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Khovan (Moscow region)

Khovan is a village in the urban district of Shakhovskaya in the Moscow Region of Russia.

Village
Hovan
A country Russia
Subject of the federationMoscow region
City districtShakhovskaya
History and Geography
Center height247 m
TimezoneUTC + 3
Population
Population↗ 44 [1] people ( 2010 )
Digital identifiers
Telephone code+7 49637
Postcode
OKATO Code
OKTMO Code

Population

Population size
1859 [2]1926 [3]2002 [4]2006 [5]2010 [1]
268β†— 346β†˜ 31β†˜ 28β†— 44

Geography

The village is located in the central part of the okrug, about 2.5 km south of the Shakhovskaya district center, on the left bank of the Khovanka River, the left tributary of the Belaya River [6] , the height of the center above sea level is 247 m [7] . The nearest settlements are Sofyino in the north, Obukhovo in the southwest and Cherry in the south. At the eastern outskirts of Khovani there passes the regional highway 46K-1123 Tver - Uvarovka [8] , along which there are many buses to Shakhovskaya [9] .

There are 5 streets registered in the village - Vasilkovaya, Novaya, Polevaya, Pridorozhnaya and Ryabinovaya [10] .

Historical Information

In 1769, Khovan was a village (formerly a palace village [11] ) of the Khovansky camp of the Volokolamsk district of the Moscow province with 181 souls , the possession of team leader Fedor Ivanovich Dmitriev-Mamonov, as well as the Sokovnins. It included 770 acres of 2004.5 acres of arable land, 767 acres of 1183 acres of forest, 4 tithes of 1210 saplings of hay mowing and 34 tithes of 1648 acres of swamps [12] .

In the middle of the XIX century, the village of Khavan belonged to the 1st camp of the Volokolamsk district and belonged to Princess Nastasya Fedorovna Vreda. In the village there were 39 households , peasants 146 male souls and 145 female souls [13] .

In the β€œList of Populated Places” of 1862, Khovan is the owner's village of the 1st camp of the Volokolamsk district of the Moscow province along the Moscow highway, going from the border of the Zubtsov district to the city of Volokolamsk , 23 versts from the county town, at the Khovanka river, with 37 yards and 268 residents (133 men, 135 women) [2] .

In 1886 - 40 yards, 282 residents. On July 20, fairs were held [14] .

According to the data for 1890, the village was part of the Murikovsky volost , there was a parish school, the number of male souls was 131 people [15] .

In 1913 - 52 yards, there was a Zemstvo school, a dairy community and a forge [16] .

By a resolution of the Presidium of the Moscow Soviet on March 24, 1924, the Murikov volost was included in the Sudislovsky volost [17] .

According to the materials of the 1926 All-Union Census, the center of the Khovansky Village Council , 346 people lived (139 men, 207 women), there were 68 households (67 peasant) [3] .

Since 1929 - a settlement as part of the Shakhovsky district of the Moscow region.

1994-1995 - the village of Cherlenkovsky rural district of the Shakhovsky district [18] .

1995-2006 - the village of Volochanovsky rural district of the Shakhovsky district [19] .

2006β€”2015 - the village of the rural settlement Stepankovskoye of the Shakhovsky district [20] [21] .

2015 - n. at. - the village of the urban district Shakhovskaya of the Moscow region [22] [23] .

Attractions

In the XVI century, there was the Elias Church, destroyed in troubled times. Later in its place was built a wooden chapel, attributed to the church in Cherlenkovo . The chapel was demolished around 1940 [24] .

There is a toy factory "Tenth Kingdom".

