Bolshaya Dainova ( Belorussian. Dainava Vyalaya; Vyalaya Dainava ) [Comm 1] - a village in the Volozhinsky village council of the Volozhinsky district of the Minsk region of Belarus .
| Dainova Bolshaya | |
|---|---|
| Belor. Dainava Vyalikaya; Vyalikaya Dainava | |
| A country | |
| Region | Minsk Region |
| Area | Volozhinsky district |
| Village Council | Volozhinsky |
| History and Geography | |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 152 [1] people ( 2008 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +375 1772 [2] |
| Postcode | 222352 [3] |
| Car code | five |
Content
Etymology
The toponym Dainova is an ethnonym : Dainova is one of the ethnic groups of the Baltic (Lithuanian) population; Daina - Lithuanian folk songs. In Belarus, five toponyms arose from this ethnonym [4]
Geography
The village is located 21 km west of Volozhin and 8 km from the railway station Volozhin (line Molodechno - Lida ), 83 km from Minsk [1] .
The layout of Dainova is an elongated, smoothly curved street oriented meridionally. Bilateral, dense buildings are characterized by traditional wooden manor houses. The household sector is located on the northeastern and northwestern outskirts of the village [1] .
History
In 1895, a literacy school was opened in the village. According to the 1897 census, Dainova belonged to the Zabrez volost of the Oshmyany district of the Vilnius province . In 1904 it was already a village and was called Velikaya Dinova [1] .
From 1921 to November 1939, Dinova was part of Poland . In November 1939, the village became part of the BSSR . October 12, 1940 became part of the Uzbolotsky village council of the Volozhinsky district of the Baranavichy region [1] .
During World War II, Dinova was occupied by Nazi forces from June 25, 1941 to July 5, 1944. 58 villagers fought on the fronts and in partisan formations, 17 of them died [1] .
Since September 20, 1944, the village was part of the Molodechno region . The collective farm named after V.I. Lenin, created in the village in October 1950, was at the service of the Volozhinsky MTS . Since January 20, 1960, Dinova was already listed in the Minsk region. In 1982, the village became part of the Zarya collective farm, the center of which was the village of Dubina Boyarskaya . In the 1990s, a pig farm and a cattle farm, a stable, a granary, an indoor current , a shop were located in Dainovo [1] .
Until May 28, 2013 she was a member of the Uzbolotsky village council [5] .
The village is home to a scientist in the physical chemistry of peat , academician of the NAS of Belarus , doctor of technical sciences, professor, honored worker of science and technology of Belarus I. I. Lishtvan (born in 1932) [1] .
Population
- 1897 - 368 people, 55 yards [1]
- 1904 - 447 people [1]
- 1921 - 557 people, 95 yards [1]
- 1940 - 716 people, 112 yards [1]
- 1959 - 584 people [1]
- 1994 - 268 people, 121 yards [1]
- 2008 - 152 people, 87 households [1]
Comments
- ↑ Name and stress are given for: Names of settlements of the Republic of Belarus: Minsk region: Narmatians of the past / І. A. Gaponenka іnsh .; pad red. V.P. Lemtsyugovay. - Mn. : Tekhnalogіya, 2003 .-- S. 136.
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Garada and Belarus Belarus / Redkal. T. U. Byalova (holektar) і інш. - Minsk: Belarus. Encekl. Name P. Brokki, 2010. - T. 8. Minsk Region. Prince 1. - S. 377. - 736 p. - ISBN 978-985-11-0520-1 .
- ↑ Phone codes Minsk region
- ↑ Postcodes Minsk Region, Volozhinsky District
- ↑ Zhuchkevich V.A. Brief toponymic dictionary of Belarus. - Mn. : Publ. BSU, 1974.- S. 91 .-- 448 p.
- ↑ "On changing the administrative-territorial structure of the districts of the Minsk region." Decision of the Minsk Regional Council of Deputies of May 28, 2013 No. 234 (Russian)