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Great Sabitsa

Big Sabitsy is a village in the Voloshovsky rural settlement of the Luga district of the Leningrad region .

Village
Great Sabitsa
A country Russia
Subject of the federationLeningrad region
Municipal DistrictLuga
Rural settlementVoloshovsky
History and Geography
First mention1498 year
Former namesSabitsa, Sabitsa, Subabitsa, Subabitsa
TimezoneUTC + 3
Population
Population▼ 52 [1] people ( 2017 )
Digital identifiers
Telephone code+7 81372
Postcode188280
OKATO Code41233816016
OKTMO Code
Plan of the village of Sabitsa. 1926

Content

  • 1 History
  • 2 Geography
  • 3 Demographics
  • 4 notes

History

It was first mentioned in the scribe books of the Shelonsky Pyatina of 1498, as the village of Sabitsa and in 1571, as the village of Sabitsa - 4 lakes , in the Belsky graveyard of the Novgorod district [2] .

In the estate (estate) of Sabitsa in the Belsky graveyard of the Novgorod district according to the census of 1710, there was the landowner yard of Kondraty Kirillovich Veshensky, where in addition to him and his mother lived four more brothers and sisters, as well as yard people, 3 male and 3 female people. In the village of Sabitsa there were three yards: the landowner Pyotr Ivanovich Pazhinsky owned one peasant's yard , where 7 male and 10 female people, immigrants from the Yamburg district lived. The second yard was transported from the village of Gorki and belonged to the landowner Ivan Antipovich Ryabinin, behind him there were 3 male and 4 female people. The third courtyard belonged to Fedosya Eliseevna Sverbeeva, where 6 males and 7 females lived [3] .

As the village of Syabitsa, it is indicated on the map of the St. Petersburg province of 1792 by A. M. Wilbrecht [4] .

Then, under the name Syabitsy, the village is mentioned on the map of the St. Petersburg province of F. F. Schubert in 1834 [5] .

BIG SABITSI - the village belongs to the headquarters captain Andrei Apsentov, the number of inhabitants according to the audit: 28 mp., 30 w. P.
and court counselor Alexander Apsentov, the son of lieutenant Alexander and his brothers, the number of inhabitants under the audit: 28 m. p., 35 w. P.
SABITSY - the village belongs to the titular counselor Olga Veshenskaya, the number of inhabitants according to the audit: 9 m., 10 w. P.
titular adviser Ivan Kosyakov, the number of inhabitants under the audit: 5 m. P.
damsel Elena Kosyakova, the number of inhabitants under the audit: 3 m. p. [6] (1838)

The village of Syabitsa and the adjacent Seltso Syabitsy are marked on the map of Professor S. S. Kutorgi in 1852 [7] .

SABITSY - the village of gentlemen Vishnevskaya and Kosyakov, along a country road, the number of yards - 27, the number of souls - 50 m. [8] (1856)


BIG SABITSI - a village, the number of inhabitants according to the Xth revision of 1857: 76 m. n. (of which yard people - 1 w.p.) [9]


BIG SABS - owner's village by the Saba River, number of yards - 22, number of inhabitants: 66 metro stations, 59 g. p. [10] (1862)

  •  

    Big Sabitsy village on the map of 1863

According to the map from the “Historical Atlas of the St. Petersburg Province” of 1863, the village was called Syabitsy , near it was the village of the same name [11] .

In 1867, temporarily liable peasants of the village bought their land allotments from A. I. Engel and became the owners of the land [12] .

In 1870-1872, temporarily liable peasants bought their land allotments from MA Apseytov [13] .

In 1873-1874, peasants bought land allotments from A. A. Apseytov [14] .

According to the 1882 farmstead inventory, the village of Bolshoye Sabitsy of the Sabitsky Society of the Bielsko-Saber Parish consisted of three parts:
1) the former estate of Engel, houses - 31, allotment areas - 36, families - 16, number of inhabitants - 56 m. P.; the category of peasants is the owners.
2) the former estate of Al. Absentov, houses - 9, allotment areas - 18, families - 7, number of inhabitants - 17 m., 17 g. P.; the category of peasants is the owners.
3) the former estate of Mic. Absentov, houses - 16, allotment areas - 14, families - 8, number of inhabitants - 32 m., 30 w. P.; the category of peasants is the owners [9] .