Notes

  1. ↑ 1 2 The number of rural population and its distribution in the Moscow Region (results of the 2010 All-Russian Population Census) Volume III (Neopr.) (DOC + RAR). M .: Territorial authority of the Federal State Statistics Service for the Moscow Region (2013). Date of treatment October 20, 2013. Archived October 20, 2013.
  2. ↑ 1 2 Lists of populated places of the Russian Empire. Moscow province. According to the information of 1859 / Art. ed. E. Ogorodnikov. - Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. - SPb. , 1862. - T. XXIV.
  3. ↑ 1 2 Handbook on populated areas of the Moscow province . - Moscow Statistics Division. - M. , 1929. - 2000 copies.
  4. ↑ 2002 All-Russian Census Data: Table No. 02c. Population and prevailing nationality for each rural locality. M .: Federal State Statistics Service, 2004
  5. ↑ Alphabetical list of settlements of municipal districts of the Moscow Region as of January 1, 2006 (Neopr.) (RTF + ZIP). The development of local government in the Moscow region. Date of treatment February 4, 2013. Archived January 11, 2012.
  6. ↑ Topographic map N-36-012-Aa (in 1 cm 250 m)
  7. ↑ Hovan. Planet Photos
  8. ↑ Decree of the Government of MO dated 05.08.2008 No. 653/26 β€œOn the list of public roads of regional or intermunicipal significance of the Moscow Region” (neopr.) (Unavailable link) . Government of the Moscow region. Date of treatment October 16, 2013. Archived October 16, 2013.
  9. ↑ Khovan, highway: bus schedule (neopr.) . Yandex Schedules . Date of treatment December 26, 2016.
  10. ↑ Classifier of addresses of the Russian Federation (neopr.) . The state register of addresses of the Federal Tax Service of Russia. Date of treatment December 26, 2016.
  11. ↑ Kholmogorov V.I., Kholmogorov G.I. Historical materials about churches and villages of the XVI β€” XVIII centuries Issue 9: Volokolamsk and Serpukhov tithes . - M. , 1896. - S. 84.
  12. ↑ Kusov V.S., Lands of the Moscow province in the 18th century - M .: Muscovy, 2004 .-- T. I. - S. 146. - 315 p. - ISBN 5-7151-0081-X .
  13. ↑ Nystrem K. Index of villages and residents of counties in the Moscow province. - M. , 1852. - S. 332. - 954 p.
  14. ↑ Volosts and the most important villages of European Russia. Issue II: Provinces of the Moscow Industrial Region. Moscow, Tver, Yaroslavl, Kostroma, Nizhny Novgorod, Vladimir . - Central Statistical Committee. - SPb. , 1886. - S. 28. - 317 p.
  15. ↑ Shramchenko A.P. Reference book of the Moscow province . - M. , 1890. - S. 162. - 420 p.
  16. ↑ Populated areas of the Moscow province / B.N. Penkin. - Moscow Metropolitan and Provincial Statistical Committee. - M. , 1913. - S. 162. - 454 p.
  17. ↑ Handbook of administrative-territorial division of the Moscow province (1917-1929) / A. A. Kobyakov. - M. , 1980 .-- 554 p. - 500 copies.
  18. ↑ Handbook of administrative-territorial division of the Moscow region 1929-2004 . - M .: Kuchkovo field, 2011 .-- S. 622. - 896 p. - 1,500 copies - ISBN 978-5-9950-0105-8 .
  19. ↑ Handbook of the administrative-territorial structure of the Moscow region. - M. , 1999 .-- 335 s. - 1,500 copies
  20. ↑ Law of the Moscow Region of February 28, 2005 No. 62/2005-OZ β€œOn the Status and Borders of the Shakhovsky Municipal District and the municipalities newly formed in its composition” (adopted by resolution of the Moscow Regional Duma of February 16, 2005 No. 6/129-P) (neopr.) . Date of treatment January 21, 2014.
  21. ↑ Resolution of the Governor of the Moscow Region dated November 29, 2006 No. 156-PG β€œOn the exclusion of rural districts from the accounting data of the administrative-territorial and territorial units of the Moscow Region” (unexcited) . Date of treatment April 17, 2014.
  22. ↑ Law of the Moscow Region of October 26, 2015 No. 178/2015-OZ β€œOn the organization of local self-government in the territory of the Shakhovsky municipal district” (adopted by resolution of the Moscow regional Duma of October 15, 2015 No. 23/142-P) (unex.) . Date of treatment January 3, 2016.
  23. ↑ Law of the Moscow Region dated November 25, 2015 No. 207/2015-OZ β€œOn the classification of the city of Yegoryevsk, the Yegoryevsky district of the Moscow region, the city of Kashira, the Kashirsky district of the Moscow region, and the city of Mytishchi, the Mytishchi district of the Moscow region, as the city of regional subordination of the Moscow region, the classification of the working village Serebryanye Prudy Serebryano-Prudsky district of the Moscow region and the working village of Shakhovskaya, Shakhovsky district of the Moscow region to the category of urban-type towns of regional subordination to the Moscow region, its abolition Ryevsky, Kashirsky, Mytishchinsky, Serebryano-Prudsky and Shakhovsky districts of the Moscow Region and amendments to the Law of the Moscow Region β€œOn the administrative-territorial structure of the Moscow Region” ”(adopted by resolution of the Moscow Regional Duma of November 19, 2015 No. 6/146-P) (unex.) . Date of treatment January 3, 2016.
  24. ↑ Chapel of Elijah the Prophet in Khovani on the site β€œTemples of Russia”.

Links

  • Map sheet O-36-144 Volokolamsk . Scale: 1: 100,000. Status of the terrain for 1982. 1986 edition
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hovan_(Moskovskaya_region)&oldid=100680712


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