Gardeners ( Belor. Agarodnіkі ) - a village in Zhabinka district of Brest region of Belarus . It is part of the Krivlyanovsky village council , until 2012 it belonged to the now-abolished Yakovchitsky village council . The population of 53 people (2009) [1] .
| Village | |
| Gardeners | |
|---|---|
| belor Agarodnіkі | |
| A country | |
| Region | Brest |
| Area | Zhabinkovsky |
| Village council | Krivlyany |
| History and geography | |
| First mention | 1557 |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 53 people ( 2019 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Postcode | |
| Car code | one |
Geography
Gardeners are located 12 km north-east of Zhabinka near the border with Kobrin district . Vezhki village adjoins the village from the south . Local roads lead to the nearby villages of Matyas, Pillars and Krivlyany . The locality belongs to the Vistula basin , around the village there is a network of ameliorative canals with a drain to the Palahva Canal, from there to the Mukhavets [2] . The nearest railway station is in the village of Stolpy (line Brest - Baranavichy ).
History
Ogorodniki village arose after the agrarian reform in Kobrin economy in 1557. In the audit of 1563, the fact of the eviction of 10 families from the Vezhetsky Dvor was given, which gave the new settlement the name Ogorodniki [3] .
After the third section of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1795) within the Russian Empire, from 1801 belonged to the Kobrin district of the Grodno province [4] .
In the XIX century, the estate was owned by the Domansky family, who built a manor house here and laid out a landscape park [3] . In 1912 a wooden church was built (not preserved) [5] .
In the First World War, the manor house burned down, in its place in 1927 a wooden dwelling house was built, which has survived to the present day [3] . According to the Riga Peace Treaty (1921), the village became part of interwar Poland , where it belonged to the Kobryn povet of the Polesye voivodship . Since 1939 - as part of the BSSR [4] .
In 1997, a stone Ascension Church was erected on the site of the unretained wooden church of 1912 [5] .
Population
- 1999 - 116 people;
- 2009 - 71 people [6] ;
- 2019 - 53 people.
Attractions
- Only the stone cellar and the remains of the park remained from the Domansky estate [3] .
- Mass grave of Soviet soldiers. 6 pilots who died during the Great Patriotic War were buried. In 1965, an obelisk was installed to perpetuate the memory of pilots and 42 countrymen killed in the war [7] . The grave is included in the State List of Historical and Cultural Values of the Republic of Belarus [8] .
Notes
- Zhabinka District Executive Committee - Krivlyavsky Village Council . zhabinka.brest-region.gov.by. The appeal date is February 9, 2019.
- ↑ Map sheet N-35-133 Kobryn . Scale: 1: 100,000. State of the area in 1985. 1991 edition
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 Nestsyarchuk L. M. “Lock, palaces, parks Berasteyshchyyny X — XX stagoddziaў (gistoryya, camp, prospecting)”. Minsk, BelTA, 2002. 334 pages. ISBN 985-6302-37-4
- ↑ 1 2 Garady and All Belarus: Entsyklapedya ў 15 Tamah. T. 3, Vol. 1. Brestskaya voblasts / pad navuk. red A.I. Lakotki. - Minsk: BelEn, 2006. ISBN 985-11-0373-X
- ↑ 1 2 Gardeners on the site globus.tut.by
- ↑ Census results
- “The collection of monuments of history and culture of Belarus. Brest region". Minsk, publishing house Belarusian Soviet Encyclopedia named after Petrus Brovka, 1990
- ↑ Dzyarzhna sp_s g_storyka-cultural kashtoўnaszey RB