Manino is a village in the Kalacheevsky district of the Voronezh region .
| Village | |
| Manino | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Voronezh region |
| Municipal District | Kalacheevsky |
| Rural settlement | Maninsky |
| History and Geography | |
| Based | XVIII century |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 2,409 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
| Katoykonim | Maninians |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +7 47363 |
| Postal codes | 397640, 397641 |
| OKATO Code | 20215824001 |
| OKTMO Code | |
The administrative center of Maninsky rural settlement .
| Population |
|---|
| 2010 [1] |
| 2409 |
Content
Geography
The village of Manino is located on the Kalach Upland in the east of the Kalacheevsky District and borders on the Volgograd Region . The area of the village is 21 505 ha . Maximum height 225 m above sea level. In the lowlands of the hill flows the Manina River.
It is located between two Cretaceous mountains: the Vistula from the east and Lysaya from the west, separated by 3 km from each other, and between them is a flat valley, similar to a triangle. The area of this valley is approximately 10 km². The village is rich in deposits of chalk, clay and sand.
History
The village was founded in the 40s of the 18th century by Ukrainian Cossacks of the Ostrogozhsky Sloboda (Cherkasy) Cossack Regiment . Initially, the settlement was part of the Kalacheev Hundred Ostrogozhsky regiment. By order of Catherine the Second, in 1765, following the Getmanshchina , the Cossack administrative self-government of Sloboda Ukraine was liquidated, after which the settlement began to enter the Melovsk commissar of the Ostrogoga province of Sloboda Ukraine. Since 1779, in the Bogucharsky district of Voronezh governorship .
According to 1859, in the official settlement of the Bogucharsky district of the Voronezh province , 4976 people lived (2383 males and 2593 females), there were 656 farm households, and an Orthodox church existed [2] .
As of 1886, in the former state settlement, the center of Manin volost, there were 6389 people, there were 895 household farms, 2 Orthodox churches, 2 post stations, a pharmacy, 7 shops, 2 tanneries, 70 windmills, 6 fairs were assembled per year [ 3] .
According to the census of 1897, the number of inhabitants increased to 6495 people (3305 males and 3190 females), of which 6491 were of the Orthodox faith [4] .
According to the data of 1900, 6819 people lived in the settlement (3671 males and 3148 females), mainly of the Ukrainian population, there were 1082 households [5] .
Famous Natives
- Shcherbinin, Fedot Alekseevich (1910-1945) - participant of the Great Patriotic War, Hero of the Soviet Union, senior sergeant.
Solovyov Alexander Kirillovich (born in 1949) - First Deputy Governor of the Voronezh Region, Deputy Chairman of the Board of Sberbank of Russia, Honorary Citizen of the Voronezh Region.
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 2010 All-Russian Population Census. The population of urban districts, municipalities, urban and rural settlements, urban and rural settlements of the Voronezh region . Date of treatment January 29, 2014. Archived January 29, 2014.
- ↑ Voronezh province. The list of populated places according to svdѣnіyam of 1859, volume IX. Published by the Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. St. Petersburg. 1865 - IV + 157 s., (Code 1005)
- ↑ Volosts and important selenia of European Russia. According to the survey, carried out by statistical institutions of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, on behalf of the Statistical Council. Publication of the Central Statistical Committee. Issue I. Governorates of the Central Agricultural Region. - St. Petersburg, 1880. - VI + 413 p. - S. 199.
- ↑ Population of the Russian Empire in 500 and more inhabitants, indicating the total population and the number of inhabitants of the dominant region according to the data of the first general census of 1897, St. Petersburg. 1905. - IX + 270 + 120 s., (Page 1-34)
- ↑ Populated area of the Voronezh province. Reference book. Publishing of the Voronezh provincial zemstvo. Voronezh: Tipo-Lithography V.I. Isaev, Bolshaya Dvoryanskaya St., Dr. Stollѣ. 1900. - VI + 482 p., (Code 5651)