Ryzhevsky village council - the abolished administrative and territorial unit that existed in the territory of the Moscow province and the Moscow region in 1925-1959.
| Village Council of the USSR (AE 4th level) | |
| Ryzhevsky village council | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| SSR | RSFSR |
| Region | Moscow region |
| Area | Yegoryevsky |
| Adm Centre | Reddish |
| Population ( 1926 ) | 1245 people |
| Coordinates of the administrative center | |
| Date of education | 1925 |
| Date of abolition | 1959 |
| Timezone | MSK + -1 ( UTC + 3 ) |
The Ryzhevsky village council was formed in 1925 as a part of the Egoryevsky volost of the Egoryevsky uyezd of the Moscow province by combining Kostylevsky and Nekrasovsky with / with.
On November 16, 1926, Zabelinsky and Kostylevsky s / s were distinguished from the Ryzhevsky s / s [1] .
According to the data of 1926, the village council included the village of Ryzhevo , the villages of Zabelino , Kostylyovo , Kurbatiha , Nekrasovo , Orly, and Tanyaevskaya [2] .
In 1929, Ryzhevsky s / s was assigned to the Egoryevsky District of the Orekhovo-Zuevsky District of the Moscow Region. At the same time Kostylevsky was attached to him.
On June 14, 1954, the Gridino-Shuvoi Village Soviet was joined to the Ryzhevsky village council .
On September 25, 1958, the village of Gridino-Shuvoi was transferred from Ryzhevsky s / s to the administrative subordination of the workers' settlement of the Red Weaver .
June 27, 1959 Ryzhevsky s / s was abolished. At the same time, its territory (the settlements of Kostylyovo, Kurbatikh, Nekrasovo, Eagles and Ryzhevo) was transferred to administrative subordination to the working village of Red Tkach [3] .
Notes
- ↑ A Handbook on the Administrative-Territorial Division of the Moscow Province (1917-1929) / Kobyakov A. A. .. - M. , 1980. - 554 p. - 500 copies
- ↑ Directory of settlements of the Moscow province . - Moscow Statistical Division. - M. , 1929. - 2000 copies.
- ↑ A Handbook on the Administrative-Territorial Division of the Moscow Region 1929–2004 .. - M .: Kuchkovo Pole, 2011. - 896 p. - 1500 copies - ISBN 978-5-9950-0105-8 .