Malaja Purga
Village
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Malaya Purga ( Russian Малая Пурга ; Udmurt Пичи Пурга ) is a village (selo) in the Republic of Udmurtia in Russia with 7711 inhabitants (as of October 14, 2010).
geography
The place is about 30 km as the crow flies west-southwest of the republic capital Izhevsk , about 2 km from the border with the Republic of Tatarstan , beyond which the city of Agrys begins. It is located between Postolka and Agryska, right tributaries of the Kama tributary Isch, which flows about 5 km east to south .
Malaja Purga is the administrative center of the Malopurginsky Rajons as well as the seat of the "municipal entity" (Munizipalnoje obrasowanije) Malopurginskoje with the status of a rural municipality (selskoje posselenije), to which the three villages Abdulmenewo (3.5 km northwest), Kurtschum-Norja (5, 5 km north-north-west) and Stoljarowo (5 km north-west) as well as the village (pochinok) Kurchumsky (6.5 km north) belong.
history
The exact year of foundation of the place is unknown, but is probably in the second half of the 16th century, when after the end of the Moscow-Kazan wars in the area initially mainly Udmurts settled. The village remained insignificant for a long time; from 1780 it belonged to the Ujesds Sarapul in the holdings of the governorship of Vyatka, from 1796 in the governorate of Vyatka . In the middle of the 19th century, Malaya Purga became the seat of a Volost .
After the formation of the Votian Autonomous Oblast on November 4, 1920 (renamed the Udmurt Autonomous Oblast on January 1, 1932, reorganized into the Udmurt ASSR on December 28, 1934 ), the village belonged to their Ujesd Izhevsk from 1921, which on July 15 In 1929 it was transformed into a Rajon. From one part, together with part of the former Ujesds Moschga, the new Malopurginski rajon based in Malaja Purga was expelled. On February 1, 1963, the Rajon was temporarily dissolved and its territory was incorporated into the Izhevsky rajon. Already on January 12, 1965, the Rajon was restored.
Population development
year | Residents |
---|---|
1897 | 753 |
1939 | 2177 |
1959 | 2191 |
1970 | 2756 |
1979 | 4389 |
1989 | 6163 |
2002 | 6879 |
2010 | 7711 |
Note: census data
traffic
To the west of the place runs the secondary route Yelabuga - Izhevsk - Perm of the federal trunk road M7 Volga coming from Moscow . The short regional road 94K-38 leads through the village from the M7 to the border with Tatarstan, there from Agrys further initially as 16K-0005 parallel to the M7 in the direction of Mendeleevsk .
The nearest train station is the major railway junction Agrys about three kilometers south. There, routes branch off from the Moscow - Kazan - Yekaterinburg route in a northerly direction via Izhevsk to Balesino and south in the direction of Naberezhnye Chelny - Almetyevsk - Bugulma .
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)