Konovalikha is a village in the Bolsheukovsky district of the Omsk region of Russia , part of the Stanovo rural settlement .
| Village | |
| Konovalikha | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Omsk region |
| Municipal District | Bolsheukovsky |
| Rural settlement | Stanovskoe |
| History and Geography | |
| Founded | 1895 |
| Former names | village Konovalovsky |
| Timezone | UTC + 6 |
| Population | |
| Population | ↘ 44 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Postcode | |
| OKATO Code | |
| OKTMO Code | |
Content
- 1 History
- 2 Infrastructure
- 3 population
- 4 notes
- 5 Literature
History
The village was established as a resettlement village in 1895 as part of the Rybinsk rural society of the Rybinsk volost of the Tara district of the Tobolsk province .
In 1900, according to the journal of the general presence of the Tobolsk provincial administration of September 2, No. 1400, of the displaced persons settled in the Konovalovsky district of the Rybinsk volost, including 33 families, 97 male and 93 female cash souls, the formation of an independent rural society, with the name of it, “Konovalovsky ”With its inclusion in the Rybinsk volost.
In 1903, there were 39 yards and 208 people.
In 1904, the resettlement village was described as follows: “in the village, the area is wooded and steppe. Water supply is poor from the creek. The forest is wood. The total area of the plot is 2291 tithing. Convenient land 1740 acres. An inconvenient land of 551 tithes. Under the forest, 419 acres. The number of shower shares is 116. The free shower shares are 4 ” .
For 1909 there was a bread and spare shop, a windmill, an oil mill, a fire barn. Located at the river Malaya Stanovka on a country road.
In 1912 there was a petty shop.
In 1918, the Konovalovskaya Butter Artel operated. On April 10, 1918, the artisans of the Konovalovskaya butter artel of the Tara region of the Union of the Siberian oil artels at a general meeting discussed the issue, according to the statement they submitted to the Tara office of the Union, on the allocation of part of the property or capital of the newly formed butter artel from the Reshetnikovskaya butter artel, which they were working together from 1908 to 1917. Having heard the explanations of instructor Druganov that it was not possible to separate from the Reshetnikovskaya artel any capital or property into Konovalovskaya’s share, due to ignorance of the books, and taking into account that the allocation of the correct share due to them from the Reshetnikovskaya butter-making artel, from the ignorance of books, was made it is impossible, and also from the capital held in the Union by the end of 1917, also to make a relatively small sum of them. Therefore, they decided: “to file a petition for the allocation of property or capital in person to the Reshetnikovskaya butter-making cooperative in a peaceful manner, otherwise, if the latter does not agree to this, then apply to the appropriate court with the above-mentioned petition, demanding all the books from the Reshetnikovskaya butter-making artel the time from 1908 to 1917, or an explanation of why they were not taken or where they hid them. ”
For 1926 there was a village council. Located at the river Stanovka.
In 1974, a sanitary checkpoint was built that existed until 2001 from the walls of the Outpost Holy Trinity Church, dismantled by the villagers.
In 1991, the village was a branch of the "Stanovsky" state farm [2] .
Infrastructure
In 2011, there was a school. One street in the village of Tsentralnaya and Shkolny lane.
Population
- 1900 - 190 people (97 m - 93 g);
- 1903 - 208 people (108 m - 100 g);
- 1909 - 220 people (113 m - 107 g);
- 1912 - 250 Orthodox people;
- 1926 - 411 people (200 m - 211 railways).
| Population size | |
|---|---|
| 1926 [3] | 2010 [1] |
| 411 | ↘ 44 |
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 2010 All-Russian Population Census. The population of urban and rural settlements of the Omsk region . Date of treatment April 16, 2014. Archived on April 16, 2014.
- ↑ Administrative division on March 1, 1991. Presidium of the Omsk Regional Council of People's Deputies. Directory. Publishing Department. Omsk 1991
- ↑ List of settlements of the Siberian Territory. volume 1. District of South-Western Siberia. Novosibirsk 1928
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.
- 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.