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Mosina (Sverdlovsk region)

Mosina is a village of the municipality Kamensky Urban District of the Sverdlovsk Region .

Village
Mosin
A country Russia
Subject of the federationSverdlovsk region
City districtKamensky
History and Geography
TimezoneUTC + 5
Population
Population↗ 59 [1] people ( 2010 )
Digital identifiers
Postcode
OKATO Code
OKTMO Code

Content

Geography

 
Mosin on the scheme of the Pokrovsky district ; 1928 year

The village of Mosina of the municipality " Kamensky urban district " is located 24 kilometers (28 km along the highway) north-north-west of the city of Kamensk-Uralsky , on the right bank of the Kamenka River (the left tributary of the Iset River ), above the mouth of the Belaya River. There is a pond in the village. In the vicinity of the village passes the highway Kamensk-Uralsky - Bogdanovich [2] .

History

On May 14, 1962, the villages of Mosina and Kopyrin were united in the village of Mosina. [3]

Previously, the village of Mosina was called Yachmeneva, the name which was received from the name of the first settler Yachmenev. For the first time, the village of Yachmenev was mentioned in 1624 in the "Watch Book" by Mikhail Tyukhin, with 7 courtyards. In 1762, the villagers took part in the uprising against registration with the Verkh-Isetsk plant , and in 1774 in the peasant war led by Yemelyan Pugachev . Since 1803, the villagers became state peasants. In Mosin, the surnames of the Yachmenevs, Mosins and Vaganovs prevailed; descendants of immigrants from the Vaga river of the Olonets province . In 1914, a wooden church was built, and the village of Mosina became a village.

The village of Kopyrin was founded after 1734, named after the first settler Kopyrin. The village was located on the right bank of the Kamenka and the left bank of the Belaya River. In February 1774, a big battle took place near the outskirts of the village, from the village of Guseva, during which the Pugachevites defeated Ozerov's detachment from the imperial regiment of Fisher. The village was dominated by the names of the Kopyrins and Nifontovs. The village was part of the Klevakinsky parish of Beloyarskaya Sloboda. In 1929, a collective farm named after the 16th party congress was formed in the village; in 1954, it entered the Mosinsky collective farm named after Stalin.

On the opposite, right, bank of the Belaya River, there was a street of the village of Kopyrina, in 1907-1946 it was called the village of Asia. This street was founded by the participant of the Russian-Japanese war paramedic Pavel Kazantsev. In total there were 9 houses in it. [four]

Population

Population
1904 [5]1926 [6]2002 [7]2010 [1]
967↗ 1025↘ 57↗ 59
Structure
  • According to 1904, there are 172 yards with a population of 967 people (475 men, 492 women), all Russians are former state [8] .
  • In 1928, in the village of Mosina there were 215 households with a population of 1,025 people. [four]
  • In 1928, in the village of Kopyrina there were 76 courtyards with a population of 344 people. [four]
  • According to the 2002 census, the national composition is as follows: Russians - 100% [9] . According to the 2010 census, the village had: 21 men, 38 women [10] .

Notes

  1. ↑ 1 2 2010 All-Russian Population Census. The number and distribution of the population of the Sverdlovsk region (Neopr.) . Date of treatment June 1, 2014. Archived June 1, 2014.
  2. ↑ Rundqvist N., Zadorina O. Sverdlovsk Region. From A to Z: Illustrated Local History Encyclopedia . - Yekaterinburg: Quist, 2009 .-- S. 456. - ISBN 978-5-85383-392-0 .
  3. ↑ State Archive of the Sverdlovsk Region. Directory of administrative territorial division / Pokrovsky district (Neopr.) . gaso-ural.ru. Date of treatment June 13, 2016.
  4. ↑ 1 2 3 Korovin A.F. Our small homeland. Dictionary dictionary on the history of villages and villages of the Kamensky district . - Kamensk-Uralsky: Kamensky Plant, November 2000. - No. 1 .
  5. ↑ List of populated places of the Perm province of 1904. Ed. Perm Provincial Zemstvo, Perm, 1905.526 p.
  6. ↑ List of settlements in the Ural region. Volume XVI. Shadrinsky district. Sverdlovsk, 1928, 136 pp.
  7. ↑ 2002 All-Russian Census Data: Table No. 02c. Population and prevailing nationality for each rural locality. M .: Federal State Statistics Service, 2004
  8. ↑ "List of the inhabited places of the Perm province of 1904". Ed. Perm Provincial Zemstvo, Perm, 1905.526 p.
  9. ↑ National composition of the 2002 census (neopr.) . std.gmcrosstata.ru. Date of treatment March 13, 2016.
  10. ↑ The population of urban districts, municipalities, urban and rural settlements, settlements of the Sverdlovsk region based on the results of the 2010 All-Russian Population Census (neopr.) . sverdl.gks.ru. Date of treatment March 13, 2016.
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mosina_(Sverdlovsk_region)&oldid=91563570


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