Zasnovye - the village of Klintsovsky district of the Bryansk region . It is part of the Greater Topalsky rural settlement .
| Village | |
| Backspring | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Bryansk region |
| Municipal District | Klintsy district |
| Rural settlement | Great Topal |
| History and Geography | |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | ↘ 1 [1] people ( 2013 ) |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Postcode | 243113 |
| OKATO Code | 15230808002 |
| OKTMO Code | 15630408106 |
It is located on the right bank of the Snov River, from which its main name derives. The time of occurrence of the village is not known exactly. According to some reports, in 1926, 110 residents lived in Zasnovye. Before and during the Great Patriotic War, the village was definitely divided into two villages. The northwestern part of the village, from the rural cemetery to the central courtyard, is actually Zasnovye, which the locals called the Plant (the dialect, the name comes from the word "backwater" or the phrase "behind the water"). The eastern part of the village, from the central courtyard to the road to the village of Pruska, even in some official documents was referred to as the village of Novolebyazhye. Around the village were forests, small swamps and peat bogs. Residents themselves procured for heating houses and baths both firewood and peat. Water supply was carried out at the expense of wells. In the center of the village there was a Selpo store and next to it a small collective farm garden. Livestock farms were located around the village, and horses and sheep were bred in the central courtyard in the village itself. The floodplain of the Snov River made it possible to harvest feed for cattle and herd of the herd in flood meadows. Dry lands were used for sowing cereals, mainly cereals. Residents of the village widely practiced rabbits and poultry (mainly chickens, less often turkeys) in household plots, and kept cattle. There were beekeeping apiaries in the village. In the second half of the 80s, the village began to rapidly become empty and decline due to the outflow of youth and extinction. Currently, in the village, probably no one lives.