Arkhangelskoje (Tula, Kamenski)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Village
Arkhangelskoye
Arhangelsky
Federal district Central Russia
Oblast Tula
Rajon Kamensky
First mention 1689
Earlier names Grjasnoye (until 1771)
population 2391 inhabitants
(as of Oct. 14, 2010)
Height of the center 220  m
Time zone UTC + 3
Telephone code (+7) 48744
Post Code 301990
License Plate 71
OKATO 70 224 805 001
Geographical location
Coordinates 53 ° 16 '  N , 37 ° 42'  E Coordinates: 53 ° 16 '0 "  N , 37 ° 42' 0"  E
Arkhangelskoje (Tula, Kamenski) (European Russia)
Red pog.svg
Location in the western part of Russia
Arkhangelskoje (Tula, Kamensky) (Tula Oblast)
Red pog.svg
Location in Tula Oblast

Arkhangelskoje ( Russian Арха́нгельское ) is a village (selo) in the Tula Oblast in Russia with 2391 inhabitants (as of October 14, 2010).

geography

The place is located about 100 km as the crow flies south of the Tula Oblast Administrative Center , about 7 km from the border with Orjol Oblast , on the upper reaches of the Kamenka, which flows 15 km east of the right into the right Don tributary Krasivaya Mecha .

Arkhangelskoje is the administrative seat of the Kamensky Rajons and the seat of the "municipal entity" Munizipalnoje obrasowanije Arkhangelskoje with the status of a rural municipality (selskoje posselenije), to which another 52 other villages belong. Seven of the villages have more than 100 inhabitants: Jasykowo (9 km north-west), Kadnoje (16 km east-north-east, the largest with 540 inhabitants), Kresty (15 km north-east), Moltschanowo (16 km north-west), Schischkowka (adjoining north), Sitowo (12 km northeast) and Zyganowka (5 km southwest); 17 villages have at least 10 residents, 16 have less than 10 residents and 12 have no permanent residents (as of 2010).

history

The village was first mentioned in 1696 under the name Grjasnoye . At that time it was part of the Belgoroder Verha line . In 1771, the owner family Svetschin had a church built in the village and renamed the village after the name of the church (from Russian archangel for archangel ; the original name meant "dirty"). From 1777 the village belonged to the Ujesd Jefremow of the governorship of Tula, from 1796 of the Tula governorate . It was part of the Dolgoleskowskaja wolost with seat in about four kilometers to the southwest located, today insignificant village Dolgije Leski (today part of the rural community Arkhangelskoje, 44 inhabitants 2010).

With the introduction of the Rajon division - in the Tula governorate initially within the Ujesde - Arkhangelskoje came to the Kamenski rajon in May 1924, with its seat in the eponymous village of Kamenka (today Kamenskoje ) a good 10 km to the south-east . With the dissolution of the Ujesde in 1926, the Rajon was directly subordinate to the governorate, and with the establishment of the - much larger than present - Moscow Oblast in 1929 it came to its Okrug Tula. At the same time the administrative seat of the Rajon was moved to Arkhangelskoje; the Rajon name was retained.

During the Second World War , Arkhangelskoye was occupied by the German Wehrmacht on November 14, 1941 , and on December 20, 1941, the Red Army recaptured the southern flank of their counter-offensive as part of the Battle of Moscow .

From 1962 to 1965 the Rajon was temporarily dissolved and its territory was annexed to the Jefremowski Rajon.

Population development

year Residents
1939 401
1959 515
1970 951
1979 1857
1989 2956
2002 2768
2010 2391

Note: census data

traffic

The regional road 70K-165 leads past the village from the neighboring district center of Chern to the west on the federal M2 Krim road through the south of the oblast to the almost 20 km east running regional road 70K-125, which also leads from the M2 to Yefremov. In a southerly direction, the 70K-166 branches off to the village of Galiza, a good 20 km away, on the connection Oryol  - Yefremow (formerly part of the R120).

The nearest train station is about 30 km south-east in Jefremow on the Moscow  - Jelez  - Waluiki route .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Itogi Vserossijskoj perepisi naselenija 2010 goda. Tom 1. Čislennostʹ i razmeščenie naselenija (Results of the All-Russian Census 2010. Volume 1. Number and distribution of the population). Tables 5 , pp. 12-209; 11 , pp. 312–979 (download from the website of the Federal Service for State Statistics of the Russian Federation)