Gordejewka (Bryansk)

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Village
Gordejewka
Гордеевка
Federal district Central Russia
Oblast Bryansk
Rajon Gordejewski
head Stanislaw Umrik
Founded 1704
Earlier names Gordejewa Buda
population 3109 inhabitants
(as of Oct. 14, 2010)
Height of the center 150  m
Time zone UTC + 3
Telephone code (+7) 48340
Post Code 243650
License Plate 32
OKATO 15 211 806 001
Geographical location
Coordinates 52 ° 57 ′  N , 31 ° 58 ′  E Coordinates: 52 ° 57 ′ 30 "  N , 31 ° 58 ′ 15"  E
Gordejewka (Bryansk) (European Russia)
Red pog.svg
Location in the western part of Russia
Gordejewka (Bryansk) (Bryansk Oblast)
Red pog.svg
Location in Bryansk Oblast

Gordejewka ( Russian Горде́евка ) is a village (selo) in the Brjansk Oblast in Russia with 3109 inhabitants (as of October 14, 2010).

geography

The place is a good 160 km as the crow flies west-southwest of the Bryansk Oblast administrative center and a good 10 km from the state border with Belarus on the Pokonka river, which flows about 8 km south into the right tributary of the river Iput .

Gordejewka is the administrative center of Gordejewski Rajon and the seat of the rural community Gordejewskoje selskoje posselenije, which also includes the four villages Pokon (7 km south), Zhovnets (10 km south), Sawod-Koretsky (8 km south-south-west) and Veliky Bor (6 km south-west). and the four settlements (possjolok) Medwedowka (12 km south-southwest), Shamry (10 km south-south-west), Seljony Klin (2 km north-east) and Smely (6 km south-south-west) belong.

history

The founding year is 1704, when the regimental clerk Gordei Nossikewitsch from Starodub received permission to build a water mill on the site of the present day . To the mill one as soon arose Sloboda called settlement, the first after the founder Gordejewa Buda was called and during the period of membership of the region to Hetmanat to 1782 whose hundred (sotnja) Novoye Mesto was under the regiment Starodub.

After the formation of the Chernigov governorate , the village came to its Ujesd Surasch and in 1861 - already under the current name - the seat of a Volost . In 1929, after several administrative changes in the early Soviet period , Gordejewka became the administrative seat of a rajon named after him.

During the Second World War , Gordejewka was occupied by the German Wehrmacht on August 20, 1941 , and recaptured by the Red Army on September 27, 1943 .

In 1963 the Rajon was dissolved and its territory was assigned to the Klinzowski rajon (based in Klinzy ). In 1966 the western part of the area came to the Krasnogorski rajon (with its seat in Krasnaya Gora ), which was dissolved and now restored in 1963 ; Gordejewka himself stayed with the Klinzowski rajon. In 1985 the Rajon was re-designated within the former borders.

Population development

year Residents
1897 1776
1939 2506
1959 2292
1989 2742
2002 3066
2010 3109

Note: census data

traffic

The regional road 15K-1302 runs through the village, which connects the town of Klinzy, located just under 30 km south-east (not far from the federal highway A240 ), with the Gordejewka, neighboring district center of Krasnaya Gora, to the northwest. First to the northeast, the 15K-2501 branches off to the town of Surasch, also just under 30 km away, the neighboring Rajon center to the east.

In Klinzy on the route Brjansk - Homel (Belarus) and Surasch on the route Unetscha  - Krytschau (Belarus) the nearest train stations are about the same distance away.

The main line Mirny  - Surasch of an over 80 km long narrow-gauge network ( gauge 750 mm) ran south past Gordejewka , which from the 1950s mainly served to remove peat from the moors west of Mirny in the extreme southwest of the Rajon. As a result of the contamination of large parts of the area by the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster , peat production largely came to a standstill, and the railway line was shut down in the 1990s at the latest and then largely dismantled.

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)