Kelkety ( Kalm. Kelkd ) - a disappeared village in Tselinny district of Kalmykia . It was located at the Kelkety beam of the Ergeninsky Upland , in the western part of the Tselinny District of Kalmykia [1] .
| the village now does not exist | |
| Celquets | |
|---|---|
| State affiliation | |
| Entered into | Kalmyk ASSR , Trinity ulus |
| Coordinates | |
| Date of destruction | ( deportation of Kalmyks ) |
| Current state | destroyed |
| Modern location | Russia , Kalmykia , Tselinny district |
History
The village of Kelkety appeared at the turn of the 19-20th centuries. According to AM Pozdneev, in 1904, in the Zakha-Ekin tract in the Celtic clan there was a clan khurul , in which there were 17 people who were not officially clergy (16 of them were from Kelket clans). At the beginning of the 20th century, this private tribal khurul had two wooden buildings and three adobe buildings, as well as a house of worship [2] . The population of the Kelkets consisted of people from the Abganerovsky aimak, in particular, from the Noinahins and the Bakshen-Shebeners [3] .
In 1926, the Kelketovo Village Council was formed. In November 1929, the National Friendship collective farm was established on the territory of the village council, which was engaged in both cattle breeding and farming. In 1933, the farm had 2500 sheep, 300 cattle, 250 horses. At the collective farm, a cattle breeding farm operated. In 1936, an elementary boarding school for orphans was opened in Kelketi. Before the start of World War II , more than 200 families lived in the village [4] .
Apparently, after the deportation of Kalmyks, the village became desolate. On the administrative map of 1958 it is marked as the village of Rovnoye [5] . After the Kalmyks returned from deportation, most Kelketovites settled in a new place - in the village of Chagorta .
Notes
- ↑ Map of the General Staff of the Red Army of southern Russia • 2 km
- ↑ From the History of the Great Hurul Bogdo Dalai Lamin “Rashi Lhunbo” (inaccessible link)
- ↑ History of Kalmykia
- ↑ Master Plan for the Chagortinsky Rural Municipal Formation Archival copy of October 17, 2014 on the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Administrative map of the Stavropol Territory 1958