Studeno-Yablonovka is a village in the Gorodishchensky district of the Volgograd region of Russia , as part of the Krasnopakharevsky rural settlement . The common name is Ezhovka.
| Village | |
| Studeno-Yablonovka | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Volgograd region |
| Municipal District | Gorodishchensky |
| Rural settlement | Krasnopakharevskoe |
| History and Geography | |
| Based | in 1873 |
| Timezone | UTC + 4 |
| Population | |
| Population | 258 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Postcode | 400038 |
| OKATO Code | 18205819003 |
| OKTMO Code | |
Founded in 1873
The population is 258 [1] people. (2010) .
History
It was formed in 1873 from the lower retired ranks, resettled mainly from the village of Novaya Studenovka, Serdobsky district, Saratov province . The land allotment was allotted from the Yablonovsky treasury, as a result of which the village received the double name Studeno-Yablonovka. The village belonged to the Otrada volost of the Tsaritsyn district of the Saratov province. As of 1894, the land allotment was 1,455 acres , the population was Great Russians , Orthodox . In the settlement there were 2 windmills and 1 wine shop [2] .
In 1919, as part of the Tsaritsyn district, it was included in the Tsaritsyn province [3] . In 1928, the village became part of the Stalingrad district of the Stalingrad district of the Lower Volga region (since 1934 - the Stalingrad region ). In 1935, the village was included in the Peschansky district (from 1938 - Gorodishchensky district) of the Stalingrad Territory [4] (from 1936 - the Stalingrad Region , since 1961 - the Volgograd Region). In 1953, the Peschany and Studeno-Yablonovsky village councils were merged into one Peschansky council with a center in the village of Peschanka . In 1957, the village of Studeno-Yablonevsky was transferred to the administrative-territorial subordination to the Rossoshinsky village council. From 1963 to 1977, the village as part of the Rossoshansky Village Council belonged to the Kalachevsky District . In 1986, transferred to the Krasnopakharevsky Village Council [5] [6] .
Geography
The village is located in the southeast of the Gorodishchensky district in the steppe zone within the Volga Upland , belonging to the East European Plain , on the Tsaritsa River (Pionerka) [7] . The terrain is hilly-plain, complicated by beams and ravines. The village center is located at an altitude of about 70 meters above sea level. Mount Bandurina rises north of the village (149.4 meters above sea level [7] . Soils are chestnut solonetzic and solonchak soils. [8] There are sand outcrops on the southern side of the Tsaritsa valley [7] .
There is an entrance to the village from the A260 federal highway. By road, the distance to the center of Volgograd is 15 km, to the district center of Gorodishche village - 22 km, to the administrative center of the rural settlement of the village of Krasny Pakhar - 40 km [9] .
- Timezone
Studeno-Yablonovka, like the whole Volgograd region , is in the time zone MSC + 1 ( Samara time ). The offset of the applied time relative to UTC is +4: 00 [10] . |
Population
| 1882 [2] | 1894 [2] | 1911 [11] | 1987 [7] | 2002 [12] |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 43 | 252 | 348 | ≈310 | 249 |
| Population |
|---|
| 2010 [1] |
| 258 |
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 2010 All-Russian Population Census. The population of urban districts, municipalities, urban and rural settlements, urban and rural settlements of the Volgograd region
- ↑ 1 2 3 Minkh, A. N. The Historical and Geographical Dictionary of the Saratov Province / Comp. A.N. Minh; oven under the supervision of S. A. Scheglova. - Saratov, 1901. - T. 1: Southern counties: Kamyshinsky and Tsaritsinsky. Vol. 3: Lit. L. - S. 982—983. - 1094 s.
- ↑ Information on the history of the administrative-territorial division of the Volgograd region // State Archive of the Volgograd Region: A Guide / E.V. Bululina (responsible compiler), I.V. Garskova, V.M. Kadashova, N.M. Klimenko, N.V. Osmakova, A.V. Uskova. - Volgograd: Publishing House of VolSU , 2002. - P. 444. - 572 p. - ISBN 5-85534-626-9 .
- ↑ History of the administrative-territorial division of the Stalingrad (Lower Volga) region. 1928–1936 .: Reference / Comp .: D.V. Buyanov, N. S. Lobchuk, S. A. Noritsyna. - Volgograd : Volgograd Scientific Publishing House, 2012. - 575 p. - ISBN 978-5-90608-102-5 .
- ↑ 2.23. Kalachevsky // 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 .
- ↑ 2.11. Gorodishchensky // 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. 1. - ISBN 978-5-9846166-8-3 .
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 M-38 maps of the General Staff of the USSR. Volgograd, Saratov.
- ↑ Soil map of Russia . www.etomesto.ru. Date of treatment March 19, 2019.
- ↑ Distances are indicated according to the Yandex service. Cards
- ↑ Federal Law of 03.06.2011 N 107-ФЗ “On the Calculation of Time”, Article 5 (June 3, 2011).
- ↑ Lists of populated places of the Saratov province Tsaritsyn district / Estimated-statistical department of the Saratov Provincial Zemsky Council. - Saratov, 1912 .-- S. 10.
- ↑ SUPER WEB 2 All-Russian Census of 2002