Yugolin ( Belor. Yugalіn ) - a village in the Ivatsevichi district of the Brest region of Belarus . Included in the Dobromyshlensky Village Council . The population of 189 people (2009) [1] .
| Village | |
| Yugolin | |
|---|---|
| belor Yugalіn | |
| A country | |
| Region | Brest region |
| Area | Ivatsevichi district |
| Village council | Dobromyslensky |
| History and geography | |
| First mention | XVI century |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 189 people ( 2009 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Car code | one |
Content
Geography
The village is located 32 km north-east of the town of Ivatsevichi, near the village lies the border with the Baranavichy district . Selets village is adjacent to the south of Yugolin. The area belongs to the Neman basin, to the south of the village there is a network of melioration channels with a drain into the Myshanka river. The local three-kilometer road connects Yugolin with the highway P43 on the Ivatsevichi- Milovidy section [2] .
History
The first written mention of the village dates back to the 16th century, the Yugolin manor is a family estate of the Judezilla family [3] .
After the third section of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1795) as part of the Russian Empire, from 1801 Yugolin belonged to the Slonim district of the Grodno province [4] .
In 1825, Frantisek Yunzill was born in Yugolin ( be: Frantsishak Yunzil ), a participant in the 1863 uprising . Frantisek Junzill with his detachment took part in the battle of Milovidy , after the defeat of the uprising, emigrated to France, where he died [3] .
After the uprising was crushed, the Russian authorities confiscated the estate; Pavel Arkadyevich Vorontsov-Velyaminov from the Vorontsov-Velyaminov family became the new owner. His wife, Natalia, was the granddaughter of A. S. Pushkin [3] .
In the first half of the 19th century, a wooden manor-house was built on the estate and a landscape park was laid in the estate at Junzillah. When Vorontsov-Vel'yaminov in the estate built a number of outbuildings [3] .
According to the Riga Peace Treaty (1921), the village became part of interwar Poland , where it belonged to the Kosovo povet of the Polesia province . Since 1939 as part of the BSSR . The last owners of the estate were Pushkin’s great-great-grandchildren George and Vera Vorontsov-Veliyaminov, after the entry of Western Belorussia into the USSR were arrested and exiled to Siberia [3] .
The manor house and most of the buildings have not been preserved. Only the remains of the park and the building of the cheese dairy were preserved from the estate [3] .
Notes
- ↑ Census results
- ↑ Map Sheet N-35-112 Life . Scale: 1: 100,000. State of the area in 1983. 1986 edition
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 Nestsyarchuk L. M. “Lock, palaces, parks Berasteyshchyny X — XX stagdzyaў (gistoryya, camp, prospectyvy)”. Minsk, BelTA, 2002. 334 pages. ISBN 985-6302-37-4
- ↑ Garady and 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