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Staropolie

Staropolie is a village in the Slantsy district of the Leningrad region of Russia . The administrative center of Staropolsky rural settlement .

Village
Staropolie
A country Russia
Subject of the federationLeningrad region
Municipal DistrictSlantsevsky
Rural settlementStaropolskoe
History and Geography
Former namesValova, Valovo, Volovo
TimezoneUTC + 3
Population
Population▲ 823 [1] people ( 2017 )
Digital identifiers
Telephone code+7 81374
Postcode188550
OKATO Code41242836001
OKTMO Code
Church of the Nativity in the village of Staropol. July 2013

Content

History

It was first mentioned in the scribe books of Shelonsky Pyatina of 1498, as the village of Volovo 1 was a large yard (the village of Valovo) in the Sumerian graveyard of the Novgorod district , and the area near it was named Staropolie [2] .

Then Staropolsky churchyard is mentioned on the map of the St. Petersburg province of F. F. Schubert in 1834 [3] .

VALOVO - the village belongs to Her Majesty, the number of inhabitants according to the audit: 41 m. P.;
In it, a stone church in the name of St. Prophet Elijah [4] (1838)


VALOVA - the village of Gdovsky of Her Majesty's estate, on a country road, the number of yards - 14, the number of souls - 45 m. [5] (1856)


VALOVO - a specific village at a well, the number of yards - 14, the number of inhabitants: 46 m., 51 w. P.
STAROPOLIE - graveyard at the well, the number of yards - 7, the number of inhabitants: 15 m., 12 w. paragraph [6] . (1862 year)

The compilation of the Central Statistical Committee described it like this:

VOLOVO (STAROPOLIE) - a former specific village, 16 households, 116 residents;
Parish board, parish school, 2 shops, an inn, a fair once a year. (1885) [7]

In the XIX - early XX centuries, the village administratively belonged to the Staropolsky volost of the 2nd zemsky district of the 1st camp of the Gdovsky district of the St. Petersburg province.

According to the Memorial Book of the St. Petersburg Province in 1905, the village of Valovo and the cemetery of Staropolie were included in the Valovo Rural Society [8] .

Since 1917, the village of Valovo was part of the Zaklepsky village council of the Staropolsky volost of the Gdovsky district.

  •  

    Staropolie village on the map of 1919

Since February 1927, as part of the Lozhgolovskaya volost.

Since August 1927, as part of the Osminsky district .

Since 1928, as part of the Staropolsky Village Council [9] .

According to 1933, the village of Valovo was the administrative center of the Staropolsky village council of the Osminsky district, which included 12 settlements, villages: Zaklepie, Zamoshye, Zasosie, Korino I, Korino II, Krupa, Kureshi, Menyushi, Sobolets, Shakitsy, Chudskaya Gora and the village of Valovo , the total population of 3144 people [10] .

According to data from 1936, the Staropolsky village council of the Osminsky district included 19 settlements, 660 farms and 10 collective farms, the village of Valovo was the administrative center of the village council [11] .

From August 1, 1941 to February 28, 1944, the German occupation.

Since 1961, as part of the Slantsy district.

Since 1963, as part of Kingisepp district [9] .

As of August 1, 1965, the village of Staropolie was the administrative center of the Staropolsky village council of Kingisepp district [12] . Since November 1965, again as part of the Slantsevsky district. In 1965, the population of the village was 150 people [9] .

According to 1973, the village of Staropolie was the administrative center of the Staropolsky village council [13]

According to 1990 data, the village of Staropolie was the administrative center of the Staropolsky village council, which included 38 settlements with a total population of 1,652 people. In the village of Staropolje , 919 people lived [14] .

In 1997, 966 people lived in the village of Staropolie, Staropolsky volost, in 2002 - 801 people (Russian - 95%), the village was the administrative center of the volost [15] [16] .

In 2007, 866 people lived in the village of Staropolie, Staropolskiy SP , in 2010 - 801 people [17] [18] .

Geography

The village is located in the eastern part of the district on the highway 41K-188 ( Gostitsy - Bolshaya Pustomerzha ) at the junction of the highway 41K-027 (Staropolie - Osmino ).

The distance to the district center is 48 km [14] .

The distance to the nearest Weimarn railway station is 50 km [12] .

The right tributary of the Menuka River flows through the village.

Demographics

 

Infrastructure

Since 1974, the village has a secondary school.

A library, a kindergarten, 3 shops, an outpatient clinic, a pharmacy, a post office of the Russian Federation, a branch of Sberbank of the Russian Federation, a church, a cultural center (gym, library, theater room), 5 apartment buildings and several dozen private houses.

Attractions

  • Church of the Nativity. Built between 1878 and 1888. Architect - I. B. Slupsky.
  • Church of Elijah the Prophet (closed in 1936)

Notes

  1. ↑ Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad region / Comp. Kozhevnikov V.G. - Directory. - SPb. : Inkeri, 2017 .-- S. 158. - 271 p. - 3000 copies. Archived March 14, 2018 on Wayback Machine
  2. ↑ Andriyashev A. M. Materials on the historical geography of Novgorod land. Shelonskaya pyatina according to the scribe books of 1498-1576 I. Lists of villages. Typography G. Lissner and D., 1912, S. 119, 120, 124 Archived December 3, 2013 on the Wayback Machine
  3. ↑ Topographic map of St. Petersburg province. 5th layout. Schubert. 1834
  4. ↑ Description of the St. Petersburg province in counties and camps . - SPb. : Provincial Printing House, 1838. - P. 39. - 144 p.
  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. - S. 48. - 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. 48
  7. ↑ “Volosts and the most important villages of European Russia. Issue VII. Provinces of the lakeside group ”, St. Petersburg. 1885, p. 83
  8. ↑ Memorial book of the St. Petersburg province. Collected and compiled N.V. Shaposhnikov. St. Petersburg, 1905, p. 98
  9. ↑ 1 2 3 Handbook of the history of the administrative-territorial division of the Leningrad Region
  10. ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad region. - L., 1933, S. 62, 326
  11. ↑ Administrative and economic guide to the Leningrad region. - L., 1936, p. 223 (unopened) (inaccessible link) . Date of treatment November 5, 2018. Archived March 30, 2016.
  12. ↑ 1 2 Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad region / Comp. T.A. Badina. - Reference book. - L .: Lenizdat , 1966. - S. 175. - 197 p. - 8000 copies.
  13. ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad region. - Lenizdat, 1973, p. 270
  14. ↑ 1 2 Administrative and territorial division of the Leningrad Region. - Lenizdat, 1990, ISBN 5-289-00612-5, S. 108
  15. ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad region. - SPb, 1997, ISBN 5-86153-055-6, p. 109
  16. ↑ Koryakov Yu. B. Database “Ethno-linguistic composition of Russian settlements”. Leningrad region (neopr.) .
  17. ↑ Administrative territorial division of the Leningrad region. - SPb., 2007, S. 130
  18. ↑ Results of the 2010 All-Russian Population Census. Leningrad region.
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Staropol&oldid=100426088


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