Yurovo is a village that became part of the city of Moscow in 1985. Refers to the North-Western administrative district .
| The settlement, which became part of Moscow | |
| Yurovo | |
|---|---|
| Story | |
| As part of Moscow with | 1985 |
| Status at time of inclusion | village |
| Location | |
| Coordinates | |
Geographical position
The village of Yurovo is located in the district of Kurkino , the North-Western administrative district, the city of Moscow [1] .
History
The first mention dates back to the second half of the 16th century [1] .
At the beginning of the XVII century, most of the villages from Cherkizovo patrimony were sold. In 1646, Yurovo was in the estate of Andrei Lvovich Pleshcheev . After the 1650s, Yurovo entered the estate of Ivan Alekseevich Vorotynsky . In 1679, the boyar died and the village passed to his daughter Natalya Ivanovna Vorotynskaya [1] .
In 1762, 88 men and 73 women lived in Yurovo. In 1764, part of Yurovo passed to Prince Sergei Alexandrovich Menshikov , and the other part was to Prince A.P. Golitsyn. In 1771 there was an epidemic, because of it, 12 people died in the Menshikov territory and 10 in the Golitsyn site [1] .
In 1812, the territory completely passed to Menshikov. In his time, peasants were on corvee. After the death of Sergey Alexandrovich Menshikov, the territory passed to his son Alexander Sergeyevich. Under him, his peasants were on a quitrent. In 1861, peasants received land of 86.5 acres. Only the landowner could engage in fishing in Skhodna, and peasants were allowed in the ponds. In 1873, the village passed to Karl Karlovich Genka. In the 1880s, the village has 18 yards and 140 souls live [1] .
At the beginning of the 20th century in Yurovo there are: Geltishchev's dacha, Genke brothers cloth factory, Zhiro brothers' dyeing factory, and a vegetable shop. In 1912, the Genke factory stopped working, as the owner went bankrupt. After 1917, agriculture fell into decay. In 1927, 37 farms and 195 residents were located in Yurovo. Until 1929 the village was in the Ulyanovsk volost , after that in the Skhodnensky, Krasnogorsk and Khimki districts. In the 1930s and 1940s, the majority of the young population moved to the nearest cities to the industrial zone. In March 1984, Yurovo came under the control of the Moscow City Council of People's Deputies. In December 1985, it is part of the city of Moscow [1] .
In honor of the village was named Yurovskaya street .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 Yurovo (Moscow) . Date of treatment May 1, 2015.