Alekseyevka is a village in the Zainsky district of the Republic of Tatarstan of the Russian Federation . Included in the Tygeyevsky rural settlement.
| Village | |
| Alekseyevka | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Tatarstan |
| Municipal district | Zainsky |
| Rural settlement | Tygeev |
| History and geography | |
| First mention | mid XIX century [1] |
| Former names | N. Tetvel [1] |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 143 [1] people ( 2000 ) |
| Nationalities | Tatars [1] |
| Official language | Tatar , Russian |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Postcode | |
| OKATO code | |
| OKTMO code | |
Content
Geography
The village is located in the basin of the river Yamashka , 32 kilometers south-west of the city Zainsk .
History
The village was founded in the middle of the XIX century by immigrants from the village of Tetvel . The original name is N. Tetvel.
Until 1917, the main occupation of the local people was farming, cattle breeding and beekeeping. Part of the peasants engaged in handicraft: bending rims for wheels, arcs, making boots, matting, weaving canvas, coarse cloth. In 1871 a school of the Brotherhood of St. Gury was opened in Alekseyevka. In 1929 - 1930 the collective farm named after Engels was organized, in 1959 it became part of the enlarged collective farm "Rassvet". Since 1990 in Alekseyevka there is a part-time farm of the Zainsky Avtoagregatny Plant. Until 1920, the village was part of Yeryklinsky parish Chistopolsky district Kazan province . Since 1920 as part of the Chistopol canton of the TASSR . From August 10, 1930 in Novosheshminsky , from February 19, 1944 in Yamashinsky , from December 7, 1956 in Aktashsky , from March 26, 1959 in Zainsky, from February 1, 1963 in Almetyevsky , from November 1, 1972 in Zainsky Districts [1 ] .
Population
| 1920 | 1926 | 1938 | 1949 | 1958 | 1970 | 1979 | 1989 | 2000 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 489 | 375 | 461 | 408 | 344 | 280 | 174 | 112 | 143 |
Economy
Meat and dairy cattle.
Social Infrastructure
Primary school, club, library.
Literature
Zainsky encyclopedia. K., 1994.