Survilishki ( Belor. Survіlіshkі ) - a village in Belarus as part of the Trabsky village council of Ivyevsky district of the Grodno region . The population of 66 people (2009) [1] .
| Village | |
| Survilishki | |
|---|---|
| Belor. Survіlіshkі | |
| A country | |
| Region | The Grodno region |
| Area | Ivyevsky district |
| Village Council | Trabsky Village Council |
| History and Geography | |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 66 people |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Postcode | |
| Car code | four |
Content
Geography
The village is located 6 km northwest of the center of the village council, the village of Traby and 28 km north of the city of Ivye . The village stands on the small river Kleva , a tributary of Gavia . The nearest railway station is Jachymovshchina ( Molodechno - Lida line ) is 15 km from the village. 3 km west of the village of Surviliški, the border with Lithuania passes; Surviliški is located in the border zone of the Republic of Belarus.
History
In 1510, a Catholic parish was founded here [2] , in the first half of the 16th century the settlement belonged to the Survilov family, from which it received its name. The estate of Survilov was located on the highway leading from Trab to Vilno [3] . In the second half of the 16th century, representatives of the Gaiko clan (Gaikovskys) owned Survilishki; a wooden church of the Holy Trinity was built with their funds [2] [4] .
According to the administrative-territorial reform of the mid-16th century, the settlement became part of the Oshmyany district of the Vilnius Voivodeship , and in the 17th – 18th centuries it changed owners many times [3] .
As a result of the third division of the Commonwealth (1795), the village became part of the Russian Empire , in Oshmyany district . Since 1840 - the estate of the Poplavsky family, which throughout the 19th century built a manor in Survilishki. In 1880, a stone belfry was attached to the church of the Holy Trinity [4] . In 1905, the village totaled 40 inhabitants [3]
In 1921-1939, Survilishki were part of the interwar Polish Republic , where they belonged to the Volozhin district of the Novogrudok Voivodeship .
In 1939, Survilishki became part of the BSSR , from June 26, 1941 to July 8, 1944 they were under fascist occupation.
Current status
There are a secondary school, a club, a library, a feldsher-midwife station, and a communications department. The wooden church of the Holy Trinity, an architectural monument of the 16th century burned down at the end of the 20th century, only ruins of the belfry remained from it. In 1992, a new Catholic church was built, it also burned in 2003, but was restored. The ruins of several buildings, a garden and several park alleys remained from the Poplavsky estate of the 19th century [5] .
Literature
- Entsiklapedy gistory Belarus / Redkal .: G.P. Pashkoў (red halons) i insh .; Mast. E.E. Zhakevich. - Мn .: BelEn. : M-Pood. ISBN 985-11-0141-9
Notes
- ↑ Census 2009 results
- ↑ 1 2 Parish of the Holy Trinity on the site of the Catholic Church in Belarus
- ↑ 1 2 3 Etsiklapedy gistoryі Belarusі / Redkal .: G.P. Pashkoў (halogens of the red.) I insh .; Mast. E.E. Zhakevich. - Mn .: BelEn: M-Pood. ISBN 985-11-0141-9
- ↑ 1 2 “The architecture of Belarus. Entsyklapedychny davendnik ". Minsk, “Belarus Encyclapedia Name Petrusya Brokki”, 1993. 620 is old. ISBN 5-85700-078-5 .
- ↑ Website globus.tut.by