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Zamoshye (Braslavsky district)

Zamoshye ( Belorussian. Zamoshsha ) is a village in the Braslavsky district of the Vitebsk region of Belarus , in the Akhremovetsky village council . The population is 313 people (2009) [1] .

Village
Zamoshye
Belor. Suede
A country Belarus
RegionVitebsk
AreaBraslavsky
Village CouncilAkhremovetsky
History and Geography
TimezoneUTC + 3
Population
Population313 people ( 2009 )
Digital identifiers
Postcode
Car code2

Geography

The village is located 16 km south of the city of Braslav . A number of small lakes are located near the village, the largest of them are Shilovo and Serednik. Three kilometers east of the village, the P3 highway runs on the Sharkovshchina - Braslav section, and a local road leads from Zamoshye to the highway. The nearest railway station in Sharkovshchina , 30 km to the southeast.

History

The first mention in the sources of the village under the name Danishevschina refers to 1524, when the Grand Duke Sigismund I transferred the estate to M. Mikulich in exchange for the lost possessions in the Smolensk region. According to the administrative-territorial reform of the mid-16th century, the area became part of the Braslav district of the Vilnius Voivodeship [2] .

In 1541, the estate was bought by Pavel Sapega . In 1541-1566 and 1600-1754, Zamoshye was in the possession of the Sapeg clan, and from the middle of the 18th century it changed owners many times. In 1761, Smolensky's chestnut S. Buzhinsky built a wooden Greek Catholic church of Saints Peter and Paul. During the uprising of Tadeusz Kosciuszko in 1794, a battle between the rebels and Russian troops took place near the town [2] .

As a result of the second division of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1793), Zamoshye turned out to be part of the Russian Empire, in the Disney county of Minsk province . In 1800, the town was jointly owned by S. Buzhinsky and the Greek Catholic parish, there were 22 courtyards, a wooden church, plebians , a wooden manor house on the banks of Lake Serednik, and a windmill. During the Patriotic War of 1812, the apartments of Emperor Alexander I and I. Murat were in Zamoshye. During the uprising of 1863, a rebel detachment operated in the vicinity of Samosh. At the end of the 19th century, there were 28 houses in the town [2] . In 1893, a stone Orthodox church of Saints Peter and Paul was built here [3] .

According to the Riga Peace Treaty (1921), Zamoshye became part of the interwar Polish Republic , where it belonged to the Braslav county of the Vilnius Voivodeship . Since 1939 - as part of the BSSR . In 1971, there were 275 inhabitants and 93 courtyards in Zamoshye [2] .

  External Images
 Peter and Paul Church on the Globe of Belarus website

Monuments

  • Peter and Paul Church (Zamoshye)

Notes

  1. ↑ Census results
  2. ↑ 1 2 3 4 Castus Shydloўskі. Zamoshsha // Encyclopedic histories of Belarus / Redkal: G.P. Pashkoў (red halons) i insh .; Mast. E.E. Zhakevich. - Mn. : BelEn , 1996. - T. 3: Gimnazіі-Kadentsya. - S. 403. - 527 p. - 10,000 copies. - ISBN 985-11-0041-2 .
  3. ↑ Suede on the Globus Belarus website

Literature

  • Belarusian encyclopedia: At 18 vol. T. 6: Dada - Zastava / Redkal .: G.P. Pashko і іnsh. - Mn. : BelEn , 1998.- S. 525. - 576 p.: Il. - 10,000 copies. - ISBN 985-11-0106-0 .
  • Castus Shydloўskі. Zamoshsha // Encyclopedic histories of Belarus / Redkal: G.P. Pashkoў (red halons) i insh .; Mast. E.E. Zhakevich. - Mn. : BelEn , 1996. - T. 3: Gimnazіі-Kadentsya. - S. 403. - 527 p. - 10,000 copies. - ISBN 985-11-0041-2 .

Links

  • Suede on the Globus Belarus website
  • Suede on Radzima.org
  • Zamoshye village (Braslavsky district, Vitebsk region, Republic of Belarus)
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zamoshye_(Braslavsky_district)&oldid=101248968


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