Novye Mink is a disappeared village in the Kamyshin district of the Volgograd region . The village was located within the Volga Upland , on the right bank of the Ilovli River (just below the mouth of the Guselka River), opposite the village of Aleksandrovka [1]
| the village now does not exist | |
| New Mink | |
|---|---|
| State affiliation | |
| Entered into | Erlenbach canton , Volga Germans Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic |
| Coordinates | |
| Based | [[ in 1847 ]] |
| Other names | until 1852 - Shutnikovsky farm until 1927 - New Mink (Ney Mink) until 1944 - Ney Mink |
| Date of Abolition | 1985 |
| Current state | destroyed |
| Modern location | Russia , Volgograd region , Zhirnovsky district |
| Population | 1339 people (1931) |
Founded around 1847.
History
Around 1847, several colonists from the villages of the Kamensky district founded a farm here; among them was the colonist Valentin Goethe, who was called "a joker" on the street, therefore the farm was called the Shutnikovsky farm or the Joke. In 1852, as prescribed by the office of foreign settlers, Germans moved here from the Nork colony, as a result of which the village received the official name - New Nork (Ney-Nork) [2] .
The village belonged to the Lutheran parish of Rosenberg. In 1852, a parish school was opened. In 1886 - a private school. In 1890 - a house of worship [2] . In 1877-1878, 7 families left for America [3] .
Since 1918 - as part of the Nizhne-Ilovlinsky district of the Golo-Karamysh district of the Labor commune (Region) of the Volga Germans (since 1923 - the Volga Germans Republic ), after the transition to the canton division as a part of Kamensky , since 1935 - the Dobrinsky canton .
During the famine of 1921, 37 people were born, 50 died. In 1926, there are a village council, an elementary school, a cooperative shop, and an agricultural cooperative partnership [3] .
In 1927, the decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee On Changes in the Administrative Division of the Autonomous Autonomous Region S. S. R. Nemtsev of the Volga Region and the Assignment of German Names to the Old Names that Existed Before 1914, the village of Novaya Norka of the Kamensky canton was named Nei-Nork [4] .
On August 28, 1941, a Decree of the Presidium of the USSR Armed Forces on the resettlement of Germans living in the Volga region was issued, the German population was deported . By a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of September 7, 1941, the village, as well as other settlements of the Erlenbach canton (renamed to Remennikovsky district ), was transferred to the Stalingrad region. By the decision of the Executive Committee of the Stalingrad Regional Council of Workers' Deputies dated March 31, 1944 "On renaming settlements of the Stalingrad region bearing German names", the village of Ney-Nork was renamed the village of New Norki [5]
In 1948, in connection with the liquidation of the Remennikovsky district, it was included in the Kamyshin district [5] .
By the decision of the Volgograd Regional Executive Committee of September 7, 1985 No. 21/606, the village of New Norki was excluded from the credentials [6]
Population
Population dynamics by years [3] :
| 1859 | 1886 | 1897 | 1904 | 1911 | 1920 | 1922 | 1926 | 1931 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 564 | 828 | 1115 | 995 | 1304 | 1218 | 1032 | 1214 | 1339 |
Notes
- ↑ Administrative map of the Stalingrad region 1956
- ↑ 1 2 Geschichte Der Wolgadeutschen = Neu Mink
- ↑ 1 2 3 http://wolgadeutsche.net/diesendorf/Ortslexikon.pdf
- ↑ GESCHICHTE DER WOLGADEUTSCHEN = Decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee on changes in the administrative division of the Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic of NP and on the restoration of the traditional names of its German villages (1927)
- ↑ 1 2 2.69. Erlenbach // History of the administrative-territorial division of the Volgograd (Stalingrad) region. 1936−2007 .: Reference. in 3 volumes / Comp.: D.V. Buyanov, T.I. Zhdankina, V.M. Kadashova, S.A. Noritsyna. - Volgograd : Change, 2009. - T. 3. - ISBN 978-5-9846166-8-3 .
- ↑ 2.25. Kamyshinsky; Petrov Val // History of the administrative-territorial division of the Volgograd (Stalingrad) region. 1936−2007 .: Reference. in 3 volumes / Comp.: D.V. Buyanov, T.I. Zhdankina, V.M. Kadashova, S.A. Noritsyna. - Volgograd : Change, 2009. - T. 2. - ISBN 978-5-9846166-8-3 .