Annino is a former village in the Moscow province , then in the Moscow region , located east of Moscow on the banks of the Upper Kuzminsk Pond . Included in Moscow in 1960 .
| The settlement, which became part of Moscow | |
| Annino | |
|---|---|
| Story | |
| First mention | XI century |
| As part of Moscow with | August 17, 1960 |
| Status at time of inclusion | village |
| Other names | Natural boundary Anino, Annino, Annina |
| Location | |
| Counties | SEAD |
| Areas | Vykhino-Zhulebino |
| Coordinates | |
History
During the archaeological excavations of 1998, the expedition of the Institute of Archeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences at this place discovered the remains of a residential building with a stone-adobe furnace, as well as fragments of a glass bracelet and ceramics. A radiocarbon analysis of the latter showed that a settlement on the banks of the Goledyanka River (tentatively called the 4th Kuzminsky Settlement) arose no later than the 11th century.
In the XVIII century, a new settlement was built on the site of the tract, consisting of four courtyards and was named in honor of Baroness Anna Alexandrovna Golitsyna , the wife of Lieutenant-General Prince Mikhail Golitsyn . Anino village was located along the alley leading east from the Kuzminki estate and had geometrically even outlines. [1] [2]
The village was abandoned and plundered by 1931. In the vicinity of the village, a garden field was organized at the 2nd branch of the State Farm named after Moscow City Council. In 1964, the state farm was liquidated during the construction of the 127th “A” block of Vykhino, and the remains of the village together with the garden field - in 1969, during the construction of power lines and pipelines.
See also
- Kuzminki (manor)
- Vykhino-Zhulebino