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Mokredi

Mokredi is a village in the Zagrivsky rural settlement of the Slantsevsky district of the Leningrad region .

Village
Mokredi
A country Russia
Subject of the federationLeningrad region
Municipal DistrictSlantsevsky
Rural settlementZagrivskoe
History and Geography
Former namesMockworms, Mockworm, Mokredi Big, Mokredi Small, Mokred, Small Mokred
TimezoneUTC + 3
Population
Population▲ 42 [1] people ( 2017 )
Digital identifiers
Telephone code+7 81374
Postcode188577
OKATO Code41242808002
OKTMO Code

Content

History

The village of Mokritsy is mentioned on the map of the St. Petersburg province of F. F. Schubert in 1834 [2] .

MOCREDI - the village belongs to Messrs. Solodchenka, Dubyansky, Sokhnovskaya, the number of inhabitants according to the audit: 27 m. p. [3] (1838)

Like the village of Mokritsa , it is marked on the map of Professor S. S. Kutorgi in 1852 [4] .

MOKREDI - the village of Messrs. Solodonchenkova, Lyamshina and Zinoviev, on a country road, the number of yards - 11, the number of souls - 32 m. [5] (1856)


BIG MOONS - the owner's village at the well, the number of yards - 2, the number of inhabitants: 7 m., 9 g. P.;
SMOKES SMALL - the owner's village at the well, the number of yards - 2, the number of inhabitants: 6 m., 8 w. P.; [6] . (1862 year)

In the XIX century, the village administratively belonged to the 1st camp, at the beginning of the XX century to the Dobruchinsky volost of the 1st zemsky section of the 4th camp of the Gdovsky district of the St. Petersburg province.

According to the Memorial Book of the St. Petersburg Province in 1905, the villages of Malaya Mokred and Mokred (state) were included in the Malo-Zagrivsky rural society [7] .

  •  

    Mokredi village on the map of 1919

According to the map of the Petrograd and Estland provinces of 1919, the village was called Mokritsy , and a chapel was located south of the village [8] .

From 1917 to 1920, the village was part of the Skaryatinsky volost of the Gdovsky district.

Since 1920, as part of Estonia .

Since 1940, as part of the Estonian SSR .

Since 1944, as part of the Zagrivsky village council of the Slantsevsky district of the Leningrad region.

Since 1963, in the Kingisepp district .

As of August 1, 1965, the village of Mokredi was part of the Zagrivsky village council of Kingisepp district [9] . Since November 1965, again as part of the Slantsevsky district [10] .

According to 1973, the village of Mokredi was part of the Zagrivsky village council of the Slantsy district [11] [12] .

In 1997, 19 people lived in the village of Mokredi, Zagrivsky volost, in 2002 - 41 people (Russians - 88%) [13] [14] .

In 2007, 28 people lived in the village of Mokredi of the Zagrivsky Joint Venture , in 2010 - 30 [15] [16] .

Geography

The village is located in the western part of the district on the highway 41K-164 ( Slantsy - Vtroy ), to the south and adjacent to the village of Zagrivye .

The distance to the administrative center of the settlement is 1 km [15] .

The distance to the railway platform Slates - 21 km [9] .

Demographics

 

Streets

Gardening [17] .

Notes

  1. ↑ Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad region / Comp. Kozhevnikov V.G. - Directory. - SPb. : Inkeri, 2017 .-- S. 155. - 271 p. - 3000 copies. Archived March 14, 2018 on Wayback Machine
  2. ↑ Topographic map of St. Petersburg province. 5th layout. Schubert. 1834
  3. ↑ Description of the St. Petersburg province in counties and camps . - SPb. : Provincial Printing House, 1838. - S. 36. - 144 p.
  4. ↑ Geognostic map of St. Petersburg province prof. S. S. Kutorgi, 1852
  5. ↑ Gdovsky district // Alphabetical list of villages by counties and camps of the St. Petersburg province / N. Elagin. - SPb. : Printing House of the Provincial Government, 1856. - P. 53. - 152 p.
  6. ↑ "Lists of the populated areas of the Russian Empire, compiled and published by the Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior" XXXVII St. Petersburg Province. As of 1862. SPb. ed. 1864 p. 37
  7. ↑ Memorial book of the St. Petersburg province. Collected and compiled by N.V. Shaposhnikov. St. Petersburg, 1905, p. 89
  8. ↑ Military topographic map of the Petrograd and Estland provinces, series IV, plate 7, 1919
  9. ↑ 1 2 Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad region / Comp. T.A. Badina. - Reference book. - L .: Lenizdat , 1966 .-- S. 132. - 197 p. - 8000 copies. Archived October 17, 2013. Archived October 17, 2013 on Wayback Machine
  10. ↑ History of the administrative-territorial division of the Leningrad Region (Neopr.) (Inaccessible link) . Date of treatment January 8, 2018. Archived on September 14, 2017.
  11. ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad region. - Lenizdat, 1973, p. 266 Archived on March 30, 2016.
  12. ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad region. - Lenizdat, 1990, ISBN 5-289-00612-5, S. 106 Archived October 17, 2013.
  13. ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad region. - SPb, 1997, ISBN 5-86153-055-6, p. 107 Archived October 17, 2013.
  14. ↑ Koryakov Yu. B. Database “Ethno-linguistic composition of Russian settlements”. Leningrad region (neopr.) .
  15. ↑ 1 2 Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad Region. - St. Petersburg, 2007, p. 128
  16. ↑ Results of the 2010 All-Russian Population Census. Leningrad region.
  17. ↑ System "Tax Reference". Directory of postal codes. Slantsevsky district, Leningrad region (inaccessible link)
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mocredi&oldid=101599450


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