Ascherino is a former village in the Alexinsky district of the Tula region .
Village | |
Ascherino | |
---|---|
A country | Russia |
Subject of the federation | Tula region |
Municipal district | Alexinsky |
History and geography | |
Timezone | UTC + 3 |
Nationalities | Russians |
Denominations | Orthodox |
History
Mentioned on the plan of the General Survey of the Tula governorship of 1790 as the village of Ascherina [1] .
In 1912, a courtyard census was conducted in the Alexinsky district . The village of Ascherino belonged to the Asherinsky rural community of the Shironosovsky volost , formerly belonged to Voronetsky. There were 56 households (47 of them were cash and 9 were absent), 279 people (153 men and 126 women) of the present population (58 of them were literate and semi-literate, and 8 students). There were 97 land plots, totaling 321.1 tithes of allotment land, as well as 40.8 acres of convenient leased land. 37.3 tithes of comfortable land was leased. In the use of cash farms there were 228.8 acres of arable land, 39.2 acres of haymaking, 22.1 acres of forest, 12.2 - manor land, 7.2 - shrubs, 6.1 - pasture , 5.8 - uncomfortable land. Under crops, there were 176.1 tithes of land (including 10 acres of manor), of which winter rye occupied 71.3 acres, spring oats - 71.7 acres, lentils - 11.3, potatoes - 9.3, hemp - 5 , other crops - 7.5 acres. The inhabitants had 49 horses, 73 heads of cattle , 50 sheep and 58 pigs; 1 farm kept 5 bee hives. 68 people were engaged in crafts: 20 - local and 48 othozhimymi (mainly in Moscow), of which 14 tablemakers, 10 shoemakers, 9 plasterers, 5 working samovar factory, 4 laborers [2] .
According to the census of 1926, the village was part of the Pansky Village Council of the Alexinsky District , there were 62 peasant farms and 284 inhabitants (117 men, 167 women) [3] . By World War II, the number of households was reduced to 31 [4] .
On the map of 1982 it is designated as a settlement with a population of about 10 people [5] , on the map of 1989 it is already as uninhabited [6] . After that, the village is abolished.
Notes
- ↑ Plans of the General Land Survey (PGM) of the districts of the Tula province
- ↑ Aleksinsky County: Farm. The household census of 1912. Communal tables // Materials for assessing the lands of the Tula province: Vol . 1. / Tul. lips Zemstvo. Estimates stat. detachment - Tula, 1917. - S. 210-235. - 345 s.
- ↑ List of settlements in the Tula province according to the data of the all-Union census of 1926 / Tula province statistical department. - Tula: B. and., 1928. - p. 5. - 172 p.
- ↑ Map of the Red Army N-37 (A)
- Detailed topographic map of Tula region
- ↑ Topographic maps of the USSR N-37 (A)