Derevtsy ( Belorussian. Dzeraўtsy ) [Comm 1] - a village in the Protasevichsky village council of the Osipovichi district of the Mogilev region of the Republic of Belarus [1] .
| Village | |
| Trees | |
|---|---|
| Belor. Dzeraўcy | |
| A country | |
| Region | Mogilev |
| Area | Osipovichsky |
| Village Council | Protasevichsky |
| History and Geography | |
| Climate type | moderately continental |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 36 [1] people ( 2007 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +375 2235 |
| Postcode | 213743 [2] |
Content
- 1 Etymology
- 2 Geographical location
- 3 History
- 4 population
- 5 See also
- 6 Comments
- 7 notes
Etymology
The name of the village comes from the base "tree" [3] .
Geographical position
The village is located 12 km south-west of Osipovichi , 1 km from the railway station Derevtsy on the Osipovichi- Starye Dorogi line and 145 km from Mogilev . There is a railway to the west of the village. The development of a village with a T-shaped layout consists of wooden manor-type houses [1] .
History
Written sources of the 16th century mention Derevtsy as a village within the Minsk Voivodeship of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania . So, in 1524 they were mentioned as a village in the gentry property. The village became part of the Russian Empire after the second division of the Commonwealth (1793). In 1838, the Trees were mentioned in the Bobruisk district as a landowner property with 8 revision souls . In 1907, it was part of the Zamos volost of Bobruisk county. From February to November 1918, the trees were occupied by German troops, from August 1919 to July 1920 - Polish. Local residents entered the collective farm in the 1930s, and a land reclamation partnership was created on April 19, 1924 [1] .
From August 20, 1924 to July 16, 1954, the village was the center of the Village Village Council of the Osipovichi District of the Bobruisk District (the latter lasted until July 26, 1930). Since February 20, 1938, this village council already belonged to the Mogilev region, September 20, 1944 to the Bobruisk region , and from July 16, 1954 - again to the Mogilev region. In 1967, the village of Barracks became part of the village [1] .
During World War II, the Trees were occupied by Nazi forces from the end of June 1941 to June 29, 1944. At the front, 4 residents were killed [1] .
In 1931, a school was opened in Derevtsy, in which already by 1925 109 students of both sexes were studying and there was a library. In addition to the basic school, at the moment in the village there is a club, a shop, a FAP, a post office [1] .
Population
- 1845 - 12 people, 5 yards [1]
- 1907 - 48 people, 8 yards (village), 147 people, 21 yard (settlement of the same name) [1]
- 1917 - 172 people, 29 courtyards (village), 79 people, 1 courtyard (farm) [1]
- 1926 - 192 people, 33 yards [1]
- 1959 - 220 people [1]
- 1970 - 155 people [1]
- 1986 - 99 people, 47 households [1]
- 2002 - 49 people, 20 households [1]
- 2007 - 36 people, 16 households [1]
See also
- Protasevichsky Village Council
- Osipovichi district
Comments
- ↑ Name and emphasis are given for: Names of settlements of the Republic of Belarus: Magylo в oblast: narmatyna davydnіk / І. A. Gaponenka іnsh .; pad red. V.P. Lemtsyugovay. - Mn. : Tekhnalogіya, 2007 .-- S. 66. - 406 p. - ISBN 978-985-458-159-0 . ; Garady і veskі Belarusі / Redkal. G.P. Pashkoў іnsh. - Minsk: Belarus. Encekl. Name P. Brokki, 2008 .-- V. 5, Prince. 1. Magіlёў oblast. - S. 96. - 728 p. - ISBN 978-985-11-0409-9 . .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Garada and Belarus Belarus / Redkal. G.P. Pashkoў іnsh. - Minsk: Belarus. Encekl. Name P. Brokki, 2008 .-- V. 5, Prince. 1. Magіlёў oblast. - S. 96. - 728 p. - ISBN 978-985-11-0409-9 .
- ↑ Postal code of the village Derevtsy (Mogilev region, Osipovichsky district, Protasevichsky village council) (inaccessible link)
- ↑ Zhuchkevich V.A. Brief toponymic dictionary of Belarus. - Mn. : Publ. BSU, 1974.- S. 97 .-- 448 p.