Bogdanowka (Kaliningrad)

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settlement
Bogdanowka / Gnadenthal,
also: Jürkendorf

Богдановка
Federal district Northwest Russia
Oblast Kaliningrad
Urban district Mamonowo
First mention 1320 (Jürkendorf)
Earlier names until 1945:
Gnadenthal,
Haselau,
until 1947:
Jürkendorf
population 132 inhabitants
(as of Oct. 14, 2010)
Time zone UTC + 2
Telephone code (+7) 40156
Post Code 238450
License Plate 39, 91
OKATO 27 203 510 001
Geographical location
Coordinates 54 ° 29 '  N , 20 ° 2'  E Coordinates: 54 ° 28 '51 "  N , 20 ° 1' 34"  E
Bogdanowka (Kaliningrad) (European Russia)
Red pog.svg
Location in the western part of Russia
Bogdanowka (Kaliningrad) (Kaliningrad Oblast)
Red pog.svg
Location in Kaliningrad Oblast

Bogdanowka ( Russian Богдановка , German  Gnadenthal and Jürkendorf , before 1993 also: Haselau , Lithuanian Gnadentalis and Jurkai ) is the common place name of three formerly independent places in the Russian Oblast Kaliningrad ( Koenigsberg area (Prussia) ), which belong to the Mamonowo district (Heiligenbeil) .

Geographical location

Bogdanowka is located six kilometers northeast of the city of Mamonowo on the Russian highway A 194 . The village reaches up to the south-east situated Jarft (today Russian: Wituschka). In the village a side road branches off to the northwest, which leads to Snamenka , the nearest train station on the route from Kaliningrad via Mamonowo to Poland (former Prussian Eastern Railway ).

history

Until 1945

Bogdanowka / Gnadenthal

The district called Gnadenthal before 1945 is originally a suburb of the community of Schirten (Russian: Potjomkino, no longer exists today). Thus, the small town belonged to the district of germ Kallen (Russian: Krasnodonskoje, the place does not exist today more) - it was renamed "District Schirten" 1929 - the district Heiligenbeil in the administrative district of Konigsberg the Prussian province of East Prussia .

With all of northern East Prussia, Gnadenthal came to the Soviet Union in 1945 as a result of the Second World War .

Bogdanowka / Jürkendorf (m. Haselau)

The district with the former name of Jürkendorf consisted of several small and large farms before 1945. The village was first mentioned in 1320 as Natangen , later Jorgendorff (around 1528), Gorckendorff (around 1539), Gorkendorff (before 1600) and Jürckendorff (after 1685). In 1874, Jürkendorf came to the newly established district of Groß Rödersdorf (now Russian: Nowosjolowo) in the district of Heiligenbeil and the administrative district of Königsberg in the Prussian province of East Prussia . In 1910, 47 residents were registered here.

On September 30, 1928, the neighboring estate village Haselau (Russian also: Bogdanowka, no longer exists today) was incorporated into the rural community of Jürkendorf. A year later, Jürkendorf was reclassified from the Groß Rödersdorf district to the Quilitten district (today in Russian: Schukowka). 167 people lived here in 1933 and 140 in 1939.

In 1945, Jürkendorf and Haselau came to the Soviet Union as a consequence of the war . The place Jürkendorf got the Russian name Bogdanowka in 1947 .

Since 1947

The small estate village with the previous name Haselau was initially settled after 1945, but then abandoned. The two other places with the former names Gnadenthal and Jürkendorf were incorporated as a common place Bogdanowka in the Mamonowski gorodskoi soviet (Stadtsovjet Mamonowo). On the occasion of an extensive structural and administrative reform in 2009, Bogdanowka was classified as a “settlement” (Russian: possjolok) within the urban district of Mamonowo .

church

Before 1945 the population of the places grouped under the Russian name Bogdanowka belonged to the Protestant denomination almost without exception . While Gnadenthal was incorporated into the parish of Heiligenbeil , Jürkendorf and Haselau were a parish of Bladiaus . Both parishes were part of the Heiligenbeil church district within the church province of East Prussia of the Church of the Old Prussian Union .

Today Bogdanowka is in the catchment area of ​​the evangelical congregation in Mamonowo, which was founded in the 1990s . It is a subsidiary of the Church of the Resurrection in Kaliningrad and belongs to the Kaliningrad provost of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of European Russia .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Itogi Vserossijskoj perepisi naselenija 2010 goda. Kaliningradskaya oblastʹ. (Results of the 2010 all-Russian census. Kaliningrad Oblast.) Volume 1 , Table 4 (Download from the website of the Kaliningrad Oblast Territorial Organ of the Federal Service for State Statistics of the Russian Federation)
  2. Location information-picture archive East Prussia: Gnadenthal
  3. ^ Rolf Jehke, Keimkallen / Schirten district
  4. Location information-picture archive East Prussia: Jürkendorf
  5. ^ Rolf Jehke, district of Groß Rödersdorf
  6. ^ Uli Schubert, community directory, district of Heiligenbeil
  7. ^ Rolf Jehke, Quilitten district
  8. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. District of Heiligenbeil. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  9. Through the Указ Президиума Верховного Совета РСФСР от 17 ноября 1947 г. "О переименовании населённых пунктов Калининградской области" (Order of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR of November 17, 1947 on the renaming of settlements in Kaliningrad Oblast )
  10. According to the Law on the Composition and Territories of Municipal Forms of the Kaliningrad Oblast of June 25th / 1. July 2009, in conjunction with Law No. 395 of May 15, 2004, specified by Law No. 370 of July 1, 2009
  11. Evangelical Lutheran Provosty Kaliningrad ( Memento of the original dated August 29, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.propstei-kaliningrad.info