Botovo is a village in the Sergiev-Posad district of the Moscow region of Russia , part of the rural settlement of Bereznyakovskoye .
| Village | |
| Botovo | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Moscow region |
| Municipal district | Sergiev Posad |
| Rural settlement | Bereznyakovskoe |
| History and geography | |
| Center height | 218 m |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | β 22 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Postcode | 141327 |
| OKATO code | 46215806014 |
| OKTMO code | 46615406116 |
Population
| Population | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1859 [2] | 1886 [3] | 1895 [4] | 1905 [5] | 1926 [6] | 2002 [7] | 2006 [8] | 2010 [1] |
| 200 | β 190 | β 152 | β 200 | β 208 | β 36 | β 31 | β 22 |
Geography
The village of Botovo is located in the north of the Moscow region, in the south-eastern part of the Sergiev-Posad district, about 59 km north of the Moscow ring road and 15 km east of the Sergiev Posad station of the Yaroslavl direction of the Moscow Railway [9] .
9 km west of the village passes Yaroslavl highway M8 , 28 km south-west - Moscow small ring A107 , 2 km north-east - Moscow large ring A108 , 16 km south - Fryanovskoe highway P110 .
The nearest rural settlements are the villages of Vzidnevo , Voronino and Malinniki .
History
In the "List of populated areas" of 1862 - the village of the sovereign volosts of the 1st camp of the Aleksandrovsky district of the Vladimir province on the left side of the Trinity trading road from the city of Aleksadrov to Sergievsky Posad of the Moscow province , 27 versts from the district city and stanovoy apartment, at the Moklokovsky ravine, with 33 yards and 200 inhabitants (94 men, 106 women) [2] .
As of 1895, the village of the Botovsky volost of the Aleksandrovsky district with 152 inhabitants (75 men, 77 women). The main industries of the population were arable farming, the production of paper tissue and silk unwinding, 10 people left as servants for the fishery industry [4] .
According to the materials of the All-Union Population Census of 1926, the village of the Okhota village council of the Sharapovo volost of the Sergievsky uyezd of the Moscow province is 17.1 km from the local highway and 19.2 km from the Sergievo station of the Northern Railway; there were 208 people (102 men, 106 women), there were 39 peasant farms [6] .
1927-1929 - the center of the Botovsky village council of the Sharapovsky volost [10] .
Since 1929 - the settlement of the Moscow region in the composition:
- Malinnikovsky Village Council of the Sergievsky District (1929β1930) [11]
- Malinnikovsky village council of Zagorsk district (1930-1954) [12]
- The Bereznyakovsky Village Council of the Zagorsky District (1954β1963, 1965β1991) [12] [13] [14] ,
- Bereznyakovskogo village council Mytishchi enlarged rural area (1963-1965) [13]
- Bereznyakovskogo village council Sergiev Posad district (1991-1994) [14]
- Bereznyakovsky rural district of Sergiev-Posad district (1994-2006) [15] ,
- rural settlement Bereznyakovskoe Sergiev Posad district (2006 - present.) [16] [17] .
Notes
- β 1 2 The number of the rural population and its distribution on the territory of the Moscow Region (the results of the All-Russian Population Census 2010). Volume III (DOC + RAR). M .: Territorial body of the Federal State Statistics Service in the Moscow region (2013). Circulation date October 20, 2013. Archived October 20, 2013.
- β 1 2 Lists of populated areas of the Russian Empire. Vi. Vladimir Province. According to the 1859 / processed art. ed. M. Raevsky . - Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. - SPb. , 1863. - 283 s.
- β Volosts and the most important settlements of European Russia. Issue II: Moscow Province of Industrialization. Moscow, Tver, Yaroslavl, Kostroma, Nizhny Novgorod, Vladimir . - Central Statistical Committee. - SPb. , 1886. - 317 s.
- β 1 2 The memorial book of the Vladimir province. - Vladimir, 1895.
- β List of populated places of Vladimir province. - Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. - Vladimir, 1905.
- β 1 2 Guide to the settlements of the Moscow province . - Moscow Statistical Division. - M. , 1929. - 2000 copies.
- β Data from the 2002 All-Russian Population Census: Table No. 02c. Population size and the predominant nationality for each rural locality. M .: Federal State Statistics Service, 2004
- β Alphabetical list of settlements in municipal districts of the Moscow region as of January 1, 2006 (RTF + ZIP). The development of local government in the Moscow region. The date of circulation is February 4, 2013. Archived January 11, 2012.
- β D. Botovo . Public cadastral map . Rosreestr. Released on March 21, 2016. (unavailable link)
- β Reference book on the administrative-territorial division of the Moscow province (1917-1929) / A. A. Kobyakov. - M. , 1980. - p. 287. - 554 p. - 500 copies
- Handbook on the Administrative-Territorial Division of the Moscow Region 1929β2004, 2011 , p. 499.
- β 1 2 Handbook on the Administrative-Territorial Division of the Moscow Region 1929β2004, 2011 , p. 155.
- β 1 2 Handbook on the Administrative-Territorial Division of the Moscow Region 1929β2004, 2011 , p. 156.
- β 1 2 Handbook on the Administrative-Territorial Division of the Moscow Region 1929β2004, 2011 , p. 158.
- Handbook on the Administrative-Territorial Division of the Moscow Region 1929β2004, 2011 , p. 497.
- β Law of the Moscow Region dated February 28, 2005 No. 60/2005-OZ βOn the status and borders of the Sergiev-Posad Municipal District and newly formed municipalitiesβ (adopted by the Resolution of the Moscow Regional Duma of February 9, 2005 No. 8/128-P, original version ) . The appeal date is March 7, 2015.
- β Resolution of the Governor of the Moscow Region of November 29, 2006 No. 156-PG βOn the exclusion of rural districts from the registration data of administrative-territorial and territorial units of the Moscow Regionβ . The appeal date is April 17, 2014.
Literature
- Handbook on the administrative-territorial division of the Moscow region 1929-2004 . - M .: Kuchkovo Pole, 2011. - 896 p. - 1500 copies - ISBN 978-5-9950-0105-8 .
Links
- Botovo on the map . Old maps on-line . This is a place.ru. The appeal date is March 21, 2016.