Nikolaevka is a disappeared village in the Olkhovsky district of the Volgograd region . The village at the Nikolaevskaya beam (right tributary of the Ilovli river) [1]
| the village now does not exist | |
| Nikolaevka | |
|---|---|
| State affiliation | |
| Entered into | Olkhovsky district , Volgograd region |
| Coordinates | |
| Based | 1827 |
| Modern location | Russia , Volgograd region , Olkhovsky district |
| Population | 1,056 people (1,894) |
It was founded in 1827 - 1828.
History
It was populated in 1827-1828 by state peasants who resettled from the Penza , Oryol , Ryazan and Kursk provinces. Land allotment - 4498 acres of convenient land. During the settlement, the peasants used the land together with the peasants of the village of Klinovka , and subsequently the allotment was divided. In 1872, the church of St. Michael the Archangel was consecrated. In 1894, a rural school was opened [2] .
Since 1928 - the administrative center of the Nikolaev village council of the Olkhov district of the Kamyshin district (the district was liquidated in 1934) of the Lower Volga region , from 1935 - the Stalingrad region [3] (since 1936 - the Stalingrad region, since 1961 - the Volgograd region). In 1954, the Nikolaev Village Council was abolished, the village was included in the Rybinsk Village Council [4] .
Population
Population dynamics
| 1860 [2] | 1886 [2] | 1889 [2] | 1894 [2] |
|---|---|---|---|
| 890 | 994 | 1172 | 1056 |
Notes
- ↑ Maps of the General Staff M-38 (B) 1: 100000. Volgograd and Rostov regions
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 Minh, Alexander Nikolaevich. Historical and geographical dictionary of the Saratov province / Comp. A.N. Minh. - Saratov, 1898-1902. - 5 t. - App. To the Works of the Saratov Scientific Archival Commission. T. 1: Southern counties: Kamyshinsky and Tsaritsinsky. Vol. 3: Lit. L-F: continued. C. 674–678
- ↑ History of the administrative-territorial division of the Stalingrad (Lower Volga) region. 1928–1936 .: Reference / Comp .: D.V. Buyanov, N. S. Lobchuk, S. A. Noritsyna. - Volgograd : Volgograd Scientific Publishing House, 2012. - 575 p. - ISBN 978-5-90608-102-5 .
- ↑ 2.46. Olkhovsky