Bolshoye Nagatkino
Village
Bolshoye Nagatkino
Большое Нагаткино
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Bolschoje Nagatkino ( Russian Большо́е Нага́ткино ) is a village (selo) in the Ulyanovsk Oblast in Russia with 5462 inhabitants (as of October 14, 2010).
geography
The place is located about 35 km as the crow flies northwest of the Ulyanovsk Oblast Administrative Center, mainly on the left bank of the small river Biryuch, which flows into the Swijaga a good 15 kilometers east from the left .
Bolshoye Nagatkino is the administrative center of the Rajons Zilninski and seat of the rural community Bolschenagatkinskoje selskoje posselenije, (km 6 east) which also includes the six villages Krestnikowo, Maloye Nagatkino (13 km north-northwest), Novye Timersjany (8 km west-northwest), Sadki (3 km north) , Norowka and Stepnaja Repjowka (both 3 km west, left and right of the Biryutsch) as well as the five settlements Klin and Orlowka (both 14 km northwest), Novaya Volja (9 km north-northwest), Sakhalin (9 km southeast) and Solnze (8 km south) belong.
history
The village was founded in 1675 by the landowner Stepan Nagatkin from Kurmysh an der Sura (then a town, now a village) and named after him. After the founding of the village Novoje Nagatkino ("New Nagatkino") in the early 18th century and its renaming to Maloje Nagatkino ("Small Nagatkino"), the current name ("Large Nagatkino") became natural for the original location. As the seat of a Volost, the village belonged to Ujesd Simbirsk (today Ulyanovsk), from 1780 part of the governorship and from 1796 of the Simbirsk governorate .
With the dissolution of the governorate ( Ulyanovsk governorate from 1924 ) and the introduction of the Rajon division in 1928, Bolshoye Nagatkino initially came to the Teleschowski rajon, based in the village of Teleschowka a good 15 km northeast, but on January 21, 1929 in the Bogdaschkinski rajon, located 20 km northwest located Bogdaschkino , and this finally in February 1931 in Ulyanovsky rajon, which was then based in Ulyanovsk. In 1932 (according to other sources not until 1935) the Rajon was restored, and in 1935 its administrative seat moved to the more centrally located Bolshoye Nagatkino, but the Rajon name was retained.
On February 1, 1963, the Bogdaschkinski rajon was dissolved again, but was re-expelled on November 3, 1965, still based in Bolshoye Nagatkino, but under its current name after the Zilna flowing through its northern part .
Population development
year | Residents |
---|---|
1939 | 2067 |
1959 | 1685 |
1970 | 1921 |
1979 | 3520 |
1989 | 5101 |
2002 | 5235 |
2010 | 5642 |
Note: census data
traffic
The federal trunk road A151 from Ziwilsk to Ulyanovsk runs past the eastern edge of Bolshoye Nagatkino . This is crossed by the regional road 73K-1429, which branches off the federal trunk road R241 Kazan - Ulyanovsk a good 15 km northeast at the settlement Zilna and in a wide arc to the west around Ulyanovsk via Tagai (on the R178 Saransk - Ulyanovsk) and the district center Maina leads to 73K-1427 north of Kusowatowo .
The nearest station is in Zilna at the 1942 opened distance of Nischnije Wjasowyje (Station sviyazhsk ) in Kazan on Ulyanovsk to Syzran .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ 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)