Cherepovets district - an administrative-territorial unit of the Leningrad region , which existed in 1927 - 1930 . The administrative center is the city of Cherepovets .
| district | |
| Cherepovets district | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Entered into | Leningrad region |
| Adm. center | Cherepovets |
| History and Geography | |
| Date of formation | August 1, 1927 |
| Date of Abolition | July 23, 1930 |
Cherepovets district was formed on August 1, 1927 as part of the Leningrad region . It included the territories of the abolished Belozersky , Kirillovsky , Ustyuzhensky , Cherepovets counties of the Cherepovets province .
By order of the Central Executive Committee and the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR of July 23, 1930, the Cherepovets district, like most other districts of the USSR, was abolished. Its districts became directly subordinate to the Leningrad Region.
Administrative Division
The district was divided into 19 districts:
- Abakanovsky ,
- Babaevsky ,
- Belozersky ,
- Borisov-Sudsky ,
- Vashkinsky ,
- Verkhne-Chagodoshchensky ,
- Efimovsky ,
- Kaduysky
- Kirillovsky ,
- Myaksinsky
- Nikolo-Torzhsky ,
- Pestovsky ,
- Petrinevsky ,
- Peter and Paul ,
- Prisheksninsky , Ulomsky ,
- Ustyuzhensky ,
- Cherepovetsky
- Sholsky .
According to data from 1929, there were 7 national village councils in the district [1] :
- In the Efimovsky district - Pozharishchensky, Prokushevsky, Radogoschensky, Sidorovsky - Veps ; Korgorsky - Karelian
- In the Sholsky district - Kuysky, Pondolsky - Vepsian .
Notes
- β National minorities of the Leningrad region / P. M. Yanson. - L .: Organizational Department of the Leningrad Regional Executive Committee, 1929. - P. 26. - 104 p.