Omoforovo is a village in the Sobinsky district of the Vladimir region of Russia , part of the Kopninsky rural settlement .
Village | |
Omoforovo | |
---|---|
A country | Russia |
Subject of the federation | Vladimir region |
Municipal district | Sobinsky |
Rural settlement | Kopninskoe |
History and geography | |
First mention | 1637 |
Former names | Saws , Yazvetsovo |
Timezone | UTC + 3 |
Population | |
Population | ↘ 44 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
Digital identifiers | |
Postcode | 601242 |
OKATO code | 17250000129 |
OKTMO code | 17650444141 |
Geography
The village is located 12 km to the north from the center of the settlement of Zarechny village and 13 km to the west from the district center of Sobinka .
History
Until the middle of the XVIII century, the village of зzvica existed in this area, which had no church. According to the scribal books of 1637, the village of Yazvetsovo was listed in the Matreninsky parish with the center in the Resurrection churchyard [2] .
In 1769, a local landowner Pavel Ivanovich Dubrovsky, with the blessing of Bishop of Vladimir and Muromsky Pavel, built a stone church in the village in honor of the Protection of the Most Holy Theotokos. The church founder dedicated the temple to the Protection of the Mother of God in honor of the icon of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos, acquired by him in the Crimea around 1762. The church remained single-altar until 1826, in the same year the meal was expanded and a warm chapel was built in the name of Basil the Great, Gregory the Theologian and John Chrysostom, and since then the church has not changed its appearance. Above the main altar is a shade. The local temple icon of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos is revered in the parish as miraculous. The silver and gilded necklace on it is embroidered, and the necklace is worn with pearls; on the icon is hung a kovchezhets with particles of holy relics. From Omophor, depicted in the icon of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos, the village received its name. The parish consisted of the village of Omoforov and the villages: Gnusov, Babanin, Pavlovka, Pleshkov and Spirin; They have 586 male souls and 657 female souls according to the clearing lists. In 1878, in the village of Omophorovo, there was an elementary public school with a shelter for 10 orphan boys; the school and the shelter were built at the expense of the merchant Mikhail Yakovlevich Makhra. Shortly after the arrest of the rector of the church, Father Vasily, in 1930, the church was closed.
On October 14, 2011, 70 years later, the Divine Liturgy was again held in a dilapidated church [3] .
In the late XIX - early XX century, the village was part of the Kopninskaya parish Pokrovsky district .
From 1929 the village was part of the Undolsky Village Council of the Sobinsky District , and later until 2005 as part of the Kopninsky Village Council .
Population
Population | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
1859 [4] | 1905 [5] | 1926 [6] | 2002 [7] | 2010 [1] |
316 | ↗ 403 | ↘ 299 | ↘ 108 | ↘ 44 |
Current State
In the village there are GKOU "Omoforovskaya special (correctional) general boarding school" [8] .
Attractions
The village is the current Church of the Intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary (1769) [3] , the ensemble of the estate Dubrovskie XVIII-XIX centuries.
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 The 2010 All-Russian Population Census. The population of the settlements of the Vladimir region . The appeal date is July 21, 2014. Archived July 21, 2014.
- Historical and statistical description of the churches and parishes of the Vladimir diocese: Vol. 2-4 / comp. V. Dobronravov. Issue 4: Melenkovsky, Murom, Pokrovsky and Sudogodsky counties. - 1897.
- ↑ 1 2 Folk catalog of orthodox architecture
- ↑ Lists of populated places of the Russian Empire. Vi. Vladimir Province. According to the 1859 / processed art. ed. M. Raevsky . - Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. - SPb. , 1863. - 283 s.
- ↑ List of populated places of Vladimir province . - Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. - Vladimir, 1907.
- ↑ Preliminary census results for the Vladimir province. 2nd Edition // All-Union Population Census of 1926 / Vladimir Provincial Statistical Division. - Vladimir, 1927.
- ↑ All-Russian Census 2002 data: table 02c. M .: Federal State Statistics Service, 2004.
- ↑ "Virtual city of Vladimir"