Ozhuany ( Belor. Azhuny , lit. Ažuny ) [1] is a village in the Voropayevsky village council of the Postavy district of the Vitebsk region of Belarus .
| Village | |
| Ojuni | |
|---|---|
| belor Ajuna | |
| A country | |
| Region | Vitebsk |
| Area | Postavy |
| Village council | Voropaevsky |
| History and geography | |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +375 2155 |
| Postcode | 211877 |
| Car code | 2 |
Content
Geography
Ozhuny is located 34 km from the city of Pastavy and 4 km from Voropayevo . In the vicinity of the village flows the river Zarezhanka (Zarazhanka).
History
In 1781 , the village was first mentioned in the metric books of the Luchaysky church .
"Ozhuny. On January 28, 1781, the priest Michael Novoseletsky consecrated the marriage of Luka Fialkovsky (Fyadkovsky?) And Anna Forkovna from the village of Ferky. Witnesses: Samuel Velatovich (?) And Ivan Puzyna" [2] .
In 1799 , a small Roman Catholic church operated in Ozhunakh [3] .
The National Historical Archives of Belarus preserved the metric books of the Ozhunsky Uniate Church for 1830 , 1832 and 1833 [4] .
In 1861 , Ozhuny belonged to Countess Sofya Mostovskoy (nee Chominskaya).
In 1873 , Ojuni had 70 revision souls. Territorially, the village was part of the Luchay volost of the Vileika district of the Vilna province .
In 1886 , the village had 17 yards and 181 inhabitants; Orthodox Church.
In 1921 , the village was part of the Luchaik commune of the Dunilovichi district of the Republic of Poland .
In 1923, 39 courtyards and 224 inhabitants.
Since 1926 , as part of the Vilno Voivodeship .
In September 1939 , Ozhuny was annexed to the BSSR by the forces of the Belorussian Front of the Red Army
December 4, 1939 Ozhuny as a part of the Dunilovichsky village council of the Dunilovichsky district of the Vileysky region of the BSSR.
In 1947 , 56 farms, forge.
In 1963 - as part of the Voropayevsky Village Council. Ojuni had 59 yards, 172 inhabitants. The village had a primary school and a club.
In 2001 , 44 houses and 96 residents, the state farm "Voropaevo" .
Notes
- ↑ Names of inhabited settlements L. Kapylo, V.P. Lemtsyugova; pad red V.P. Lemtsyugovay. - Minsk: Tehnalogiya, 2009. - 668 p. ISBN 978-985-458-192-7
- ↑ National Historical Archives of Belarus. - A copy of the Metric Books of the Luchaisky Roman Catholic parish church about births, marriagers, deaths from 1774 to 1798. - F. 937, op. 6, d. 5, l. 77.
- ↑ National Historical Archives of Belarus. - A copy of the metric books of Ozhunsky b. the church. F. 937, op.5, d. 36.
- ↑ National Historical Archives of Belarus. - F. 937, op. 5, d. 70.
Literature
- Pamyat: Hisstory-documentary chronicle of Pastauskaga raion. - Minsk: BelTA, 2001. - p. 626-627.