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Voynosolovo

Voinisolovo is a village in the Kotelsky rural settlement of the Kingisepp District of the Leningrad Region .

Village
Voynosolovo
A country Russia
Subject of the federationLeningrad region
Municipal districtKingisepp
Rural settlementKotelskoe
History and geography
First mention1500 year
Former namesVoinosolo, Warriors, Voynasala, Voinosolo, Voynosovo, Voynosova
TimezoneUTC + 3
Population
Population▲ 44 [1] people ( 2017 )
Digital identifiers
Telephone code+7 81375
Postcode188468
OKATO code41221820010
OKTMO code
Plan village Voynosolovo. 1938

Content

History

It is first mentioned in the Scribal Book of Vodskaya Pyatina in the year 1500, as the village of Voynosol in the Nikol'sk Toldozhsky churchyard in Chyudy, Yamsky district [2] .

Then, as the village of Voinasalo by in the Toldozhsky churchyard in the Swedish “Scribal books of Izhora land” of 1618–1623 [3] .

On the map of Ingermanland A.I. Bergenheim , compiled from Swedish materials of 1676, is designated as the village of Woinasawa [4] .

On the Swedish “General Map of the Province of Ingermanlandia” of 1704, it is like the village of Woinasala [5] .

As the village of Warrior, it is mentioned on the "Geographical drawing of the Izhora land" by Adrian Schonbek of 1705 [6] .

The village of Voynasala is marked on the map of Ingermanlandia A. Rostovtsev in 1727 [7] .

On the map of the St. Petersburg province of F.F. Schubert in 1834, the village of Voynosov is indicated, consisting of 74 peasant households [8] .

VOYOSOLO - the village belongs to the heirs of the late Count Sivers, the number of inhabitants according to audit: 270 m. P., 281 g. P. (1838) [9]

According to the map of Professor S. S. Kutorgi in 1852, the village was called Voynosov and consisted of 74 courtyards [10] .

VOYNOSOLOVO - the village of collegiate secretary Count Sivers, 10 versts by post, and the rest by country roads, the number of yards is 74, the number of souls is 234 pm (1856) [11]


VAYNOSOLOVO - village, number of inhabitants according to the X-th audit of 1857: 221 m. P., 235 w. p., total 456 people [12]

  •  

    Plan village Voynosolovo. 1860

According to the "Topographic map of parts of the St. Petersburg and Vyborg provinces" in 1860, the village was called Voynosov and consisted of 69 yards [13] .

VOYNOSOLOVO (VOINOSOVO) is a village owned by a nameless stream, the number of households is 78, the number of inhabitants is 254 m. P., 248 w. Clause (1862) [14]


VOYNOSOLOVO is a village, according to the census census of 1882: 84 families, 240 meters in them, 234; n., only 474 people. [12]

The collection of the Central Statistical Committee described the village as follows:

VOYNOSOLOVA (VOYNOSOVA) is a former owner’s village, there are 95 yards, 409 inhabitants. 3 schools, a shop. (1885) [15] .

According to the census of 1899:

VOYNOSOLOVO - the village, the number of farms - 82, the number of inhabitants: 207 m. P., 203 w. n., only 410 people;
the rank of peasants: former owner; nationality: Russian - 405 people., mixed - 5 people. [12]

In the 19th and early 20th centuries, the village administratively belonged to the Kotelsky volost of the 2nd camp of the Yamburg district of the St. Petersburg province.

From 1917 to 1925, the village of Voinosolovo was part of the Voinolosovsky Village Council of the Kotelskoye parish of Kingisepp County .

Since 1925, as part of the Ruddilovsky Village Council.

Since 1927, as part of the Bolshe-Ruddilovsky Village Council of Kotelsky District .

In 1928, the population of the village Voynosolovo was 406 people.

According to the topographic map of 1930, the village consisted of 101 yards [16] .

Since 1931, as part of the Kingisepp District [17] .

According to the data of 1933, the village of Voinosolovo was part of the Kotelsky Village Council of the Kingisepp District [18] .

According to the topographic map of 1938, the village had 88 courtyards. In the village there was a village council, on the northern outskirts of the village - a chapel.

The village was liberated from the Nazi occupiers on January 30, 1944.

Since 1954, as part of the Kotelsky Village Council.

In 1958, the population of the village Voynosolovo was 178 people [17] .

According to the data of 1966, 1973 and 1990, the village was part of the Kotelsk Village Council [19] [20] [21] .

In 1997, 44 people lived in the village of Voynosolovo , in 2002 - 48 people (Russian - 98%), in 2007 - 29 [22] [23] [24] .

Geography

The village is located in the northeastern part of the district on the A180 ( E 20 ) highway ( St. Petersburg - Ivangorod - border with Estonia ) " Narva ", near the crossing point of its road 41K-008 ( Petrodvorets - Cricova).