According to the statistics on the national economy of the Luga district of 1891, one of the estates in the village of Sabitsa with an area of ​​50 acres belonged to the wife of college assessor E.I. Dmitrieva, the estate was acquired in 1885 for 500 rubles, the second estate belonged to the heirs of the provincial secretary V.I. Zakharov, the estate was acquired until 1868, the third estate of 543 tithes belonged to the merchant S.T. Kudryashov, the estate was acquired in 1883 for 1800 rubles, the fourth estate belonged to the clerk V.N. Osminsky. Sabitsa wasteland with an area of ​​93 tithes belonged to the widow of the court adviser N.V. Lavrov, the wasteland was acquired in 1868 for 500 rubles, and the Krutoy Ruchene wasteland near the village of Sabitsa with an area of ​​151 tithes belonged to college secretary I.I. Engel, the wasteland was acquired in 1871 [15] .

In 1900, according to the Memorial Book of the St. Petersburg Province, the lands of Sabitsa belonged to: merchant Trofim Ivanovich Bukmin - 355 acres, Novgorod merchant of the 2nd guild Leonty Andreevich Andreev - 355 acres, noblemen Antonina Kozheva and Alexander Pshenitsina - 95 acres, tradesman Ivan Antonovich Seeste - 238 acres [16] .

In the XIX - early XX centuries, the village administratively belonged to the Bielsko-Sabersky volost of the 4th zemsky section of the 2nd camp of the Luga district of St. Petersburg province.

According to the "Memorial Book of the St. Petersburg Province" for 1905, the village of Big Sabitsy was part of the Sabitsky rural society [17] .

From 1917 to 1927, the village was part of the Sabitsky village council of the Bielsko-Saber parish of Luga district.

According to a topographic map of 1926, the village numbered 132 peasant yards .

Since August 1927, as part of the Luga region [18] .

According to 1933, the village of Bolshie Sabitsy was the administrative center of the Sabitsky village council of the Luga region, which included 6 settlements: the villages of Bolshoye Sabitsy , Dubrovitsy, Elemno, Lozhek, Malye Sabitsy and the Sabitsky farm, with a total population of 806 people [19] .

According to 1936, the Sabitsa Village Council included 8 settlements, 227 households and 3 collective farms [20] .

From August 1, 1941 to January 31, 1944, the village was under occupation.

In 1958, the population of the village was 359 people [18] .

According to 1966, the village of Big Sabitsy was part of the Sabitsky village council and was its administrative center [21] .

According to 1973, the village of Big Sabitsy was part of the Verduzhsky village council [22] .

According to 1990 data, the village of Big Sabitsy was part of the Voloshovsky village council [23] .

In 1997, 102 people lived in the village of Bolshaya Sabitsy, Voloshovskaya Volost, in 2002 - 89 people (Russians - 88%) [24] [25] .

In 2007, 76 people lived in the village of Bolshoye Sabitsy, Voloshovsky JV [26] .

Geography

The village is located in the western part of the district on the highway 41K-145 ( Retyun - Sara-Log ).

The distance to the administrative center of the settlement is 27 km [26] .

The distance to the district center is 107 km [21] .

The distance to the nearest railway station Serebryanka is 70 km [21] .

The Sabitsa River flows through the village.

