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Ludvinovo (Berestovitsky district)

Ludvinovo ( Belorussian. Ludvinova [1] , there is also Belorussian. Ludzvinova , Polish. Ludwinów ) - a village in the Berestovitsky district of the Grodno region of Belarus .

Village
Ludvinovo
Belor. Lyudvіnova
A country Belarus
RegionGrodno
AreaBerestovitsky
Village CouncilBerestovitsky
History and Geography
Former namesLudvinov, Ludvinow
Square0.1173 km²
TimezoneUTC + 3
Population
Population8 people ( 2015 )
Digital identifiers
Telephone code+375 1511
Postcode231778
SOATO4 204 832 071

It is part of the Berestovitsky village council [2] .

Located at the eastern border of the area. The distance to the regional center Bolshaya Berestovitsa by road is 5 km and to the railway station Berestovitsa - 13 km (the Mosty – Berestovitsa line ). The nearest settlements are Crows , Zbory , Eminovtsy [3] . The area occupied is 0.1173 km², the length of the borders is 3058 m [4] .

Content

Title

The name comes from the name of the former owner of the village (then still farm ) Ludwin Kakhovsky [1] .

History

Ludvinovo is marked on the map of Schubert (mid-19th century) as a Lyudvinov folk farm [5] . In 1845, it was listed as part of the Grodno district of the Grodno province , part of the estate of Bolshaya Berestovitsa, owned by L. Kossakovskaya. There were 333 tithes of 30 fathoms of landowner land, of which 314 acres of arable land. The village of Eminovtsy, 39 peasant tax yards and 286 peasants were assigned to the farm. In 1890, a farm in the Veliko-Berestovitsky volost , possession of S. Kossakovsky. According to the inventory of 1897, the farm [6] , which consisted of 2 buildings with 24 inhabitants. In 1905, 3 residents. For 1914 - 53. From August 1915 to January 1, 1919 it was part of the occupation zone of Kaiser Germany . Then, after the campaign of the Red Army , as part of the SSRB . In February 1919, during the Soviet-Polish war, it was occupied by Polish troops, and from 1920 to 1921 the troops of the Red Army [7] .

After the signing of the Riga Treaty , in 1921 Western Belarus moved to the Polish Republic and Ludvinovo was included in the newly formed rural commune Wielka Bzhostovitsa of the Grodno district of the Bialystok Voivodeship. In 1924, it was listed as a colony of the same name (there are no buildings and no population) and the Ludwinów folk farm ( Polish: Ludwinów ), which totaled 1 smoke (yard) and 6 souls (4 men and 2 women). Of these, 5 Catholics and 1 Orthodox ; 5 Poles and 1 Belarusian [8] .

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. In 1940, Ludvinovo became part of the newly formed Danilkovsky village council of the Krynkovsky district of the Bialystok region of the BSSR . From June 1941 to July 1944 it was occupied by German troops. The village lost 4 residents who died at the front and in the partisan struggle. Since September 20, 1944 in the Berestovitsky district. In 1959, there were 79 inhabitants. From December 25, 1962 to July 30, 1966 it was part of the Svisloch district . In 1970, there were 99 inhabitants. Since November 12, 1973 in the Parkhimov Village Council . In 1998, there were 18 yards and 27 residents, a shop. From 1944 to 1950 on the collective farm “October Revolution”, then until June 20, 2003 as part of the collective farm “Victory” ( Belorussian. Peramoga ). October 18, 2013 transferred to the Berestovitsky Village Council [9] .

Population

Population by Years
1897190519141924195919701998199920092015
24 [7]3 [7]53 [7]6 [8]79 [7]99 [7]27 [7]29 [10]20 [11]8 [7]

Transport

The republican highway P100 Bridges — Bolshaya Berestovitsa — passes through the village. Ludvinovo is also connected by local roads [12] :

  • H6231 with the Eminovites ;
  • H20129 with the Elders

Notes

  1. ↑ 1 2 Lemtsyugova V.P. Taponima weaken. “Literature and Mastastva”, Minsk, 2008 S. 233. ISBN 978-985-6720-54-6 (Belarusian)
  2. ↑ Directory of Human Settlements in Belarus (SOATO)
  3. ↑ Map sheet N-35-97 Volkovysk . Scale: 1: 100,000. State of the terrain for 1985. 1991 edition
  4. ↑ Decision of the Berestovitsky District Council of Deputies of September 26, 2011 N 56 “On Establishing the Borders of Rural Settlements of the Berestovitsa District”
  5. ↑ Schubert's Three-Tier
  6. ↑ Ludwinowo (Polish) in the Geographical Dictionary of the Kingdom of Poland and other Slavic countries , Volume XV, part 2 (Januszpol - Wola Justowska) from 1902
  7. ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Garada and wax Belarus. Grodzenskaya oblast “Belarus Encyclopedia I Petrusya Brokki”, Minsk, 2015 Book. I S. 374. ISBN 978-985-11-0839-4 (Belor.)
  8. ↑ 1 2 Index of settlements of the Republic of Poland. Volume 5. Bialystok Voivodeship . “Main Department of Statistics”, Warsaw, 1924 (Polish)
  9. ↑ Decision of the Grodno Regional Council of Deputies of 10/18/2013 N 264
  10. ↑ Based on 1999 census results. Data source - “Demographic GIS of the rural population of the Republic of Belarus”.
  11. ↑ Census data for 2009
  12. ↑ Decision of the Grodno Oblast Executive Committee of January 25, 2013 No. 46 “On establishing a list of local roads of the Grodno Oblast”

Links

Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lyudvinovo_(Berestovitsky_district)&oldid=100338322


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