Zakhlamino - a disappeared village (according to other sources - a village or a Cossack village), located on the site of the Soviet district of the city of Omsk .
| Disappeared settlement | |
| Zahlamino † | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Omsk region |
| Area | Omsk |
| History and Geography | |
| Founded | 1744 |
| The disappeared settlement with | 1955 |
| Timezone | UTC + 6 |
Content
- 1 Origin of the name
- 2 History
- 3 Infrastructure
- 4 notes
- 5 Links
Name Origin
There are two versions of the origin of the name Zahlamino. According to one of them, trash in the Old Slavonic language means a hill . According to another version, the name comes from the surname Zakhlamin [1] .
History
It was founded in the XVIII century on the right bank of the Irtysh River north of the Omsk Fortress. The first mention dates back to 1744 . In 1749, in the Tarskie Voivodeship, the village was ranked as an Omsk fortress. In 1768, in connection with the construction of the New Omsk Settlement, 42 male souls moved to Zakhlamina. In 1788, the village consisted of 20 yards, 142 inhabitants (78 men and 64 women) [2] . On December 5 [17], 1846, the settlement entered the line of the Siberian Cossack army, and its inhabitants were transferred to the Cossack estate and began to perform military service. The composition of the 5th regiment included 65 souls. In the middle of the XIX century, windmills appeared in the village, and the village itself gained the fame of a resort where Omsk merchants stopped at taverns . In 1915, the settlement received the status of an independent village (before that, it was part of the village of Melnichnaya) [1] . The village cemetery was located on the site of the square on Prospekt Mira and the territory of Omsk University [3] . In 1918, the base of the Cossack detachment of Boris Annenkov was located here. After the approval of Soviet power in the village, the Luch collective farm was created, tractors began to process the arable land, and telephone communication was established with Omsk. In 1937, some residents of Zakhlamin, in particular, many Cossacks, were repressed . The village was abolished in connection with the construction of an oil refinery in 1955 [4] .
Infrastructure
Agriculture was developed. In the 1930s-1940s there was a collective farm named after November 7 in Zakhlamino, the village itself was the center of the Zakhlamino village council [5] .
Notes
Links
- Poplar fluff is circling in the Oil Workers (inaccessible link)