovsky volost [3] . By the end of the 19th century, the village of Dmitrievskaya was transferred to the Lower Riverside Volost. Linets , village of Rogovinka , x. Cutting .
After the October Revolution of 1917, village councils began to form on the territory of the volost. In January 1918, the Dmitrievsky volost executive committee was created. From September 24 to November 14, 1919 the territory of the volost was under the control of the Volunteer Army A.I. Denikin . It was abolished on June 12, 1924 during the enlargement of volosts by including Kursk district in the structure of Alisovskaya volost [4] .
Composition of the volost
As of 1877, the volost included 25 rural societies, 27 communities, 27 settlements [5] . Below is a list of the most significant settlements: [6]
| No. | Locality | Type of settlement |
|---|---|---|
| one | Dmitrievskoe-on-Kholchach | village, administrator. center |
| 2 | Upper Khalchi | village |
| 3 | Gnezdilovo | village |
| four | Linets | village |
| 5 | Lower Khalchi | village |
| 6 | Pozdnyakovo | village |
| 7 | Rainbow | village |
| 8 | Rogovinka | village |
| 9 | Fatyanivka | village |
| 10 | Shakhovo | village |
By 1914, the list of settlements of the volost was as follows:
| No. | Locality | Type of settlement |
|---|---|---|
| one | Dmitrievskoe-on-Kholchach | village, administrator. center |
| 2 | Alisovo | village |
| 3 | Bunino | village |
| four | Verkhnyaya Zhdanovo | village |
| 5 | Gnezdilovo | village |
| 6 | Zhuravinka | village |
| 7 | Klyushnikovo | village |
| 8 | Lyubimovka | village |
| 9 | Lower Khalchi | village |
| 10 | Pilyuginka | village |
| eleven | Lift | village |
| 12 | Pozdnyakovo | village |
| 13 | Rainbow | village |
| fourteen | Rogovinka | village |
| fifteen | Soldier | village |
| 16 | Suhodol | village |
| 17 | Fatyanivka | village |
| eighteen | Shakhovo | village |
| 19 | Shuklino | village |
Also, at different times, the following settlements were included in the volost: Kolupaevka, Mukhino , Nadezhdenka , Nizhnyaya Zhdanovo , Nikolaevka , Olshanets , Tolstovka , Troitsk-on-Prut and others [7] .
Parish foremen
The list is incomplete:
- Semyon Abramov Golubkov (1864) [8]
- Mikhail Vasilievich Shpinev (May 19, 1883 - after 1916) [9] [10]
Notes
- β Volosts and the most important villages, 1880 , p. 251.
- β Map of Kursk Province 1921
- β Compilation of statistical information on the Kursk province, 1885 , p. 148.
- β GAKO, fund R-575
- β Volosts and the most important villages, 1880 , p. 250.
- β Volosts and the most important villages, 1880 , p. 285.
- β Proceedings of the Kursk Provincial Statistics Committee, 1863 , p. 248-250.
- β RGIA, fund 577, inventory 17, case 2037
- β Village of Big Zhirovo - History of the village
- β Kursk calendar address. 1916, 1916 , p. 303.
Literature
- Proceedings of the Kursk Provincial Statistics Committee. First release. - Printing house of the Kursk government, 1863. - 584 p.
- Volosts and the most important villages of European Russia. Issue 1. Provinces of the central agricultural region. - SPb. : Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior, 1880. - 413 p.
- Collection of statistical information on the Kursk province: General Division, Volume 1. - Printing house of the provincial government, 1885.
- Zlatoverkhovnikov N.I. Kursk collection. Issue 1. - Printing house of the provincial government, 1901. - 360 p.
- Kursk address calendar. 1916 year. - Electric typographic lithography of the provincial government, 1916. - 369 p.