Boyars ( Belorussian Bayars ) is an agro-town in Myadel district of Minsk region . It is part of the Myadel Village Council . The population of 360 people (2009) [1] .
| Agro-town | |
| Boyars | |
|---|---|
| Belor. Bayars | |
| A country | |
| Region | Minsk |
| Area | Myadelsky |
| Village Council | Myadelsky |
| History and Geography | |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 360 people ( 2009 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Postcode | |
| Car code | five |
Content
Geography
Boyars are located 3 km north of the city center of Myadel and 8 km south of the border with the Vitebsk region . Connected by local roads to Madel and surrounding villages. The area belongs to the basin of the Western Dvina , near the Boyars begins a small river Zelenukha, which flows into Lake Myadel .
History
In 1868 , the village of Boyary was part of the Myadel parish of the Vileika county of the Vilnius province , 105 inhabitants.
In 1904 , there were 241 inhabitants in the village [2] . In the dungeon of Boyar Asanovich - 39 inhabitants, in the dungeon of Verechat Makhnist - 6 inhabitants.
During the First World War , a line of the Russian-German front passed near the village. The 6th artillery brigade was in the village.
Since October 1920 - as part of Middle Lithuania .
In 1921 - 55 yards, 255 residents.
On February 20, 1922, the Sejm of Middle Lithuania adopted a resolution on unconditional accession to the Republic of Poland .
According to the administrative-territorial division, the village of Boyary was part of the Myadel municipality of the Dunilovičy county of the Vilnius Voivodeship .
Since 1925 - in the Postavy district.
In 1936 , the KPZB cell operated (5 people, secretary D.F. Bogovets).
In September 1939 , the Yushkovichi were annexed to the BSSR by the forces of the Belorussian Front of the Red Army .
Since October 12, 1939, it has been the center of the village council of Myadel district of the Vileyka region .
Since September 20, 1944 - as part of the Molodechno region .
In 1948 , a collective farm named after Voroshilov was created in the village.
In 1949 , a hut-reading room was opened.
In 1952 , a radio center with 100 radio points.
From July 16, 1954 - as part of the Myadel Village Council (from November 17, 1959 - the City Council).
Since January 20, 1960 - as part of the Minsk region .
Since February 11, 1960, the village was part of the Stalin's Way collective farm.
Since November 20, 1961 , the village has been the center of the Leninsky Way collective farm .
In Soviet times, a military unit was located in Boyars.
As of January 1, 1997 , there were 137 yards and 339 residents in the village. The House of Culture, a library, a communications department, a feldsher-midwife station (FAP), an elementary school, a shop, a bathhouse, 2 livestock farms, a workshop for repairing agricultural implements, and a grain mill [3] worked.
Attractions
- Cemetery of Russian soldiers of the First World War [4] [5] .
- Stele in memory of those killed in World War II ( 1972 ). During the war years, 76 residents from 18 villages of the Leninsky Way collective farm were killed on the fronts and in the partisan struggle with the Nazi invaders.
Notes
- ↑ Census results
- ↑ Entsiklapedia gіstoryі Belarusі. At 6 tons of Kadety - Lyashchen / Belarus. Encekl .; Redkal: G.P. Pashkoў (red halons) і іnsh .; Mast. E.E. Zhakevich. - Мn .: BelEn. ISBN 985-11-0041-2
- ↑ Memory: Gistoryka-documentary chronicle of Myadzelskag ryonu. - Minsk: “Belarus Entsiklapedyya” name Petrusya Brokki, 1998.-S. 565. - ISBN 985-11-0107-9
- ↑ Battle of Naroch, 1916. German sources about the Russian spring offensive. (Naroch operation): memorial / ed. text, comp. A.V. Bogdanov. - Brest: Polygraphy, 2016 .-- S.328-329.
- ↑ Military burial places in the Republic of Belarus. Minsk Region. World War I / Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Belarus: comp. V.A. Bogdanov, A.Yu. Karkotko. - Мn .: StroyMediaProekt, 2018 .-- 200 p. - ISBN 978-985-7172-04-7