Korobovskaya volost - a volost in the Egorievsky district of the Ryazan province , which existed until 1922.
Content
History
Korobov volost existed as part of the Yegoryevsky district of the Ryazan province. The administrative center of the volost was the village of Dmitrovsky Pogost . In 1922, Yegoryevsky district was included in the Moscow province.
On June 22, 1922 the volost was abolished, the villages of the volost were attached to Dmitrov volost [1] .
Composition
In 1885, 1 village and 24 villages were part of the Korobovo volost.
| View | Name [2] | Population, people [3] (1858 year) [~ 1] | Population, people [3] [4] [~ 2] (1885 year) | Population, people [five] (1905) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| village | Dmitrievsky Pogost | 62 [6] | 237 | 350 |
| village | Korobovskaya | 825 | 1153 | 1388 |
| village | Kulakovskaya | 472 | 621 | 772 |
| village | Mitinskaya | 208 | 251 | 256 |
| village | Gubino | 231 | 260 | 250 |
| village | White | 309 | 431 | 520 |
| village | Naumovo | 222 | 295 | 350 |
| village | Fedeevskaya | 163 | 297 | 350 |
| village | Mikhailovskaya | 196 | 294 | 332 |
| village | Petryaiha | 206 | 272 | 364 |
| village | Denisikha | 213 | 354 | 416 |
| village | Nadeino | 182 | 309 | 356 |
| village | Pershinskaya | 89 | 178 | 198 |
| village | Epifanovskaya | 87 | 120 | 170 |
| village | Bundovo | 78 | 143 | 162 |
| village | Beketovskaya | 70 | 97 | 114 |
| village | Fedorovskaya | 83 | 146 | 166 |
| village | Kuzmino | 109 | 121 | 156 |
| village | Ivanovo | 55 | 70 | 94 |
| village | Kashnikovo | 118 | 173 | 246 |
| village | Pestovskaya | 224 | 326 | 300 |
| village | Shiryaevskaya | 124 | 271 | 270 |
| village | Emino | 88 [6] | 126 | 220 |
| village | Epikhino | 88 [6] | 177 | 128 |
| village | Markovskaya | 156 | 215 | 280 |
Land
The population was 43 rural communities - all former landowner peasants , except for three communities that belonged to the category of state peasants. All communities had a communal form of land ownership. 20 communities divided the land by audit souls , another 20 communities divided by workers or taxes , in the remaining three communities, consisting of a small number of householders, the land was divided along the level between the yards. Meadows in 14 communities were shared simultaneously with arable land, in other communities - annually. The forest was mainly divided annually.
Most communities have rented grasslands or pastures from private owners. Householders with rental land accounted for about 64% of the total number of households in the volost. Allotments rarely surrendered.
Agriculture
The land in the volost was mediocre, the soil in most communities was loamy , silty, sometimes loamy or sandy. The meadows were dry or swampy. The forest is more than wood, but in 5 communities it was not at all. Some communities had part of the timber forest. Peasants of the volost planted rye, oats, buckwheat and potatoes. Oats were sown very rarely. Drowned in most cases from their own forests.
Local and local crafts
The main local fishery for the parish was the weaving of baskets. This was mainly done by women and children, as well as many men in the winter. Bast was bought at the Nizhny Novgorod Fair, and the manufactured bast bags were sold to Moscow. In 1885, there were 82 carpenters, 25 shoemakers, 24 traders, 5 millers, 4 creameries, 4 carts, 5 brick workers, 7 tailors, 12 artisans, etc. In addition, 58 women and 3 men wove nanku.
The latrine industries were significant. In 1885, 1,421 men and 1 woman went to work. In total, 83% of men of working age left. Most of them were carpenters - 1330 people. Of the remaining fishing trades, 32 are merchants, 9 clerks, 22 weavers, 4 artisans, 3 cabmen, the rest are laborers and servants. They went to work mainly in the Moscow province , as well as in Vladimir and other provinces.
Infrastructure
In 1885, there were 1 water mill and 14 windmills, 5 forges, 6 grinders, 5 oil mills, 1 brick factory, 1 sineilny, 1 tannery, 2 wholesale wine stores, 4 taverns, 4 rensk cellars, 2 inns, 2 drinking houses, 4 bakeries of 15 various shops. In the village of Dmitrievsky Pogost there was an exemplary two-year male and one-class female schools.
Temples
- Church of Dmitry Solunsky in the village of Dmitrievsky Pogost
Notes
- Comments
- β X revision data
- β People living in villages and not assigned to the peasant society of these villages are also taken into account
- Sources
- β Handbook of Administrative Territorial Division of the Moscow Province (1917-1929), 1980 , Pages 93-94.
- β Collection of statistical information on the Ryazan province. Volume V. Vol. II. Egorievsky Uyezd, 1887 , Pages 342-369.
- β 1 2 Collection of statistical information on the Ryazan province. Volume V. Vol. I. Yegoryevsky district, 1886 , Pages 186-217.
- β Collection of statistical information on the Ryazan province. Volume V. Vol. II. Egorievsky Uyezd, 1887 , Pages 588-591.
- β Populated places of Ryazan Province, 1906 , Pages 92-95.
- β 1 2 3 Ryazan province. The list of settlements according to 1859, 1862 , Pages 29-43.
Literature
- Ryazan province. The list of settlements according to the information of 1859 / Ed. I. Wilson. - St. Petersburg, 1862. - S. 29-43.
- Collection of statistical information on the Ryazan province. Volume V. Vol. I. Egorievsky district. - Ryazan, 1886 .-- S. 186β217.
- Collection of statistical information on the Ryazan province. Volume V. Vol. II. Egorievsky district. - Ryazan, 1887. - S. 342-369, 588-591.
- Populated places of the Ryazan province / Ed. I.I. Prokhodtsova. - Ryazan, 1906. - S. 92-95.
- Handbook of administrative-territorial division of the Moscow province (1917-1929) / Ed. ed. A.A. Kobyakov. - Moscow, 1980. - S. 92-108.