Sovdenevichi or Savdenevichi ( Belor. Saўdzenevichi ) is a village in the Logoisk district of the Minsk region of Belarus . Part of the Yanushkovichskogo village council .
| Village | |
| Sovdenevichi | |
|---|---|
| belor Saўdzenevychi | |
| A country | |
| Status | Yanushkovichi village council |
| Region | Minsk |
| Area | Logoysky |
| The village council | Yanushkovichsky |
| History and geography | |
| First mention | XVI century |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 54 people ( 2010 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +375 1774 |
| Postcode | 223110 |
| Car code | five |
Content
Geographical position
Located 30 km from Moscow Ring Road, 15 km from the district center and 15 km from the Silichi ski complex on the Slizhanka River.
History
Sovdenevich first mentioned in written sources in the XVI century. In 1582 the yard was Sovdenevsky (the name Shiryaevsky is also known), which belonged to Sh. Levkovich and his wife T. Shiryaevskaya. For 1705 in the settlement there were 25 yards. In the area of the village, there was a battalion defense area of the “III” Minsk fortified area, in the immediate vicinity there were 3 bunkers that were blown up by German sappers [1] . During the Second World War , punitive SS units acted in this region. There are probably more pre-war burned villages in the district than modern ones built.
Population Dynamics
- 1800 - 252 inhabitants
- 1897 - 264 inhabitants (according to the census of the Russian Empire )
- 1909 - there were two settlements Sovdenevichi-1 and Sovdenevichi-2 with a population of 266 and 251 people respectively
- 1941 - 35 inhabitants
- 1969 - 153 inhabitants
- 2003 - 153 inhabitants
- 2010 - 54 inhabitants [2]
Attractions
- The Church of St. George, built in the late XIX-early XX centuries [3] . Initially, the temple stood on a nearby cemetery, there are still remains of its foundations.
- The ruins of 3 pillboxes, preserved since the Great Patriotic War [1] .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Meridian28.com - Battalion area of defense "III" of the Minsk fortified
- ↑ Garad and ёskі Belarus: entsyklapedya. T. 8. Minsk Voblast. Prince 3 / redkal .: T. U. Byalova (duraectar) [і інш.]. - Minsk: Belarus. Entsykl Name P. Brokie, 2012.
- ↑ Sovdenevichi