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Parshino (Tula region)

Parshino is a village in the Zaoksky district of the Tula region of the Russian Federation (formerly Parshin a , P o rshino). Included in the Romanovsky rural district of the Malakhovskoye municipality .

Village
Parshino
A country Russia
Subject of the federationTula region
Municipal DistrictZaoksky
Rural settlementMunicipal formation Malakhovskoe
History and Geography
Former namesParshina, Porshino.
Center height153 [1] m
TimezoneUTC + 3
Population
Population42 [2] people ( 2010 )
NationalitiesRussians and others
Digital identifiers
Telephone code+7 48734
Postcode301002
OKATO Code70222860007
OKTMO Code70622435261
zaokskiy.tularegion.ru/pos/malahovskoe/

Content

Geography

Located in the north of the Tula region, in the northern part of the Zaoksky district, two kilometers from the border with the Moscow region . The nearest major city is Serpukhov , located on the northern bank of the Oka , 8 km north of the village. The regional center of the town of Zaoksky is located 9 km south of the village. On public roads, the path to the district center is about 11 km, depending on the route chosen.

The village is located at the confluence of an unnamed stream in the Skniga River [3] . 2 km in the north-west is the nearest railway station Priokskaya, Kursk direction of the Moscow railway . 2 km east of the village lies the old Simferopol highway, which after three kilometers in the north connects with the federal highway M2 " Crimea ".

Numerous settlements and SNT are located near the village of Parshino. From the southeast side through the ravine, the village of Karpishchevo is located. 1 km in the north-east is the village of Upper Romanovo , and 2 km in the east is the village of Lower Romanovo .

The Skniga River flows through the village, which after 6 km in the north flows into the Oka River.

History

The village with the name Parshino, in Kashira district , is already on the map of the Moscow province in 1774 [4] . According to the General Land Surveying Plans of the Tula Province in 1790 , the village of Parshin and Aleksinsky Uyezd was located at the Skniga River [5] .

In the published book Lists of Populated Places of the Russian Empire, the village is listed as the owner village of P rshino near the Skniga River, with 23 yards and 189 inhabitants [6] [7] .

On the Special Map of European Russia by I. A. Strelbitsky , drawn up in 1865 - 1871 (sheet 58, edition of 1871), the village is indicated with the name Parshin a [8] . According to the three - tailed Military Topographic map of the Russian Empire , F.F. Schubert and P.A. Tuchkov, the village is also called Parshin a . [9] [10]

According to the reprinted map of I. A. Strelbitsky from 1918 , the village of Parshin a is marked on it as a village up to 30 yards in size [8] .

According to the map of the Red Army , by the beginning of the 1940s, the village acquired its modern name, Parshino, and consists of 55 yards [11] .

According to 1989, the population of the village was about 70 people [12] .

Before the revolution , the estate was located in the village. Also in the village was a church parish school .

After the revolution and the ensuing civil war , the estate was abandoned by its owners, and a school was opened in the main building of the estate. Over time, the school expanded and additional facilities were added to it. In the late 80s, the school was closed and dismantled by local residents for building materials, in the future the school was not restored. By the beginning of the 2000s, the building had turned into ruins.

The village had a favorable location due to the fact that it was located on the Serpukhov highway, which connected the district towns of Serpukhov and Aleksin .

In Soviet times, the state farm was located in the village, which after perestroika ceased to exist.

Population

Population
2010 [2]
42

Internal Division

SNT Berezkino [13] .

Notes

  1. ↑ Weather in the village of Prashino (Zaoksky district, Tula region)
  2. ↑ 1 2 2010 All-Russian Population Census. The number and distribution of the population of the Tula region (Neopr.) . Date of treatment May 18, 2014. Archived May 18, 2014.
  3. ↑ State Water Register: untitled river, near s. Parshino (neopr.) . textual.ru. Date of treatment March 22, 2016.
  4. ↑ Map of the Moscow Province composed of the General District Surveying Plans. Scale 1: 300000. 1774 g.
  5. ↑ General surveying plans for the counties of the Tula province. 2 versts in 1 inch. 1790
  6. ↑ Abbreviations used in the list of populated areas of the Tula province
  7. ↑ Lists of populated places of the Russian Empire. Vol. 44: Tula province: Compiled according to 1859
  8. ↑ 1 2 Special map of European Russia. Sheet 58
  9. ↑ Military topographic map of the Russian Empire. Sheet 13-15 "Laptevo". Scale: 3 versts per inch. 1878. A variant of the map without the line of the Moscow-Kursk railway.
  10. ↑ Military topographic map of the Russian Empire. Sheet 13-15 "Laptevo". Scale: 3 versts per inch. 1878-1902 Variant of a map with the line of the Moscow-Kursk railway.
  11. ↑ Map of the Red Army N-37 (A). 1 km. Moscow, Kaluga, Tula regions. Terrain condition for 1935-1941
  12. ↑ Maps of the General Staff. N-37 (A). Moscow, Kaluga and Tula regions. Scale 1: 100000
  13. ↑ Postcodes and codes OKTMO, OKATO. Parshino Village, Zaoksky District, Tula Region
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Parshino_(Tula region )&oldid = 78450817


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