Ilyinsky is a village in the Kolchuginsky district of the Vladimir region of Russia , part of the Ilyinsky rural settlement .
Village | |
Ilinsky | |
---|---|
A country | Russia |
Subject of the federation | Vladimir region |
Municipal District | Kolchuginsky |
Rural settlement | Ilinsky |
History and Geography | |
First mention | 1628 year |
Former names | Ilyinskoye-Stromilovo |
Timezone | UTC + 3 |
Population | |
Population | ↘ 182 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
Digital identifiers | |
Postcode | 601753 |
OKATO Code | 17240000053 |
OKTMO Code | 17640424136 |
Content
Geography
The village is located on the banks of the Peksha river (a tributary of the Klyazma ) 6 km west of the center of the settlement of the village of Bolshevik , 12 km north of the district center of Kolchugino .
History
At the beginning of the XVII century, the village belonged to Yuri Stromilov , and after his death passed to his son-in-law Ivan Yuryevich Neledinsky; Ilyinskoye remained the fiefdom of the Neledinsky family until the end of the 17th century. The church in the village has long been in honor of the holy prophet Elijah, it is mentioned in the books of the patriarchal state order under 1628 and in the abandoned patriarchal books of 1645-1647. The time of building the stone two-story church is unknown; the bell tower and the fence were also stone. There were six thrones in the church: in the lower warm floor: in honor of the holy prophet Elijah and the sidekeepers - in honor of the Kazan Mother of God and St. Nicholas the Wonderworker; in the upper cold floor: in honor of the Entrance of the Lord into Jerusalem and the side-men - in honor of the Protection of the Blessed Virgin Mary and in the name of the Holy Great Martyr Barbara. In 1896, the parish: the village and villages: Brattsevo, Novoe , Obukhovo , Pavlovka and the village of Sofyino. There are 241 all courtyards in the parish, 728 male showers, 832 female showers. Since 1893, a parish school has been opened in the village [2]
In the third quarter of the 18th century, the large Stromilov manor was erected here in the late Baroque style with a stone two-story house and a large regular park in the form of an elongated rectangle cut by geometrically symmetrical alleys on the stalls or other curly stands.
During the years of Soviet power, the Elias Church was completely destroyed.
At the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries, the village was the center of the Davydovskaya volost of the Yuryev district , and since 1924 - in the Kolchugin volost of the Alexander district .
Since 1929, the village was part of the Davydovsky village council as part of the Kolchuginsky district , since 1965 the village was part of the Ilyinsky village council .
Population
1859 [3] | 1897 [4] |
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690 | 605 |
Population | ||||
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1859 [5] | 1897 [6] | 1905 [7] | 2002 [8] | 2010 [1] |
690 | ↘ 605 | ↗ 656 | ↘ 193 | ↘ 182 |
Current status
In the village there are a club, a feldsher-midwife station, a post office [9] .
Attractions
In the village are the ruins of the estate of the Ilyin-Stromilov XVIII-XIX centuries.
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 2010 All-Russian Population Census. The population of the settlements of the Vladimir region . Date of treatment July 21, 2014. Archived July 21, 2014.
- ↑ V.G. Dobronravov, V.D. Berezin “Historical and Statistical Description of Churches and Parishes of the Vladimir Diocese” Issue 1. Lip. mountains Vladimir, Tipo-Lithography V.A. Parkova, 1893
- ↑ Vladimir province. The list of settlements according to 1859.
- ↑ First General Census of the Russian Empire in 1897 6. Vladimir Province
- ↑ Lists of populated places of the Russian Empire. VI. Vladimir province. According to the information of 1859 / Art. ed. M. Raevsky . - Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. - SPb. , 1863. - 283 p.
- ↑ Vladimir province, the first general census of 1897. . Archived March 1, 2012.
- ↑ List of populated areas of Vladimir province . - Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. - Vladimir, 1907.
- ↑ 2002 All-Russian Census Data: Table 02c. M .: Federal State Statistics Service, 2004.
- ↑ On the site "Virtual City Vladimir"