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Kailinsky volost (Tomsk district)

Kailin volost is an administrative-territorial unit in the history of the Tomsk district of the Tomsk province .

volost
Kailin parish
A country Russian empire
Included inTomsk County
Adm. CentreKailinskoye village
History and Geography
Date of formationXIX century
The largest cityToguchin station
Population
PopulationOK. 15,000 people
NationalitiesRussians
DenominationsOrthodoxy
Official languageRussian

Content

History

The name of the volost is from the administrative (volost) center, the village of Kailinsky , which was at a distance of approx. 130 miles in a straight line south-west of Tomsk , and is located on the right, northern bank of the Inya river [1] - 4 km from the place where the Kaila River flows into it. Now this village is searched on maps on the line between the regional centers of Moshkovo - Toguchin , 16 km northwest of the village. Toguchin [2] . The volost was located on the border of Tomsk and Kuznetsk counties; The villages of the volost periodically belonged to one or another county.

The modern village of Kayly (east of the Novosibirsk region ) currently belongs to the Moshkovsky district .

This volost is mentioned in documents of the Tomsk district until the second half of the 19th century (1898), including in connection with the boundary unrest of the peasants of the 1860s. Then the volost was mentioned in connection with the Stolypin resettlement reform and in connection with the development of national literacy.

At the initiative of the philanthropist S.I. Kandaurova in the large village of Gutovskoy October 1, 1904 was opened volost national library, which was located was located at a rural elementary school. Funds for its device were given by the Kailinsky volost board. From the opening date to January 1, 1905, the total number of readers was 35. Books were issued to students twice a week, and for other readers daily. In 1904, the Tomsk district guardianship of national sobriety established a second library in the same village [3] .

In 1911, the volost center was transferred from Kaila to the village of Gutovskoye (near the village of Toguchin ), located 14 km in a straight line to the southeast from the village. Kyle The parish itself was reorganized into Gutovskaya .

Gutovsky volost from 1917 to 1925 belonged to the Kuznetsk district of Tomsk province.

Main article : Gutovsky volost .


The main villages in the volost in 1885 (according to the reference book “Memorial Book of the Tomsk Province for 1885”):

  • village Agafonikha
  • Asanovo village
  • Achinskaya village
  • Dolgovo village
  • with. Gutovo (Gutovo)
  • D. Kukushkino
  • v. Bartsevo
  • Bugotan village
  • v. Vassino
  • Gorevka village
  • village Dergousovo
  • village of Izylenskaya
  • village Eltyshevo
  • village Irbinskaya
  • village Elfimovo
  • with. Kailinsky
  • v. Kapagonovo
  • with. Karpysak
  • Kanarbuga village
  • village Bzhitskaya
  • v. Chertenkovo
  • Shumilovo village
  • village Chemskaya
  • Shubkino village
  • village Ust-Kamenskoye
  • village Cherepanovo
  • village Tomilovo
  • v. Toguchin (v. Taguchin )
  • village Balaevo
  • village Taskaevo
  • village of Osipovo
  • village Rusakovo
  • village of Savinovo
  • village Sukhostrelovo
  • village Osinovka
  • Motkovo village
  • Manoilovo village
  • Kusmen village
  • Kuskovo village
  • Kudrino village
  • d. Maltsevo
  • Kornilovo village
  • village Eltyshevo
  • village of Kiik

In 1911, the settlement of Borovlyanka also belonged to the volost (it was also indicated as Brovlyanka or Kukushkina village ) and the settlement point Kanabishka ( Kalabishka ) [4] .

Famous Persons

  • Lapin, Ivan Vasilievich (1914-1979) - captain of the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army, participant in the Great Patriotic War, Hero of the Soviet Union (1943). Born and raised in the village of Chemskoye, Kailinsky volost.

See also

Kayla village near Tomsk
In 65 versts southeast of Tomsk in the second half of the 18th century, the village of Kayla appeared and now exists. The village is located on the banks of the Kayla River, which is the right tributary of the Kitat River , which flows further into the Yaya River. Now this village is searched on maps 15 km north of the city of Anzhero-Sudzhensk , which appeared along with the construction of the Trans-Siberian Railway in 1896-1897. This village was not a volost center, although some of the later researchers believed that it was here in the 19th century that the Kailinsky volost of the Tomsk district. However, this village, as well as the neighboring villages of Sudzhenka (volost center), Voznesenka, Ulanka, Lebedyanka, Turat and the village of Anzherka, were part of the Sudzhensky volost of the Mariinsky district of Tomsk province [5] .

Kailin parish (Tarsk district)
This volost appeared in the western part of the Tara district of the Tobolsk province from January 1, 1914. The administrative, volost center is the village of Kailinskoye (now the village of Kaili, Ust-Ishim district of the Omsk region ), which is located on the left bank of the Ishim river, 280 miles in a straight line northwest of Omsk . In 1917, the Provisional Government of Russia conceived a partial administrative-territorial reform with the transformation of the Omsk lands of the Tobolsk province. This was planned earlier, even by decree of the Emperor of October 21, 1868: it was ordered to create the Akmola (Omsk) region . But the creation of this Cossack-steppe region was constantly delayed.

The paperwork on the creation of the Akmola (Omsk) region took place in the summer of 1917, the creation of the region actually happened in December 1917. According to the documents of the Provisional Government, the newly formed Tatar district of the Tomsk province (the center of the county - Tatarskaya station) included the lands of the former Tarsky district (center county - the village of Tara ), as well as part of the western lands of Tomsk and Cain districts of the Tomsk province. At the same time, according to the documents of the Provisional Government, confusion occurred among the Tomsk and Tara Kailin volosts. It turned out that this volost, supposedly from the structure of Tomsk Uyezd, among a number of volosts east of Omsk , was transferred to the newly formed Tatar Uyezd ( Tatarsk - station on the Trans-Siberian Railway between modern Novosibirsk and Omsk ), which was then to become part of the new Omsk province . However, upon the fact of the revolutionary events of October 1917 and then the Civil War , this Kailinsky volost until 1921 remained the volost of Tarsk district , it was not part of the Tomsk province.

For more information about this volost, see the article Kailinsky volost (Tarsk district) .

Notes

  1. ↑ Inya - a river flowing in a westerly direction, the right tributary of the Ob River , into which it flows into the boundaries of the modern city of Novosibirsk .
  2. ↑ The village of Toguchin appeared on the lands of the southern part of the volost in 1867
  3. ↑ Kozlova M.O. The History of the Rural Libraries in the Tomsk Region // Art Education in Siberia: a collection of articles based on the materials of the Regional Scientific Conference “Art Education in Siberia”, Tomsk, TSU , December 12, 2014. - Tomsk, 2015. - P. 107. Electronic resource : vital.lib.tsu.ru .
  4. ↑ List of populated areas of Tomsk province for 1911. - Tomsk, 1911. - S. 40–42. - Electronic resource : sun.tsu.ru.
  5. ↑ Anzhero-Sudzhensk. Events and people / comp. A.A. Kalinina, N.P. Goldaev, G.S. Pozdnyakov et al. - Novosibirsk : State Enterprise "Novosibirsk Polygraphic Combine", 1997. - 180 p. - (100 years to the city). - Circulation 1000 copies.

Links

  • Geographical Dictionary of the Kemerovo Region
  • Kosovets I.V. Settlement and development of the surroundings of Yurga and adjacent territories of the Middle Pritomie and Priobye . - Yurga , 2010. ( Including materials on the life of peasants of the Kailin volost on the banks of the Ini River ).
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kailinsky_vost_(Tomsky_Uyezd )&oldid = 100183317


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