Kamenka - the village of Belevsky district of the Tula region of Russia on the left bank of the river Vyrka . Included in the municipal Left Bank .
Village | |
Kamenka | |
---|---|
A country | Russia |
Subject of the federation | Tula region |
Municipal district | Belevsky |
Rural settlement | Left Bank |
History and geography | |
Timezone | UTC + 3 |
Population | |
Population | 12 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
Nationalities | Russians |
Denominations | orthodoxy |
Digital identifiers | |
Telephone code | +7 48742 |
Postcode | 301530 |
OKATO code | 70206876005 |
OKTMO code | |
Near the village, at the confluence of the stream into the Vyrka river, is the Gremyachiy spring, which is revered by the local population as holy and healing [2] .
Population
Population |
---|
2010 [1] |
12 |
History
From the scribal books of 1630-1632 it is known about the existence of a village here called Kamennoye.
In the village there was a wooden church in the name of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker with two side-chapels in the name of the great martyr Paraskeva Friday and in the name of St. Seraphim of Sarov, which was dismantled during the Great Patriotic War. It was built in 1769 at the expense of Prime Minister Ivan Ivanovich Pavlov, in 1888-1893 - overhauled, under it was laid a stone foundation. In 1891, a school was opened at the temple. The chapel of the church was a priest and a psalm reader, she owned 36 dessiatinas of 2,318 square sazhen (including the estate of 1 tithe of 430 sq. Sazhen, field 29 desiatin of 721 sq. Sazhen, meadow 6 dessiatin 327 sq. Sazhen, and uncomfortable 840 sq. Sazhen). The parish consisted of the neighboring villages: Senyukhino, Kartsovo, Belomestny, Ganshina, and Khodykino, where peasant farmers lived [3] .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 The 2010 All-Russian Population Census. The number and location of the population of the Tula region . The date of circulation is May 18, 2014. Archived May 18, 2014.
- ↑ I. Rogozhin. Spring "Gremyachiy", the holy spring near the village of Kamenka.
- ↑ P.I. Malitsky "Parishes and Churches of the Tula Diocese" Tula 1895. Belevsky uezd, p. 181.