The Bugrinsky district is an administrative-territorial unit of the Novosibirsk District of the Siberian Territory that existed in 1925-1930. The administrative center of the district was the village of Bugry (formerly Bugrinskoe ).
Description
The district was created in the summer of 1925 mainly in the territory of the former Bugrinsky volost . The former Prokudskaya , Voznesenskaya and part of the Verkh-Irmensky volosts were also included in the Bugrinsky district .
The region included the villages of Vertkovo , Erestnaya , Tolmachevo , Verkh-Tulinskoye , Nizhne-Chemskaya , Ogurtsovo and Malo-Krivoshchekovo .
In 1926, the district center of the village of Bugrinskoye (Bugry) had 236 yards and 1287 inhabitants, and in 1928 there were already 495 yards with a population of 1968 people. The status of the village of Bugrinskoe received in 1894 with the construction of an Orthodox church here (a village without a church is a village ).
In the village there was a malt factory, a tannery, an agronomic center, a veterinary clinic, a reading room, a consumer society shop, and a credit shop. The temple was destroyed during the active atheistic campaign in the RSFSR in 1928.
The district was disbanded on May 8, 1929 in connection with the formation of new administrative-territorial areas, and on October 20, 1930, in connection with the formation of the Zaobsky district of Novosibirsk , the lands and settlements of the district were in the city limits of Novosibirsk .
Links
- Administrative-territorial division of Siberia / Astrakhantseva I.F., Dudoladov A.A., Timoshenko M.I. - Novosibirsk: West Siberian Book Publishing House, 1966. - 2000 copies.