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Old Burmese

Old Burma ( Bashk. Iҫke Borma [1] ) - the village of the Burma village council of the Askinsky district of the Bashkir ASSR , abolished in 1986. It was located on the right bank of the Tyu River near the mouth of Burminka [2] .

Abolished village
Old Burmese †
A country
RegionBashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic
Municipal districtAskinsky
History and geography
Abolished Village withsince 1986
Population
Population141 people ( 1969 )

Content

History

In the second half of the 19th century, the village of Old Burma was part of the 1st camp of the Birsky district of the Ufa province . According to 1870, there were 31 courtyards and 154 inhabitants (74 men and 80 women) in Old Burmese; the predominant nationality is Russian. Residents were busy with beekeeping [3] .

In the 1920s, the village of Old Burma was part of the Askinsky volost of the Birsk canton . According to the 1920 census, the village had 66 yards and 340 inhabitants (150 men and 190 women); the predominant nationality is Russian [4] . In 1952, the village of Old Burma was part of the Gordinsky Village Council along with the village of New Burma . According to data from 1969, 141 people lived in the village of Old Burma of the Burma Village Council; the predominant nationality is Russian [5] . According to 1972, in the village of Staraya Burma of the Burma Village Council, the predominant nationality is Russians [6] .

It is excluded from accounting data by Decree of the Presidium of the Armed Forces of the Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic dated 12.12.1986 N 6-2 / 396 "On the exclusion from the accounting data of some settlements" [7] .

Geographical position

Distance to:

  • center of the village council ( New Burma ): 2 km [6] [8] ,
  • district center ( Askino ): 6 km [6] [8] ,
  • Nearest train station ( Shchuchye Lake ): 42 km [6] [8] .

Notes

  1. ↑ Dictionary of place names of the Republic of Bashkortostan. —Ufa: Kitap, 2002 .-- 256 p.
  2. ↑ Map sheet O-40-138 . Scale: 1: 100,000. State of the area in 1982. 1984 edition
  3. ↑ Lists of populated areas of the Russian Empire, compiled and published by the Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. - SPb. : ed. Centre. stat. com Min ext. Affairs, 1861-1885. Vol. 45: Ufa province: ... according to 1870. - 1877.
  4. ↑ List of settlements of Bashrespublika. Ufa, 1926 .: p. 158
  5. ↑ Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic: administrative-territorial division on January 1, 1969 : [reference / ed. A. I. Zakharov]. - Ed. 5th. - Ufa: Bashkir book publishing house, 1969. S. 314
  6. ↑ 1 2 3 4 Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic: Administrative-territorial division on July 1, 1972 . - S. 33
  7. ↑ About the exclusion from the accounting data of some settlements
  8. ↑ 1 2 3 Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic: Administrative division on September 1, 1981 . - S. 40

Literature

  • Administrative and territorial division of the Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (on June 1, 1952). - Bashkir book publishing house , Ufa, 1953. C.24.
  • Bashkir ASSR: administrative-territorial division on July 1, 1972 : [reference] / Presidium of the Supreme. Council Bashk. ASSR; [comp. N.N. Kirillova, P.F. Maksimov, M. Kh. Musin; open ed. B. A. Abdrakhmanov]. - Ed. 6th - Ufa: Bashkir book publishing house, 1973. - 386, [2] p. : tab. preim., cards. - Alf. decree: s. 327-387. C.33
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Old_Burma&oldid=96976836


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