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Griffon

Belogrivka is a village in the Bolsheukovsky district of the Omsk region of Russia , the administrative center of the Belogrivsky rural settlement .

Village
Griffon
A country Russia
Subject of the federationOmsk region
Municipal DistrictBolsheukovsky
Rural settlementBelogrivskoe
History and Geography
Based1909
Former namesBaikalovsky site
Belaya Griva village
Belogrivsky village
TimezoneUTC + 6
Population
Population↘ 319 [1] people ( 2017 )
Digital identifiers
Postcode646383
OKATO Code
OKTMO Code

Content

History

The village was founded in 1909 by settlers on the Baikalovsky site as part of the Rybinsk volost of the Tarsky district of the Tobolsk province . The first settlers were from the Mogilev , Kazan provinces.

In 1910, according to the general presence magazine of the Tobolsk provincial administration dated December 18, No. 827, out of 17 immigrants settled in the Belogrivsky district of the Rybinsk volost, including 17 cash families of 54 male and 51 female sexes, the formation of an independent rural society with the name of it “Belogrivsky” with the inclusion in the administrative relation to the Rybinsk volost.

January 1, 1911 the village was transferred to the formed Forpost volost.

On January 1, 1914, the village was again transferred to the Rybinsk volost.

For 1926 there was a school.

In 1991, the village was the center of the Belogrivsky state farm [2] .

Infrastructure

In 2011, there was a school, a library, a village administration, 5 peasant (farmer) households (Gnome, Baikal, Orbit, Zenit, Komarov), Belogrivskoye agricultural holding, 2 agricultural complex (Niva) , "Belogrivsky").

Streets in the village: Maslozavodskaya, Youth, New Year's, Sedelnikova, Central, School. Lanes: Boiler House, Youth.

Population

  • 1910 - 105 people (54 m - 51 railways);
  • 1926 - 483 people (252 m - 231 g);
  • 2011 - 495 people.
Population
2010 [3]2011 [4]2012 [5]2013 [6]2014 [7]2015 [8]2016 [9]
449↘ 447↘ 424↘ 387↘ 365↘ 351↘ 335
2017 [1]
↘ 319

Notes

  1. ↑ 1 2 Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2017 (neopr.) (July 31, 2017). Date of treatment July 31, 2017. Archived July 31, 2017.
  2. ↑ Administrative division on March 1, 1991. Presidium of the Omsk Regional Council of People's Deputies. Directory. Publishing Department. Omsk 1991
  3. ↑ 2010 All-Russian Population Census. The population of urban and rural settlements of the Omsk region (Neopr.) . Date of treatment April 16, 2014. Archived on April 16, 2014.
  4. ↑ Omsk region. Estimated resident population as of January 1, 2009-2016
  5. ↑ Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities. Table 35. Estimated resident population as of January 1, 2012 (neopr.) . Date of treatment May 31, 2014. Archived May 31, 2014.
  6. ↑ The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2013. - M.: Federal State Statistics Service of Rosstat, 2013. - 528 p. (Table 33. The population of urban districts, municipalities, urban and rural settlements, urban settlements, rural settlements) (neopr.) . Date of treatment November 16, 2013. Archived November 16, 2013.
  7. ↑ Table 33. The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2014 (neopr.) . Date of treatment August 2, 2014. Archived on August 2, 2014.
  8. ↑ The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2015 (neopr.) . Date of treatment August 6, 2015. Archived on August 6, 2015.
  9. ↑ Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2016

Literature

  • List of resettlement sites of the Tobolsk province (annex to the 20th layout map of the Tobolsk province, 1913 edition). Typography of the diocesan brotherhood. Tobolsk. 1913.
  • Reference publications of the Resettlement Department of the Ministry of the Interior. Issue XIV. List of resettlement and reserve plots formed from 1893 to July 1, 1903 in the Steppe Territory, Tobolsk, Tomsk, Yenisei and Irkutsk provinces. Printing house of the Ministry of the Interior. St. Petersburg. 1903
  • Reference publications of the Resettlement Department of the Ministry of the Interior. Issue XXII. List of resettlement sites formed on January 1, 1904 in the Akmola region, Tobolsk, Tomsk, Yenisei provinces (with maps of designated provinces and regions). St. Petersburg. 1906
  • Reference book of the Omsk diocese. Compiled on behalf of the VII diocesan congress, the priest of the village of Novoselya, Tyukalinsky district, John Goloshubin. Printing house "Irtysh". Omsk 1914.
  • Lists of populated areas of the Russian Empire compiled and published by the Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior: LX. Tobolsk province. The list of settlements according to the data for 1868-1869. Printing house of the Ministry of the Interior. St. Petersburg. 1871.
  • Statistics of the Russian Empire: Volosts and inhabited places of 1893. Issue X. Tobolsk province. Compiled by N. A. Rubakin. Published by the Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. Printing house V. Berezovsky and Co. St. Petersburg. 1894.
  • The list of populated areas of the Tobolsk province, compiled by the provincial statistical committee by order of a citizen of the Tobolsk governor, according to information delivered by volost boards in 1903 and verified by census material. Provincial Printing House. Tobolsk. 1904.
  • List of the inhabited places of the Tobolsk province. Compiled according to information on July 15, 1909, received from district police officers and volost boards. Edition of the Tobolsk provincial statistical committee. Provincial Printing House. Tobolsk. 1912.
  • List of settlements of the Siberian region. Volume 1. District of South-Western Siberia. Siberian Regional Executive Committee. Novosibirsk 1928.
  • Encyclopedia of the Omsk region. Volume 1. AM. Omsk book publishing house. Omsk 2010. Article 122

Links

  • Belogrivka Omsk region on the map.
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title= Belogrivka&oldid = 85236512


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