Milenino is a village in Fatezhsky district of Kursk region . The administrative center of the Mileninsky Village Council .
| Village | |
| Milenino | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Kursk region |
| Municipal District | Fatezhsky |
| Rural settlement | Mileninsky Village Council |
| History and Geography | |
| Former names | Melenino |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 295 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +7 47144 |
| Postcode | 307107 |
| OKATO Code | 38244844001 |
| OKTMO Code | |
Content
Geography
It is located in the center of Fatezhsky district, 2 km southeast of Fatezh on the right bank of the river Usozhi .
History
At the beginning of the 20th century, a Roman coin dating back to 172 AD was found in one of the Milenino gardens. This type of coin was used in the 7th-9th centuries when calculating Slavic tribes with neighbors, which allows us to judge the population of this area already at that time. A settlement on the site of present-day Milenin existed in the XIV-XV centuries. Then these territories were subordinated to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania .
Modern Milenino has been documented since the 17th century. It arose earlier than the neighboring village of Glebovo . The first borrowers of Milenin were the Belova, Gnezdilov (from the village of Gnezdilov ), Emelyanovs (from the village of Soldatskoye ), Kobelevs, Kartsevs, Kononovs, Kryukovs, the Bad (from the village of Bogoyavlenskoye ) and Chaplygins (from the village of Chaplygin ). A little later, the monasteries of Pavlovs (from the village of Soldatskoye), Sotnikovs (from the village of Kolesnikova ), and Karamyshevs settled here as sons-in-law of local residents. Also in the 1st half of the 17th century immigrants from Poland settled in Milenino.
Initially, it was called Melenino . It is mentioned in 1676 as one of the large villages of the Usogsky camp of the Kursk district [2] . By the middle of the 18th century, an Orthodox church was built in Milenino, consecrated in honor of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary. In the 2nd half of the 18th century, about 1300 odnodory and several hundred proprietor peasants lived in the village. In 1779, the village was included in the Fatezh district .
The proximity to the county town determined the presence of a large number of estates concentrated in the village. The largest estates belonged to the nobles Batesatul , Bulgakov , von Disterlo , Kozlov , Korobkin, Koshurov, Nikushin, Nitskevich, merchants Gladkov, Barkov, Solntsev and others.
According to the 9th revision of 1850, the peasants of the village were owned by staff captain Ivan Nikolaev (184 male souls), the wife of non-commissioned officer Anastasia Iosifova (3 dmp), major Ivan Kishkin (30 dm.p. .), the wife of the college secretary Vera Koshurova (11 medical doctors), Nikolai Koshurov (1 medical doctors), the wife of the titular adviser Ekaterina Maritskaya (9 medical doctors), the wife of the college registrar Anastasia Prudkovskaya (7 d.a.m.), wife of the provincial secretary Alexander Smirnov (1 d.a. m.), Wife of staff captain Alexander Subbotin (4 d.a.), Marya Churilova (6 d.a. .), Elizabeth Annenkova (1 MD), Natalya Anne Nkova (2 dm.p.), wife of the titular adviser Alexander Bulgakov (8 dm.p.), wife of the ensign Ekaterina Volzhina (1 dm.p.), second lieutenant Vasily Zvyagintsev (19 dm.p. .), captain Ivan Zvyagintsev (15 dm.p.), lieutenant Peter Zvyagintsev with his brother (8 dm.p.). At that time, the village of Blagoveshchensk stood out in the village of Milenino. His peasants were owned by the wife of the college registrar Praskovya Shirobokova (7 dmp) [3] .
In 1861, the village was included in the Epiphany volost of Fatezh district. In 1862, in the former state-owned and owner's village of Milenino, there were 166 yards, 1730 people lived (853 males and 877 females) [4] . In 1877, there were 200 yards in Milenino, 1222 people lived. By this time, a school was opened here, and the village became the administrative center of the Mileninsky volost [5] . In 1897, 1,807 people lived in Milenino (876 males and 931 females) [6] , and in 1900 - 1,793 (895 males and 898 females) [7] .
In the years 1924-1928 as part of the Fatezh volost of the Kursk district . Since 1928, as part of the Fatezhsky district . In 1937, there were 107 yards in the village [8] . During the Great Patriotic War, from October 25, 1941 to February 1943, the village was in the zone of Nazi occupation.
Population
| Population |
|---|
| 2010 [1] |
| 295 |
Persons
- Polyakov, Alexey Kuzmich (? - 1915) - a participant in the First World War, a knight of three soldier George Crosses.
Attractions
- Church of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary built in 1890.
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 2010 All-Russian Population Census. Volume 1. The number and distribution of the population of the Kursk region . Date of treatment January 31, 2014. Archived January 31, 2014.
- ↑ Newspaper Fatezhsky Everyday Life: My Village
- ↑ Proceedings of the Kursk Provincial Statistics Committee, 1863 , p. 251.
- ↑ List of populated places, 1868 , p. 154.
- ↑ Volosts and the most important villages of European Russia, 1880 , p. 285.
- ↑ Populated places of the Russian Empire, 1905 , p. 98.
- ↑ Kursk collection. Issue 1, 1901 , p. 38.
- ↑ Milenino on the map of the Red Army N-36 (D) 1937
Literature
- Proceedings of the Kursk Provincial Statistics Committee. First release. - Printing house of the Kursk government, 1863. - 584 p.
- The list of the inhabited places of Kursk province according to the data of 1862. - Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. St. Petersburg, 1868 .-- 174 p.
- Volosts and the most important villages of European Russia. Issue 1. Provinces of the central agricultural region. - Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. St. Petersburg, 1880 .-- 413 p.
- Blagoveshchensky N. A. Quarterly law. - Typography of the Partnership I. N. Kushnerev and Co., 1899. - 538 p.
- Zlatoverkhovnikov N.I. Kursk collection. Issue 1. - Printing house of the provincial government, 1901. - 360 p.
- Populated places of the Russian Empire of 500 or more inhabitants according to the census of 1897. - Printing house "Public benefit", 1905. - 399 p.
- Biryukov A. Yu. Fatezhsky Territory. Past and present. - Fatezh, 2007 .-- 307 p.