Sofiysky Vyselki is a village within the Paramonovsky rural settlement of the Korsakovsky district of the Oryol region .
| Village | |
| Sofia Villages | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Oryol Region |
| Municipal District | Korsakovsky |
| Rural settlement | Paramonovskoe |
| History and Geography | |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | ↘ 121 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +7 48667 |
| Postcode | 303584 |
| OKATO Code | 54226825009 |
| OKTMO Code | |
Content
Geography
Located on both sides of the Novosil - Korsakovo road, 7 km from the regional center.
Title
The name according to legend comes from the name of some Countess Sophia - the owner, evicted from the capital (representative of the upper class).
History
The village appeared no later than the middle of the XIX century [2] . And by the end of the same century (probably after the abolition of serfdom ), part of the inhabitants founded second-order settlements - the village of Zeleny Dubok on the road to Korsakovo, and after the revolution on the road to Malinovo - third-order settlements - the village of Zeleny Dubok.
In the parish lists for 1857 it was simply indicated as “Vyselki, colloquially Sofiyskaya Khutor” with landowner peasants in the amount of 160 people and belonged to the parish of the village of Nikolskoye ( Bredikhino ) of the Nikolaev Church [3] .
In 1859, the population was 192 people with 20 yards [4] . In 1816, the village belonged to the landowner Durasov Mikhail Zinovievich [5] .
Over time, the Sofia Vyselki expanded and by 1915 the population was already 365 people and 53 yards [6] .
The village until 1925 was part of the Novosilsky district of the Tula province .
Population
| Population | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 1857 [3] | 1859 [7] | 1915 [6] | 2010 [1] |
| 160 | ↗ 192 | ↗ 365 | ↘ 121 |
People Associated with the Village
- Fomin Nikolay Nikitovich - Hero of the Soviet Union , tanker, participant in the Great Patriotic War.
- Mikhail Efimovich Konoplin - artist, participant in the Great Patriotic War, member of the Union of Journalists of Russia . [8] [9]
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 2010 All-Russian Population Census. 7. The population of urban districts, municipalities, urban and rural settlements, urban settlements, rural settlements of the Oryol region . Date of treatment February 1, 2014. Archived February 1, 2014.
- ↑ Mayorova T.V., Polukhin O.V. Historical - toponymic dictionary of the Novosilsky district of the Tula province. - Tula. 2014 - ISBN 978-5-905154-18-8
- ↑ 1 2 Keppen P.I. Cities and villages of the Tula province in 1857. Based on the parish lists of the Tula diocese. - SPb. : Imperial Academy of Sciences, 1858.
- ↑ Levshin V. Lists of the populated places of the Russian Empire according to 1859-1862. Tula province / ed. E. Ogorodnikova. - SPb. : Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, 1862.
- ↑ State archive of the Oryol region. - 7 RS (revision tale, 1816), d.610.
- ↑ 1 2 Handbook of New Keppen. Parishes of the Tula diocese (according to the clergy records, 1915-1916) / comp. D.N. Antonov. - M .: Open Society Institute, 2001.
- ↑ State archive of the Oryol region. - 7 RS (revision tale, 1816), d.610
- ↑ Korneva V.I. Grad on Ostrozhnaya Hill. - Eagle: Labor, 2008. - ISBN 5-89436-140-0 .
- ↑ Artist M.E. Konoplin
Links
- Map PGM. Tula province
- Military topographic map of the Russian Empire of the 19th century (Schubert map). Tula province, (sheet 16-15)
- Map of the Red Army. 1941 Oryol, Lipetsk and Tula regions