Mogutovo is a village in the Schelkovsky district of the Moscow region . Refers to the urban settlement Fryanovo .
Village | |
Mogutovo | |
---|---|
A country | Russia |
Subject of the federation | Moscow region |
Municipal district | Shchelkovsky |
Urban settlement | Fryanovo |
History and geography | |
First mention | 1574 |
Timezone | UTC + 3 |
Population | |
Population | ↘ 10 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
Digital identifiers | |
Postcode | |
OKATO code | 46259828008 |
OKTMO code | |
Geography
The village of Mogutovo is located in the northeast of the Moscow region, in the northeastern part of the Schelkovo district, not far from the border with the Vladimir region , on the right bank of the Shirenka river.
The nearest rural settlements are the villages of Eremino and Kozino .
A horticultural partnership (SNT) is attributed to the village [2] .
Population
Population | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1852 [3] | 1859 [4] | 1869 [5] | 1899 [6] | 1926 [7] | 2002 [8] | 2006 [9] |
119 | ↗ 123 | ↘ 98 | ↘ 54 | ↗ 173 | ↘ 15 | ↗ 17 |
2010 [1] | ||||||
↘ 10 |
History
A complex of hanging lead seals belonging to the princes of Novgorod Mstislav Vladimirovich, Vsevolod Mstislavich , Svyatoslav Olgovich and Svyatoslav Rostislavich [10] .
Slobodka Mogutovo originated at the fortress of Sherna-town (1389) [11] . The first mention dates back to 1574 when the Mogutovo wasteland not far from the village (at that time the wasteland) Voskresenskoye is indicated as the possession of the Mogutov service people (the non-canonical name Moguta meant power, power, wealth). “The Judgment Husband” Gridya Mogutov was mentioned in 1498 [12] , and the scribe Matvey Mogutov in 1575 [13] . In the first half of the 16th century, the Mogutovo wasteland along with the Fryazinovo wasteland (in the future Fryanovo ) are referred to as the possessions of Prince Andrei Shcherbaty from the boyar family of the Shcherbatykh-Shcherbatovs , who were the Tarusa-Obolensky princes. In 1573–1574 both the wastelands of Mogutovo and Fryazinovo entered the estate of Mikhail Ivanovich Lapshin [14] [15] . In 1623, Mogutovo was already a village belonging to the Sherena settlement.
For a long time (approximately from the beginning of the 18th century) the noble family of Vyazemsky owned the village (not to be confused with the princely family ).
In the middle of the XIX century, the village Mogutovo belonged to the 2nd camp of Bogorodsky district of the Moscow province and belonged to Poliekt and Anatoly Sergeyevich Vyazemsky. In the village there were 12 courtyards, 56 male peasants and 63 female souls [3] .
In the "List of populated areas" of 1862, Magutovo is the owner village of the 2nd camp of Bogorodsky district of the Moscow province on the left side of the Stromynsky tract (from Moscow to Kirzhach ), 35 versts from the district city and 36 versts from the stanovoy apartment, by the River Sharenka , with 12 yards and 123 inhabitants (60 men, 63 women) [4] .
According to the data of 1869, the village of Aksyonovsky volost of the 3rd camp of Bogorodsky district with 15 yards, 18 wooden houses, a silk-weaving establishment and 98 inhabitants (48 men, 50 women), 6 of them literate men. There were 13 horses, 17 units of cattle and 3 units of small livestock [5] .
In 1913 there were 24 yards [16] .
According to the materials of the All-Union census of 1926 - the village of the Ereminsky village council of the Aksenovskaya volost of Bogorodsky uyezd, 4 km from the Fryanovsky highway and 35 km from the Bogorodsk station of the Nizhny Novgorod railway, lived 173 inhabitants (81 men, 92 women), there were 27 peasant and 4 other farms [ 7] .
In 1994–2006, it belonged to the Ryazantsevo rural district of the Schelkovo district.
Topographic maps
- Map sheet O-37-XXXIII Zagorsk . Scale: 1: 200 000. State of the area in 1984. 1986 edition
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 The number of the rural population and its distribution on the territory of the Moscow Region (the results of the All-Russian Population Census 2010). Volume III (DOC + RAR). M .: Territorial body of the Federal State Statistics Service in the Moscow region (2013). Circulation date October 20, 2013. Archived October 20, 2013.
- ↑ Address Classifier of the Russian Federation . State register of addresses of the Federal Tax Service of Russia (database relevance: 2016.09.01). The appeal date is September 4, 2016.
- ↑ 1 2 Nistrem K. Index of villages and residents of the counties of the Moscow province. - M. , 1852. - 954 p.
- ↑ 1 2 Lists of populated areas of the Russian Empire. Moscow province. According to the 1859 / processed art. ed. E. Ogorodnikov. - Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. - SPb. , 1862. - T. XXIV.
- ↑ 1 2 Information about the villages and inhabitants of the Moscow province. Part I. Bogorodsk district . - Moscow metropolitan and provincial committee. - M. , 1873. - 351 p.
- ↑ The memorial book of the Moscow province for 1899 / A. V. Avrorin. - M. , 1899.
- ↑ 1 2 Guide to the settlements of the Moscow province . - Moscow Statistical Division. - M. , 1929. - 2000 copies.
- ↑ Data from the 2002 All-Russian Population Census: Table No. 02c. Population size and the predominant nationality for each rural locality. M .: Federal State Statistics Service, 2004
- ↑ Alphabetical list of settlements in municipal districts of the Moscow region as of January 1, 2006 (RTF + ZIP). The development of local government in the Moscow region. The date of circulation is February 4, 2013. Archived January 11, 2012.
- ↑ Chernov SZ. ON THE CHRONOLOGICAL FRAMEWORK OF THE CONCLUSION OF MARRIAGE ANDREY BOGOLYUBSKY // “Ancient Rus. Questions of medieval studies, 2017, No. 3 (69), September
- “Sherna-gorodok”: the ancient city refuge of the XI — XII centuries near the village of Mogutovo
- ↑ Acts of feudal land tenure and the economy of the XIV-XVI centuries. Part 1 M.1951. Pp. 226.
- ↑ Onomasticon. Pp. 201
- ↑ PKMG. P. 12.
- ↑ What is the point of such footnotes if they are not understood by more readers?
- ↑ Populated areas of Moscow province / B.N. Penkin. - Moscow Metropolitan and Provincial Statistical Committee. - M. , 1913. - p. 94. - 454 p.