The Vertlinsky volost is an administrative-territorial unit within the Klinsky district of the Moscow province of the Russian Empire and the RSFSR . It existed until 1929, the center of the volost was the village of Vertlinskoye , and then the village of New .
| Volost of the Russian Empire (AE 3rd level) | |
| Vertlinsky volost | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Province | Moscow |
| County | Klinsky |
| Adm. Centre | with. Vertlinskoe |
| Includes | 110 settlements |
| Population ( 1926 ) | 6557 people [one] |
| β’ percentage of the county population - 5.14% | |
| Center coordinates | |
| Date of Abolition | 1929 year |
It was formed in the 90s of the XIX century from part of the Solnechnogorsk volost of the Klinsky district and assigned to its 1st camp.
According to the data of 1899, there was a volost government in the village of Vertlinsky, there were 1-class and 2-class church parish schools, in the villages of Obushkovo, Timonovo and Rozhdestvensky there were zemstvo schools. In the village of Grishimovo was the apartment of the Zemsky chief [2] .
In the early 1910s in the villages of Botino, Merzloe , Muravyovo , Obushkovo, Timonovo and Fofanovo there were Zemsky schools, in the village of Zelenino - the school of the Moscow Imperial Educational House [3] .
After the October Revolution of 1917, a network of village councils was created in the volost, of which there were 16 in 1920: Vertlinsky, Vorobievsky, Gudinsky, Dubininsky, Zakharyinsky, Merzlovsky, Mostovsky, Moshnitsky, Muravyovsky, Obushkovsky, Ryginsky, Senezhsky, Sergeevsky, Staro-Stansky, Timonovsky and Fofanovsky.
Between 1923 and 1927 some of the village councils were reorganized, but then underwent a reverse reorganization. The only exception was the Fofanovsky village council, which from the 3rd attempt was reorganized into Cheprinsky .
In 1929, the composition of the village councils looked like this: Vertlinsky, Vorobievsky, Gudinsky, Dubininsky, Zakharyinsky, Merzlovsky, Mostovsky, Moshnitsky, Muravyovsky, Obushkovsky, Ryginsky, Senezhsky, Sergeevsky, Staro-Stansky, Timonovsky and Cheprinsky [4] .
According to the 1926 All-Union Census, the population of 110 settlements of the volost was 6,557 people (3,084 men, 3,473 women), there were 1,311 households, including 1,196 peasant ones. There were schools in the villages of Vertlinskoye , Leonidovo , Merzlovo, Novoe, Obushkovo, Timonovo, Trofimovo, Cheprino and Rozhdestvensky Pogost [1] .
During the reform of the administrative-territorial division of the USSR in 1929, the Vertlinsky volost was abolished, and its territory was divided between Solnechnogorsk and Dmitrov districts of the Moscow district of the Moscow region [5] .
Notes
- β 1 2 Handbook on populated areas of the Moscow province (Based on materials from the 1926 All-Union Census) . - Moscow Statistics Division. - M. , 1929. - S. 242-247. - 2000 copies.
- β Memorial book of the Moscow province for 1899 / A.V. Avrorin. - M. , 1899. - S. 285-287.
- β Populated areas of the Moscow province / B.N. Penkin. - Moscow Metropolitan and Provincial Statistical Committee. - M. , 1913. - S. 263-266. - 454 s.
- β Handbook of administrative-territorial division of the Moscow province (1917-1929) / A. A. Kobyakov. - M. , 1980 .-- S. 148-149. - 554 s. - 500 copies.
- 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 .