Makarovo ( Belorussian. Makarava , Polish. Makarawa ) is a village in the Kamenets district of the Brest region of Belarus . Included in the Ogorodniksky village council .
| Village | |
| Makarovo | |
|---|---|
| Belor. Makarava | |
One of the streets | |
| A country | |
| Region | Brest region |
| Area | Kamenets district |
| Village Council | Ogorodnik village council |
| History and Geography | |
| First mention | XIX century |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | 403 people ( 2010 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +375 1631 |
| Postcode | 225081 [1] |
| Car code | one |
It is located on the right tributary of the Pulva , 4 km from the border with Poland , 34 km west of Kamenets , 38 km northwest of Brest .
History
- in the middle of the XIX century: a village in the Brest district of the Grodno province , possession of Prince Sapega. It belonged to the High Lithuanian estate .
- 1845: 34 courtyards, 242 inhabitants and a tavern .
- in the second half of the XIX century: as part of the High Lithuanian region of the Brest district of the Grodno province.
- 1857: 302 inhabitants.
- 1890: The Makarov Rural Community had 319 acres of arable and manor land.
- 1897: 67 households, 381 inhabitants. There was a bread-spare shop. At the tavern: 1 courtyard and 6 inhabitants.
- 1905: 413 inhabitants.
- 1921: as part of the High Lithuanian Commune of the Brest County of Polesie Voivodeship of the Polish Republic .
- 1923: 28 residential and 7 non-residential courtyards, 262 residents. The underground cell of the KPZB operated (head M. M. Kazusik).
- 1939: as part of the Brest region of the BSSR .
- 1940: as part of the Ogorodnitsky Village Council of the Vysokovsky District, 78 households, 297 residents.
- 1948: 47 students in elementary school.
- 1960: 398 inhabitants.
- 1962: as part of the Kamenetsky district.
- 1970: 399 inhabitants.
- 1999: 440 inhabitants.
- 2005: 396 inhabitants [2] , 151 yards.
- 2010: 403 residents
Notes
- ↑ Belpost
- ↑ Cities and villages of Belarus. Encyclopedia. T. 4. Book. 2. - Minsk, 2007.p. 61