Demographics

Population size
171018381862195819972007 [27]2010 [28]
49↗ 155↘ 125↗ 359↘ 102↘ 76↘ 69
 

Notes

  1. ↑ Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad region / Comp. Kozhevnikov V.G. - Directory. - SPb. : Inkeri, 2017 .-- S. 138. - 271 p. - 3000 copies. Archived March 14, 2018 on Wayback Machine
  2. ↑ Andriyashev A. M. Materials on the historical geography of Novgorod land. Shelonskaya pyatina according to the scribe books of 1498-1576 I. Lists of villages. Typography by G. Lissner and D., 1912, p. 132 Archived December 3, 2013 by Wayback Machine
  3. ↑ comp. Koplienko V., Mogilnikov V. // Census of 1710: St. Petersburg province: Novgorod county: Shelonskaya pyatina: Zalesskaya half: Census book of the graves of Paozersky, Vasilyevsky, Sutotsky, Medvetsky, Lubinsky, Tursky, Kotorsky, Lyatsky, Belsky, Dremyattsky Petrovsky, Peredolsky, Kositsky, Sabelsky and Tryasovskaya volosts of the census of Anisim Sergeyevich Apseytov
  4. ↑ “Map of the circle of St. Petersburg” by A. M. Wilbrecht. 1792
  5. ↑ Topographic map of St. Petersburg province. 5th layout. Schubert. 1834
  6. ↑ Description of the St. Petersburg province in counties and camps . - SPb. : Provincial Printing House, 1838. - P. 121. - 144 p.
  7. ↑ Geognostic map of St. Petersburg province prof. S. S. Kutorgi, 1852
  8. ↑ Luga district // Alphabetical list of villages by counties and camps of the St. Petersburg province / N. Elagin. - SPb. : Printing House of the Provincial Government, 1856. - P. 137. - 152 p.
  9. ↑ 1 2 Materials on national economy statistics in the St. Petersburg province. Issue VI. Peasant farming in the Luga district. Part one. Tables. SPb. 1889, p. 14
  10. ↑ "Lists of the populated areas of the Russian Empire, compiled and published by the Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior" XXXVII St. Petersburg Province. As of 1862. SPb. ed. 1864 p. 93 Archived September 24, 2015 on the Wayback Machine
  11. ↑ "Historical Atlas of the St. Petersburg Province." 1863
  12. ↑ RGIA, F. 577, Op. 35, D. 495
  13. ↑ RGIA, F. 577, Op. 35, D. 370
  14. ↑ RGIA, F. 577, Op. 35, D. 366
  15. ↑ Materials on the statistics of the national economy in St. Petersburg province. Vol. Xiii. Private property in Luga district. - St. Petersburg, 1891, p. 406, p. 8, 232, 236, 240, 244
  16. ↑ Commemorative book of S. Petersburg province for 1900, part 2, Reference information, pages 77-80
  17. ↑ “Memorial book of the St. Petersburg province. 1905 ", p. 149
  18. ↑ 1 2 Handbook of the history of the administrative-territorial division of the Leningrad Region
  19. ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad region. - L., 1933, p. 47, 270 Archived on October 17, 2013.
  20. ↑ Administrative and economic guide to the Leningrad region. - L., 1936, p. 158 Archived March 30, 2016 on the Wayback Machine
  21. ↑ 1 2 3 Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad region / Comp. T.A. Badina. - Reference book. - L .: Lenizdat , 1966. - S. 54. - 197 p. - 8000 copies. Archived October 17, 2013. Archived October 17, 2013 on Wayback Machine
  22. ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad region. - Lenizdat, 1973, p. 243 Archived on March 30, 2016.
  23. ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad region. - Lenizdat, 1990, ISBN 5-289-00612-5, p. 90 Archived October 17, 2013.
  24. ↑ Koryakov Yu. B. Database “Ethno-linguistic composition of Russian settlements”. Leningrad region (neopr.) .
  25. ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad region. - SPb, 1997, ISBN 5-86153-055-6, p. 90 Archived on October 17, 2013.
  26. ↑ 1 2 Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad Region. - SPb., 2007, p. 113 Archived on October 17, 2013.
  27. ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad Region: [reference.] / Under the general. ed. V.A. Skorobogatova, V.V. Pavlova; comp. V. G. Kozhevnikov. - SPb., 2007. - 281 p. (unspecified) . Date of treatment April 26, 2015. Archived April 26, 2015.
  28. ↑ 2010 All-Russian Population Census. Leningrad region (neopr.) . Date of treatment August 10, 2014. Archived on August 10, 2014.
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Larger_Sabits&oldid=101947232


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