Lenin volost (until December 3, 1918 - Taldom ) - a volost in the Kalyazinsky district of the Tver province of the Russian Empire and the RSFSR , as well as the Lenin district in the Moscow province of the RSFSR. It existed until 1929. The center of the volost was the village of Taldom (in 1918-1930 - Leninsk [2] ).
| Volost of the Russian Empire (AE 3rd level) | |
| Lenin volost | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Province | Tverskaya |
| County | Kalyazinsky |
| Adm. Centre | with. Taldom (Leninsk city) |
| Includes | 121 settlements |
| Population ( 1926 ) | 17 464 people [one] |
| Center coordinates | |
| Date of Abolition | 1929 year |
Pre-Revolutionary Period
According to the data of 1890, 53 villages belonged to the Taldom volost, the largest of which were the village of Taldom (958 inhabitants), the villages of Akhtimneevo (573 inhabitants) and the Great Court (534 inhabitants). The average family size was 5.4 people, each accounted for 11.9 acres of land ownership.
The area of ββthe volost was 357.9 square miles; the absolute number of inhabitants was 12 124 people . According to these two indicators, the volost took first place in Kalyazinsky district, and the penultimate in terms of population density [3] .
Post-Revolutionary Period
1918 year. 8 villages of the volost went to Kimrsky district . By the decision of the Tver Provincial Executive Committee on December 3, 1918 with. Taldom was renamed to Leninsk, and Taldom volost to Leninsky.
1919 year. There are 46 villages in the volost.
1920 year There are 15 village councils in the volost: Atemnevsky, Votrinsky, Vysochkovsky, Grigorovsky, Zheldybensky, Zyatkovsky, Kamenevsky, Kvashensky, Platuninsky, Prislonsky, Rostovsky, Smenkovsky, Sotskovsky, Strashovsky, Uteninsky.
1921 year. By a decree of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee on August 15, 1921, the Lenin volost, together with five other volosts of the Kalyazinsky district, was included in the structure of the formed Leninsky district. [four]
1923 year. There are 15 village councils in the volost: Akhtimneevsky, Bobylinsky, Votryansky, Vysochkovsky, Vysochko-Zyatkovsky, Grigorovsky, Zheldybinsky, Kamenevsky, Karachunovsky, Kvashenkovsky, Platuninsky, Prislonsky, Rostovsky, Sotskovsky and Uteninsky [2] .
1924 year. The Vysochkovsky Village Council was reorganized into Vysochko-Leninsky, Karachunovsky was included in Akhtimneevsky, Sotskovsky in Kvashenkovsky [2] .
By a resolution of the Presidium of the Moscow City Council dated March 31, 1924, all villages of Starikovskaya and part of Ramenskaya volosts, which in the pre-revolutionary time constituted the Karavaevsky volost of Dmitrovsky district , as well as the northern part of Nushpolsky volost of the Alexandrovsky district and Mikhailovsky volost of the Pereyaslavsky district of the Vladimir province [1] [2] .
1925 year. The Votryansky village council is included in the Bobylinsky, Zheldybinsky in the Kvashenkovsky, Platuninsky in the Vysochko-Zyatkovsky, renamed Zyatkovsky. Formed Zhukovsky, Kalinkovsky, Kunilovsky, Lyapinsky, Nogovitsinsky, Pripustaevsky and Starikovsky; Sotskovsky Village Council was allocated from the Kvashenkovsky.
1926 year. The Lyapinsky Village Council was reorganized into Mineevsky [2] .
According to the materials of the 1926 All-Union population census, the population of 121 settlements of the volost was 17,464 people (8425 men, 9039 women), there were 3913 households, including 2936 peasant ones. In the villages of Akhtimneevo, Voldyn , Votrya , Zyatkovo , Prison, Rastovtsy , Serebrennikovo , Sotskoye , Trinity-Vyazniki , Yurkino , Kamenevo and Kvasyonki villages there were schools of the 1st level [1] .
1929 year. The Mineevsky village council was renamed Mishukovsky, Nogovitsinsky was included in the composition of Uteninsky.
During the reform of the administrative-territorial division of the USSR in 1929, the Lenin volost was abolished [2] , and its territory was divided between the Leninsky (Taldomsky since 1930) and the Kimrsky districts of the Kimry district of the Moscow region [5] . At that time, there were 17 village councils in the volost [2] .
Notes
- β 1 2 3 Handbook on populated areas of the Moscow province . - Moscow Statistics Division. - M. , 1929. - 2000 copies.
- β 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Handbook on the administrative-territorial division of the Moscow province (1917-1929) / A. A. Kobyakov. - M. , 1980 .-- 554 p. - 500 copies.
- β Collection of statistical information on the Tver province . - Statistics Division of the Tver Provincial Zemstvo Council. - Tver, 1890. - T. V. Kalyazinsky district.
- β Archival department of the Administration of the Tver region. Tver province. Administrative and territorial division (1917-1929). Handbook, 1992.
- β Handbook of administrative-territorial division of the Moscow region 1929-2004 . - M .: Kuchkovo field, 2011 .-- 896 p. - 1,500 copies - ISBN 978-5-9950-0105-8 .