Klykovo is a village in Kozelsky District of the Kaluga Region . Included in the rural settlement "Village Burnashevo . "
Village | |
Klykovo | |
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A country | Russia |
Subject of the federation | Kaluga region |
Municipal district | Kozelskiy |
Rural settlement | "Village Burnashevo" |
History and geography | |
Timezone | UTC + 3 |
Population | |
Population | ↘ 34 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
Digital identifiers | |
Postcode | |
OKATO code | |
OKTMO code | |
Located about 1 km east of the village Burnashevo .
In Klykovo there is a male monastery of the Kozelsk diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church - the Savior of the Miraculous Desert .
Content
History
It was a part of Burnashevsky volost of Kozelsky district
The village and the village stood on the right side of the river Serena. In 1859, there were 37 courtyards, 135 men and 159 women in the village. By 1903, there were 137 men and 167 women. In 1914, 425 people lived in Klykovo. The village was famous for its gardens and nursery. The buildings of the manor’s estate in Klykov did not survive, two large wooden single-storey outbuildings on the western side of the estate (buildings of the late 19th century) survived. There is a large number of old elms on the border of the manor’s estate.
Kaluga Diocesan Gazette No. 8, 1900:
"According to the legend, preserved until now by the peasants of the village of Klykov, Kozelsky district (7 versts from Kurnich), during the raging cholera epidemic in 1830 in this village, the image of the Savior from Kurynich was brought to this village. the image of the Savior around the village, and cholera, which until then had swallowed up a lot of victims, gradually began to weaken, and by 16 August it completely stopped.
Additional Information
According to historical documents, in 1782 the owner of the village of Klykova and the village of Bogdanovka (in the Kozelsky district), that on the right side of the Serena river, was State Councilor Anisim Titovich Knyazev . Anisim Titovich Knyazev came from a noble family of the Kostroma district. He was the author of works on history and genealogy, consisted since 1775, during the reign of Catherine II, a member of the boundary office in Moscow. Later he became the actual head of the surveying office. Working in the archives, he compiled the "Genealogy of Russian Grand Dukes, Kings and Emperors." On the instructions of the Empress, he checked and compiled a genealogy of 800 noble families, thereby laying the foundations of Russian genealogy.
In 1783 his estate was described for St. Petersburg Bank debts. The estate was bought in 1786 by a nephew, Ivan Ivanovich Knyazev, and he compiled a power of attorney, in which he entrusted full control and disposal of the real estate to his uncle, the former owner of the estate.
In 1803, another landowner was designated in documents - collegiate assessor Nikolai Petrovich Khlebnikov. Nikolai Petrovich Khlebnikov - the son of the famous bibliophile Peter Kirillovich Khlebnikov , who served in the headquarters of Gen. Field Marshal Count K. G. Razumovsky. His library, known as Khlebnikovsko-Avchurinskaya, kept a complete collection of Russian newspapers and periodicals of the 18th century, rare editions, manuscripts and books. His library later settled on the estate of his sister, Anna Petrovna Poltoratskaya, in Avchurin.
The collection of original documents and books collected in the Avchurino estate became the library in which N. M. Karamzin worked at the time of writing the History of the Russian State.
And after the revolution, it was transported to Moscow and became the basis of the main Russian library - it. V.I. Lenin in Moscow.
In 1805, Colonel Fyodor Markovich Poltoratsky owned the estate in the village of Klykovo. His father - Mark Fedorovich Poltoratsky in 1763 was the director of the court chapel in St. Petersburg and by the decree of Empress Catherine II was granted the title of nobility.
In 1826, the owner of the estate was Guards, Lieutenant Alexander Fedorovich Poltoratsky, Anna Petrovna Kern's cousin (nee Poltoratskaya), the same one to whom A. Pushkin dedicated a famous poem:
"As a genius of pure beauty ..."
Until 1829 in with. Klykovo existed wooden c. in the name of svt.
Nicholas the Wonderworker. It is known that in the years 1804-1823. it served priest. John
Likhachev, ordained archbishop. Kaluga and Borovsky Theophylact
(Rusanov) (GA Kaluga region. F. 32. Op. 19. D. 1322)
Population
Population | ||||
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1859 [2] | 1897 [3] | 1913 [4] | 2002 [5] | 2010 [1] |
294 | ↗ 304 | ↗ 425 | ↘ 56 | ↘ 34 |
For 2014, the population together with the monastery is 67 people. the population is growing every year due to the construction of new houses and estates around the monastery.
Links
- Village Klykovo .
- Map N-36-18 Scale 1: 200000.
- Village Klykovo eyes of history
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 The 2010 All-Russian Population Census. Population size and distribution of the Kaluga Region (volume 1) . The date of circulation is January 30, 2014. Archived January 30, 2014.
- ↑ Kaluga province ... according to 1859 / Rev. N. Stieglitz. - SPb. : ed. Centre. stat. com Min internal 1863. - (Lists of populated areas of the Russian Empire, compiled and published by the Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior; 1861-1885).
- ↑ Populated places of the Russian Empire in 500 and more inhabitants with indication of the total population in them and the number of inhabitants of the prevailing religions, according to the data of the first general census of the population in 1897 / foreword: N. Troinitsky. - SPb. : printing "Public benefit", 1905. - p. 75−78.
- ↑ List of populated places in Kaluga province / Ed. F. F. Kadobnova. - Kaluga: Kaluzh. lips stat. com., 1914.
- ↑ Kaluga region . Linguarium. The appeal date is January 22, 2018.