Orlovo is a former village in Russia , which became part of Moscow in 1984. It was located on the territory of the modern district of Novo-Peredelkino . [one]
| The settlement, which became part of Moscow | |
| Orlovo | |
|---|---|
| Story | |
| As part of Moscow with | 1984 |
| Status at time of inclusion | village |
| Location | |
| Coordinates | |
History
It is known that from 1568 the village of Orlovo was owned by the Moscow Miracles Monastery . [one]
According to the description of 1624, near the village was an old wooden Pokrovskaya church. In 1678 there was a monastery courtyard in the village, 3 courtyards of grooms, 13 peasant yards and 7 Bobyl yards, in total there were 73 inhabitants. In 1698, the wooden church of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God was disassembled to the place of the Intercession Church. [one]
The village belonged to the monastery until the middle of the XVIII century, and in 1764 it passed to the state under the jurisdiction of the College of Economy . [one]
The first industrial establishments appeared in Orlovo in 1825. The Moscow merchant I.E. Yepaneshnikov built a carpet factory here, which was then transferred to the merchant I.I. Peshkov. [one]
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 History of Moscow districts. Encyclopedia / ed. Averyanova K.A. - M .: Astrel, AST, 2008 .-- 830 p.