Malaya Slyapyanka

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Malaya Slyapyanka | Malaya Slyapyanka
Малая Сляпянка | Малая Сляпянка
( Belarus. ) | ( Russian )
State : BelarusBelarus Belarus
Coordinates : 53 ° 54 '  N , 27 ° 37'  E Coordinates: 53 ° 54 '  N , 27 ° 37'  E
Time zone : Moscow time ( UTC + 3 )
License plate : 7th
Malaja Slyapyanka (Belarus)
Malaya Slyapyanka
Malaya Slyapyanka

Malaja Slyapyanka ( Belarusian Мала́я Сляпя́нка ) was a Belarusian village to the left of the Slyapyanka River , after which it was named. The name means something like little Slyapyanka . In 1959 it was in the Minsk County Partisansky incorporated .

history

Slyapyanka was first mentioned in the 16th century. The estate belonged to the Polish-Lithuanian dynasty Radziwiłł until the middle of the 18th century and later passed to the Wańkowicz family . Alexander Wańkowicz divided the estate between his sons. The province marshal of Minsk Stanislav Wańkowicz († 1812) was Wjalikaja Sljapjanka and Erbrichter Melchior Wańkowicz (1775 to 1842) Malaya Sljapjanka.

After Melchior Wańkowicz's death, his son, the famous Russian painter Walenty Wańkowicz (1799–1842), took control of the property. Here he had a studio with the Russian painter Jan Damel (1780–1840). Wańkowicz bequeathed the village to his son, the Russian revolutionary Jan Wańkowicz (1838–1899). Due to his participation in the January uprising of 1863/64, the property was confiscated by the Russian authorities in favor of the state, whereupon Jan Wańkowicz emigrated . The property later came into the possession of the Schmidt.

In March 1931 the first and only congress of the Communist Youth Union of Western Belarus took place in Malaya Slyapyanka . Since 1934, the village was considered a suburb of Minsk and was the center of the state farm " Alexander Chervyakov ". The company was nationalized in 1937 and renamed "Malaja Sljapjanka". The village was incorporated into the Partisansky District of Minsk in 1959.

The mansion of Malaya Sljapjanka was soon demolished after the incorporation. It was located at the level of today's City Hospital No. 6, Polyclinic No. 14 and Gymnasium No. 5. At the end of 2014, a commission for the naming and renaming of streets, squares and other elements of the city of Minsk proposed the name "Malaya Sljapjanka" for a planned metro station on Line 4, which is still under construction, at the intersection of Uralskaya and Frolikova or Dolgobrodskaya streets. In 2016 the authorities only approved the name "Slyapyanka" instead. However, this was criticized because it could be confused with Vjalikaja Slyapyanka, the neighboring village, which was also incorporated in 1959.

Famous people

literature

  • Ívan P. Šamâkin: Минск . 2nd Edition. Minsk 1983, p. 224 .

Individual evidence