Dorogoshchi is a village in the Borsky rural settlement of Boksitogorsky district of the Leningrad region .
| Village | |
| Expensive | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Leningrad region |
| Municipal District | Boksitogorsk |
| Rural settlement | Borskoye |
| History and Geography | |
| Former names | Expensive |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | ▲ 9 [1] people ( 2017 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +7 81366 |
| Postcode | 187646 |
| OKATO Code | 41203844004 |
| OKTMO Code | |
History
The village of Dorogoshchi, Mikhailovsky Cherensky Pogost, is mentioned in the census of 1710 [2] .
DEARS - the village of Dorogoshchinsky society, the parish of Cherensky graveyard.
Peasant households - 15. Buildings - 56, including residential - 21. Residents are engaged in logging, sawing and rafting.
The number of residents according to the family lists of 1879: 49 m., 40 w. P.; according to the parish records of 1879: 51 m. p. [3]
In the late XIX - early XX centuries, the village administratively belonged to the Anisimov volost of the 5th zemsky district of the 3rd camp of the Tikhvin district of the Novgorod province .
DEARS - the village of Dorogoshchinsky rural society, the number of yards - 24, the number of houses - 39, the number of inhabitants: 60 m., 74 w. P.;
Occupations of residents - agriculture, forestry. Zubakinsky stream. Chapel, bakery, 2 small shops. (1910 year) [4]
Doroshchi village on the map of 1913
According to the map of the Novgorod province of 1913, the village was called Dorogoshch and consisted of 5 peasant yards [5] .
According to 1933, the village of Dorogoshchi was part of the Dmitrievsky Village Council of the Dregelsky District of the Leningrad Region [6] .
Since July 5, 1944, the Dregel district was part of the Novgorod region . On July 5, 1956, by Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR No. 713/2, the Dmitrovsky and Mozolevsky Village Councils were transferred from the Dregelsky District of the Novgorod Region to the Boksitogorsky District of the Leningrad Region [7] .
According to the data of 1966, 1973 and 1990, the village of Dorogoshchi was part of the Mozolevsky village council of the Boksitogorsky district of the Leningrad region [8] [9] [10] .
In 1997, 14 people lived in the village of Dorogoshchi, Mozolevsky volost, in 2002 - 8 people (all Russians) [11] [12] .
In 2007, 5 people lived in the village of Dorogoshchi Borsky SP , in 2010 - 4 [13] [14] .
Geography
The village is located in the southwestern part of the region near the highway 41K-034 ( Pikalyovo - Kolbeki ).
The distance to the administrative center of the settlement is 43 km [13] .
To the south-east of the village flows the Ponyr River.
Demographics
Infrastructure
In 2017, 3 households were registered in the village [15] .
Notes
- ↑ Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad region / Comp. Kozhevnikov V.G. - Directory. - SPb. : Inkeri, 2017 .-- S. 74 .-- 271 p. - 3000 copies. Archived March 14, 2018 on Wayback Machine
- ↑ Census of 1710: Novgorod Uyezd: Obonezhskaya Pyatina: Upland Half: Tales submitted to the enumerator Roman Ivanovich Choglokov (RGADA. F.1209. Op.1. D.8594. L.1-287)
- ↑ Lists of settlements and information about the villages of the Novgorod province. Tikhvin county. 1885, part 1 p. 48 and part 2 p. 110
- ↑ List of populated areas of the Novgorod province. Issue VII. Tikhvin county. Compiled under the editorship of the Secretary of the Novgorod Provincial Statistical Committee V. A. Podobedov. Novgorod. Provincial Printing House. 1911. p. 10
- ↑ Military topographic map of the Novgorod province, series III, sheet II, 1913
- ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad region. - L., 1933, p. 226
- ↑ Snytko O. V. Administrative and territorial division of the Novgorod province and the region 1727-1995. / Trifonov S. D., Chuikova T. B., Fedina L. V., Dubonosova A. E. .. - Reference. - St. Petersburg: Committee for Culture, Tourism and Archival Affairs of the Novgorod Region. State Archives of the Novgorod Region, 2009. - P. 177. - 352 p.
- ↑ Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad region / Comp. T.A. Badina. - Reference book. - L .: Lenizdat , 1966 .-- S. 88. - 197 p. - 8000 copies. Archived October 17, 2013. Archived October 17, 2013 on Wayback Machine
- ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad region. - Lenizdat, 1973, p. 169 Archived on March 30, 2016.
- ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad region. - Lenizdat, 1990, ISBN 5-289-00612-5, p. 31 Archived on October 17, 2013.
- ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad region. - SPb, 1997, ISBN 5-86153-055-6, p. 34 Archived on October 17, 2013.
- ↑ Koryakov Yu. B. Database “Ethno-linguistic composition of Russian settlements”. Leningrad region .
- ↑ 1 2 Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad Region. - SPb., 2007, p. 55 Archived on October 17, 2013.
- ↑ Results of the 2010 All-Russian Population Census. Leningrad region.
- ↑ Population by rural settlements in the Borsky rural settlement of the Boksitogorsky municipal district of the Leningrad region as of January 1, 2017.