Pozdnyakovo is a village in Fatezhsky district of Kursk region . It is part of the Soldier's Village Council .
| Village | |
| Pozdnyakovo | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Kursk region |
| Municipal District | Fatezhsky |
| Rural settlement | Soldier Village Council |
| History and Geography | |
| Center height | 224 m |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | ↘ 153 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
| Nationalities | predominantly Russian |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +7 47144 |
| Postcode | 307112 |
| OKATO Code | 38244876001 |
| OKTMO Code | |
Geography
It is located in the southeast of the region, 22 km southeast of Fatezh on the River Ruda at the confluence of the Orekhovsky stream (old Orekhovaya Rudka) into it. Height above sea level - 224 m [2] . The nearest settlements are the villages of 1st Gnezdilovo , 2nd Gnezdilovo , Shuklino , Bunino village , Morozov farm.
History
The village got its name from the surname of the first borrowers - the Pozdnyakov classmates [3] and existed by the beginning of the 18th century [4] . At that time, the village was part of the Kuritsky camp of the Kursk district . The population of Pozdnyakova was attributed to the parish of the Vasilievsky church in the neighboring village of Gnezdilovo . In 1779, the village became part of the newly formed Fatezh district of Kursk governorate (since 1797 - the province ).
At the beginning of the 19th century, the villages of Pozdnyakovo and Bunino were part of the estate of the princes Meshchersky . In 1822, retired Colonel Alexander Dmitrievich Chertkov married Princess Sofya Pavlovna Meshcherskaya and thereby acquired this estate as a dowry. In the XIX century, the current Pozdnyakovo was half state owned and half owned by the village and consisted of two settlements: the village of Pozdnyakovo and the village of Pozdnyakovo on Orekhova Rudka . At the time of the abolition of serfdom in 1861, the peasants of the village of Pozdnyakovo owned: children of the college registrar Matvey Belenikhin (16 souls), wife of the college registrar Ekaterina Belenikhina (19 souls), wife of the provincial secretary Maria Mosolova (3 souls), Akulin Poznyakova (1 soul), Matvey Poznyakov (2 souls), wife of the provincial secretary Daria Poznyakova (1 soul), Claudia Poznyakova (2 souls), provincial secretary Afanasy Poznyakov (3 souls), Dmitry Poznyakov with his brothers (1 soul), college registrar Nikolai Poznyakov (18 souls) , wife of staff captain Lyubov Rakh manova (28 souls), wife of a college registrar Olga Ukolova (6 souls), Nadezhda Barteneva (13 souls), wife of a state adviser Maria Nitsenkova (37 souls). At the same time, the owner peasants of the village of Pozdnyakovo on Orekhova Rudka belonged to the college registrar Pavel Poznyakov (14 souls) [5] .
In 1862 there were 33 yards in the village, 353 people lived (176 males and 177 females) [6] . In 1877, there were already 84 yards in Pozdnyakovo, 612 people lived, a shop was operating. At that time, the village was part of the Dmitrievsky volost of Fatezh district [7] . In the 1920s, the village became part of the Shuklinsky Village Council of Fatezhsky District . In 1937 there were 118 yards in the village [8] . During the Great Patriotic War, from October 1941 to February 1943 she was in the zone of Nazi occupation. As of 1955, the center of the Pravda collective farm was located in the village [9] . Since 2006, Pozdnyakovo is connected to the regional center by an asphalt road. In 2010, the village was transferred to the Soldiers' Village Council .
Population
| Population | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1862 [10] | 1905 [11] | 1979 [12] | 1989 [13] | 2002 [14] | 2010 [1] |
| 353 | ↗ 438 | ↘ 355 | ↘ 244 | ↘ 209 | ↘ 153 |
In 1900, 389 people lived in the village (180 males and 209 females) [15] .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 2010 All-Russian Population Census. Volume 1. The number and distribution of the population of the Kursk region . Date of treatment January 31, 2014. Archived January 31, 2014.
- ↑ Weather forecast for the village of Pozdnyakovo (Kursk region)
- ↑ Fourth Law, 1899 .
- ↑ Territoire de Koursk / par le géodésiste Ivan Krouchtchov
- ↑ Proceedings of the Kursk Provincial Statistics Committee, 1863 , p. 249.
- ↑ List of populated places, 1868 , p. 157.
- ↑ Volosts and the most important villages of European Russia. Issue I. - SPb. : Centre. statistician Committee, 1880. - S. 284.
- ↑ Pozdnyakovo on the map of the Red Army M-36 (B) 1937
- ↑ Kursk region. Administrative division, 1955 , p. 46.
- ↑ Kursk Province: a list of settlements according to 1862. - SPb. : Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, 1868. - 174 p.
- ↑ Kursk collection. Issue 5. - Provincial Statistical Committee, 1907. - 76 p.
- ↑ Map of the General Staff M-36 (B) 1981
- ↑ General plan of the Soldier's Village Council of Fatezhsky District. Volume 2 .
- ↑ Database “Ethno-linguistic composition of Russian settlements”
- ↑ Kursk collection, 1901 , p. 48.
Literature
- Proceedings of the Kursk Provincial Statistics Committee. First release. - Printing house of the Kursk government, 1863. - 584 p.
- The list of the inhabited places of the Kursk province according to the data of 1862. - Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. St. Petersburg, 1868 .-- 174 p.
- The list of the inhabited places of the Kursk province according to the data of 1862. - Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. St. Petersburg, 1868 .-- 174 p.
- Blagoveshchensky N. A. Quarterly law. - Typography of the Partnership I. N. Kushnerev and Co., 1899. - 538 p.
- Zlatoverkhovnikov N.I. Kursk collection. Issue 1. - Printing house of the provincial government, 1901. - 360 p.
- Kursk region. Administrative division on July 1, 1955. - Kursk Book Publishing House, 1955. - 147 p.
- Biryukov A. Yu. Fatezhsky Territory. Past and present. - Fatezh, 2007 .-- 307 p.