Victory ( Belorussian. Pabeda ) is a village in the Kamenets district of the Brest region of Belarus . It is part of the Verkhovichsky village council . The population of 90 people (2009) [1] .
| Village | |
| Victory | |
|---|---|
| Belor. Pabeda | |
| A country | |
| Region | Brest region |
| Area | Kamenets district |
| Village Council | Verkhovichsky |
| History and Geography | |
| First mention | 1506 |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 90 people |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Car code | one |
Content
Geography
Victory is located 12 km northeast of the city of Vysokoe and 25 km northwest of the city of Kamenets . 6 km to the north-west is the border with Poland , the village is located in the border zone with a special regime of visits. 3 km to the east is the center of the village council, the village of Verkhovichi , to the west and north of the village are the villages of Kopyly and Kunakhovichi. The area belongs to the Vistula basin , around the village there is a network of reclamation canals with a drain into the Lesnaya river. Local roads connect Victory with Verkhovich and the surrounding villages of Kopyly, Kunakhovichi and Karolin [2] .
History
Although near the modern village of Pobeda there is the village of Kopyly, the historical center of the Kopyly estate with a noble estate is located just on the territory of Victory. The Kopyla estate was first mentioned in 1506, when the Grand Duke Alexander Yagellonchik granted it to Bogdan Alekseevich. In 1512, Kopyly passed to Ivashko Gornostaevich, who married the widow of Bogdan. In the middle of the century belonged to the Minsk governor Gabriel Ermine [3] .
After the administrative-territorial reform of the middle of the 16th century, in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, the village was part of the Beresteysky district of the Beresteysk voivodship [4] .
In the XVII century the estate passed to the Soots, then to the Puslovskys [3] .
After the third partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1795), Kopyly, as part of the Russian Empire, belonged to the Brest district of the Grodno province .
In the 19th century, the estate was owned by Ostik-Narbuttov, at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries it passed into the ownership of the Roth family, who built the estate here [3] .
According to the Riga Peace Treaty (1921), the village became part of inter-war Poland , where it belonged to the Brest district of the Polessk Voivodeship . Since 1939, as part of the BSSR [4] .
The last owner of the estate, Eugene Roth, was arrested in 1939 with the brothers Konstantin (who owned Verkhovich ) and Viktor (who owned Carolin ) in Kharkov [3] .
Attractions
- The farmstead of the Rotov "Kopyly". The manor house, barn and stable have been preserved.
Notes
- ↑ Census results
- ↑ Map sheet N-34-131 High . Scale: 1: 100 000. The condition of the area for 1972-1985. 1986 edition
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 Fedoruk A.T. “Ancient estates of the Beresteyshchina”. Minsk, publishing house “Belaruskaya Entsyklapedyya imya Petrusya Brokki”, 2004. 576 pages. ISBN 985-11-0305-5
- ↑ 1 2 Garady and Belarusian Belarus: Enceklapedy ў 15 tomahs. T. 4, book. 2. Brescky Voblast / Pad Navuk. red A. І. Lakotki. - Mn .: BelEn, 2006. ISBN 985-11-0373-X