Divnoye (Kaliningrad, Nesterow)

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settlement
Divnoye
train station Trakehnen

Divnoe
Federal district Northwest Russia
Oblast Kaliningrad
Rajon Nesterow
Earlier names Trakehnen station (until 1946)
population 35 residents
(as of Oct. 14, 2010)
Time zone UTC + 2
Telephone code (+7) 40144
Post Code 238012
License Plate 39, 91
OKATO 27 224 819 007
Geographical location
Coordinates 54 ° 36 '  N , 22 ° 24'  E Coordinates: 54 ° 36 '20 "  N , 22 ° 24' 6"  E
Divnoje (Kaliningrad, Nesterow) (European Russia)
Red pog.svg
Location in the western part of Russia
Divnoye (Kaliningrad, Nesterow) (Kaliningrad Oblast)
Red pog.svg
Location in Kaliningrad Oblast

Divnoje ( Russian Дивное , German  Trakehnen train station ) is a place in the Russian Oblast of Kaliningrad . It belongs to the local government unit Stadtkreis Nesterov in Nesterovsky District .

Geographical location

Divnoje is located 13 kilometers east of the former district town of Gussew (Gumbinnen) and eleven kilometers west of the current Rajons capital Nesterow (Stallupönen / Ebenrode) . The Kaliningrad – Chernyshevskoye railway , a section of the former Prussian Eastern Railway , runs through the town to continue to Moscow . The associated train station is now called Divnoye Novoye . On the western side of the village there is a main road (27K-183), which branches off one kilometer north of the Russian trunk road A 229 (formerly German Reichsstrasse 1 , now also Europastrasse 28 ) and to the village of Yasnaja Poljana ( (large) Trakehnen ) and the former main stud Trakehnen to the Rominter Heide (now Russian: Krasny Les).

history

The small station settlement around today's Ostanowotschny point - Haltpunkt - Divnoje Novoje is a village that became independent only after 1946. Before 1945, the small town was a residential area, which before 1928 was probably an exclave of the Grünhaus community (today Russian: Seljonoje) and belonged to the Gumbinnen district in the Gumbinnen administrative district of the Prussian province of East Prussia . In 1928, the Trakehnen station exclave (0.27 hectares) was assigned to the municipality of Puspern (today in Russian: Lomowo). Despite the name of the place, the Trakehnen station never belonged to the main Trakehnen stud .

As a result of the war, the Trakehnen train station settlement with northern East Prussia became part of the Soviet Union . At an unclear point in time, the place was given the Russian name "Divnoje". The place was assigned to the village soviet Tschkalowski selski Sowet in Nesterow Raion . From 2008 to 2018 Divnoye belonged to the rural community Ilyushinskoje selskoje posselenije and since then to the urban district of Nesterow.

church

Before 1945, the small number of residents of the Trakehnen station settlement were almost all of the Protestant denomination and parish in the parish of the Szirgupönen Church (between 1936 and 1938 the place was called: Schirgupönen, 1938 to 1946: Amtshagen, Russian: Dalneje, no longer exists) . This belonged to the church district Gumbinnen in the church province of East Prussia of the Church of the Old Prussian Union . Today Divnoje is located in the catchment area of ​​the Evangelical Lutheran congregation in Yasnaja Poljana (village (Groß) Trakehnen ) , which was newly established in the 1990s, within the provost of Kaliningrad (Königsberg) 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. ^ Photo of the Trakehnen / Diwnoje Novoje train station in 2006
  3. ^ Dietrich Lange, Geographical Register of Places East Prussia (2005): Trakehnen train station
  4. ^ Rolf Jehke, Puspern District
  5. In the renaming decree of November 17, 1947, the village of Trakehnen ( Enzuhnen / Rodebach district ) was (apparently) identified with Divnoje, which was included in Yasnaja Polyana on site . On a map from the 1970s, today's Divnoye was referred to as Novodivnoye.
  6. According to the administrative-territorial division of the Kaliningrad Oblast from 1975.
  7. ^ Evangelical Lutheran Provosty of Kaliningrad ( Memento of August 29, 2011 in the Internet Archive )