Koptevichi ( Belorussian. Koptsevichy , Polish. Kopcewicze ) is a village in the Smorgon district of the Grodno region of Belarus .
| Village | |
| Koptevichi | |
|---|---|
| Belor. Koptsevichy | |
| A country | |
| Region | Grodno |
| Area | Smorgon |
| Village council | Krevsky |
| History and Geography | |
| Former names | Koptsevichi |
| Square | 0.416 km² |
| NUM height | 252 [1] m |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 35 people ( 2009 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +375 1592 |
| Postcode | 231024 [2] |
| SOATO | 4 256 827 078 |
It is part of the Krevo Village Council [3] .
Located at the southwestern border of the area. The distance to the Smorgon district center by road is about 35 km, to the center of the village council of the Krevo agro-town, in a straight line, a little less than 8 km. The nearest settlements - Geystuns , Golovatishki , Zagorotyany [4] . The area occupied is 0.416 km², the length of the borders is 5320 m [5] .
Content
History
According to the inventory of 1789, it was part of the Krevo elder. The suppression of the Kosciuszko uprising of 1794 was followed by the Third Partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth , as a result of which the territory of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was ceded to the Russian Empire and the village was included in the newly formed Krevsky volost of the Oshmyany county of Vilna province . In 1866, the Koptevichs numbered 31 revision souls and were part of the village district of Chukhny [6] .
After the Soviet-Polish war , which ended with the Riga Treaty , in 1921 Western Belarus moved to the Polish Republic and the village was included in the newly formed rural commune of Krevo, Oshmyany county, Vilnius province.
In 1938, the Koptevichs numbered 26 smokes (yards) and 143 souls [7] .
In 1939, according to a secret protocol concluded between the USSR and Germany , Western Belarus was in the sphere of interests of the Soviet state and the territory of the Red Army occupied its territory. The village became part of the newly formed Smorgon district of the Vileika region of the BSSR . After the reorganization of the administrative-territorial division of the BSSR, the village was included in the new Molodechno region in 1944. In 1960, due to the new organization of the administrative-territorial division and the abolition of the Molodechno region, the Koptevichs became part of the Grodno region.
Until 2008, the village was part of the Ordashinsky Village Council [8] .
Population
| 1938 | 1999 | 2009 |
|---|---|---|
| 143 [7] | 56 [9] | 35 [10] |
Transportation
A local dirt road of local importance N7976 is connected to the highway N6727 Koptevichi - Korendy - Ordashi - Boyarsk . The highway N7977 Orlenyat - Koptevichi - Korendy - Ordashi - Chetyrki also passes through the village [11] .
Regular bus routes pass through the village [12] :
- Ashmyany - Geystuns
- Smarhoń - Koptevichi
Notes
- ↑ Altitude
- ↑ Postal Code of Koptevichi Village (inaccessible link)
- ↑ Directory of settlements of Belarus (SOATO)
- ↑ Map sheet N-35-65 Krevo . Scale: 1: 100,000. State of the area in 1983. 1986 edition
- ↑ DECISION OF THE SMORGON REGIONAL COUNCIL OF DEPUTIES November 8, 2012 No. 120
- ↑ Kopcewicze (Polish) in the Geographical Dictionary of the Kingdom of Poland and other Slavic countries , Volume XV, part 2 (Januszpol - Wola Justowska) from 1902
- ↑ 1 2 List of settlements of the Republic of Poland. Volume I. Vilnius Voivodeship . “Main Department of Statistics”, Warsaw, 1938 S. 34. (Polish)
- ↑ Decision of the Grodno Regional Council of Deputies of June 25, 2008 No. 92 “On resolving issues of the administrative-territorial structure of the Smorgon region” (inaccessible link)
- ↑ According to the 1999 census. The source of data is “Demographic GIS of the rural population of the Republic of Belarus”.
- ↑ Census data for 2009
- ↑ The list of roads with bearing capacity of pavement of 10 tons and 6 tons per axle according to Smorgonsky DRSU 134
- ↑ Bus station timetables