Zadveya ( Belorussian. Zadzveya ) is a village in the Baranavichy district of the Brest region of Belarus , as part of the Volnovsky village council . The population of 141 people (2009) [1] .
| Village | |
| Rear | |
|---|---|
| Belor. Zazveya | |
| A country | |
| Region | Brest region |
| Area | Baranavichy district |
| Village Council | Volnovsky Village Council |
| History and Geography | |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 141 people ( 2009 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Car code | one |
Content
Geography
The village is located in the northeast corner of the Brest region, 25 km northeast of the center of Baranavichy . 8 km north-east of the village is the point where the Minsk, Grodno and Brest regions converge. The area belongs to the Neman basin, along the western tip of the village the Zmeyka River flows, on which a network of drainage ditches is created. The M1 motorway is 4 km to the south, with Zadway connected by a local road. The nearest railway station is Pogoreltsy (Baranovichi - Minsk line ).
History
The estate of Zadway was first mentioned in the metric of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1473 [2] . In the 16th century, the backstage was owned by the Gastols and the Radziwills . Then the estate changed owners several times, from the 18th century it belonged to Mezheevsky, and then to the Chechot.
After the second partition of the Commonwealth (1793), the place became part of the Russian Empire, belonged to the Minsk province . In the XVIII-XIX centuries Mezheevsky and Chechot erected a noble estate in the estate. The manor house was built by the Mezheevskys at the beginning of the XVIII century, in the middle of the century Matvey Mezheevsky gave the building a classic look. Most of the outbuildings were erected in the 19th century. Jan Chechot lived in the estate for a while, and Adam Mickiewicz visited [2] .
According to the Riga Peace Treaty (1921), the village became part of interwar Poland , where it belonged to the Baranavichy district of the Novogrudok Voivodeship . Since 1939, as part of the BSSR .
Attractions
- Manor of Mezheevskys - Chechotov. The manor house has not been preserved. The surviving buildings - ice, stable, outbuilding (all - XIX century)