The distance to the administrative center of the settlement is 3 km [24] .

The distance to the nearest railway station Kotly is 7 km [19] .

Through the village flows the river Tolbovka .

Ecology

By the Decree of the Government of the Russian Federation dated 10/08/2015 No. 1074, the village of Voynosolovo is included in the list of settlements located within the boundaries of radioactively contaminated areas as a result of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant disaster and assigned to the residence zone with preferential socio-economic status [25] .

Demographics

 

Attractions

In 1925, several clusters of stone crosses were found in the village, including a 15th-century subscription cross with the inscription "The Cross of the Slave of God Sava Tarasina the Blacksmith" [26] . According to the Archaeological Map of the Leningrad Region, there are four archaeological monuments near the village of Voynolosovo:

  • Voynosolovo-1 burial mound, dating from the 2nd quarter of the XIII — XV centuries (excavated in 1885)
  • burial ground with stone crosses Voynosolovo-2
  • cluster of stone crosses Voynolosovo-3
  • the medieval village of Voynosolovo-4 [27] [28]
  •  

    Stone crosses of the 15th — 16th centuries from the village of Voinosolovo near the Catherine’s Cathedral in Kingisepp

  •  

    The cross of the XV century with the inscription "The throat of God's slave Sava Tarasina the blacksmith"

Notes

  1. ↑ Administrative-territorial division of the Leningrad region / Comp. Kozhevnikov V.G. - Reference book. - SPb. : Inkeri, 2017. - p. 116. - 271 p. - 3000 copies Archived copy of March 14, 2018 on the Wayback Machine
  2. “Census Book of Vodskaya Pyatina in 1500” p. 906
  3. ↑ Yordeboker The book of Izhora land. Volume 1. Years 1618-1633, p. 61
  4. ↑ “Map of Ingermanlandia: Ivangorod, Pit, Koporye, Noteborg”, based on materials from 1676
  5. ↑ “General Map of the Province of Ingermanlandia” by E. Beling and A. Andersin, 1704, based on materials from 1678
  6. ↑ “Geographical drawing over the Izhora land with its cities” by Adrian Schönbek 1705
  7. ↑ New and reliable throughout Ingermanland lantkart. Grav. A. Rostovtsev. SPb., 1727
  8. ↑ Topographic map of St. Petersburg Province. 5th layout. Schubert 1834
  9. ↑ Description of the St. Petersburg province by counties and camps . - SPb. : Gubernskaya Printing House, 1838. - p. 72. - 144 p.
  10. ↑ Geognostic map of the St. Petersburg province of prof. S. Kutorgi, 1852
  11. ↑ Yamburg district // Alphabetical list of settlements by counties and camps of St. Petersburg province / N. Elagin. - SPb. : Printing House of the Provincial Board, 1856. - p. 27. - 152 p.
  12. ↑ 1 2 3 Materials to the assessment of land in St. Petersburg province. Volume I. Yamburg district. Release II. SPb. 1904, p. 210
  13. ↑ Map of St. Petersburg Province. 1860
  14. ↑ Lists of populated areas of the Russian Empire, compiled and published by the Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. Xxxvii. St. Petersburg Province. As of 1862. SPb. 1864. p. 207
  15. “Volosts and the most important villages of European Russia. Release VII. Gubernias of the lakeside group ”, SPb. 1885, p. 93
  16. ↑ Topographic map of the Leningrad Region, square O-35-22-B (Boilers), 1930. Archived November 4, 2016.
  17. ↑ 1 2 Reference book of the history of the administrative-territorial division of the Leningrad region.
  18. ↑ Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad region. - L. 1933. S. 241 Archived October 17, 2013.
  19. ↑ 1 2 Administrative-territorial division of the Leningrad region / Comp. T. A. Badina. - Directory. - L .: Lenizdat , 1966. - p. 77. - 197 p. - 8000 copies
  20. ↑ Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad region. - Lenizdat. 1973. p. 223
  21. ↑ Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad region. Lenizdat. 1990. ISBN 5-289-00612-5. Pp. 68
  22. ↑ Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad region. SPb. 1997. ISBN 5-86153-055-6. P. 69
  23. ↑ Koryakov Yu. B. Database "Ethno-linguistic composition of settlements in Russia". Leningrad region (Neopr.) .
  24. ↑ 1 2 Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad region. - SPb. 2007. p. 93
  25. Decree of the Government of the Russian Federation dated 10/08/2015, No. 1074 (Russian) . government.ru. The appeal date is January 3, 2018.
  26. ↑ Voynosolovskie stone crosses
  27. ↑ Lapshin V. А. Archaeological map of the Leningrad Region. Part I. P. 102. - L. , 1990.
  28. ↑ Panchenko V. B., Fedorov I. A. Stone crosses from the village of Voynolosovo: new research
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Vains &&oldid = 100455596


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