Pussy cinema
settlement
Muschkino
Lauck and Stobecken Мушкино
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Muschkino ( Russian Мушкино , German Lauck and Stobecken ) is a place in the Russian Oblast of Kaliningrad . It belongs to the local government unit Stadtkreis Bagrationowsk in Bagrationovsky District .
The former German town of Lauck has now been abandoned. To this end, Muschkino has expanded to include the former Patran, which was initially called Krasnoarmeiskoje in Russian. A safari park was set up on the former Morren estate , which is also part of Muschkino.
Geographical location
Mushkino is located on the northern edge of Bagrationovsk Raion on the border with Guryevsk Raion . It is almost 30 kilometers to the former district town of Mamonowo (Heiligenbeil) in the southwest . The location close to the railroad can be reached via a side road that runs from Swetloje (Kobbelbude) on the Russian trunk road R 516 (former German Reichsautobahn Berlin – Königsberg “ Berlinka ”) in a westerly direction to Novo-Moskovskoye (Poplitten) and on to Uschakowo (Brandenburg on the Frischen Haff) .
Mushkino can be reached by rail via the two stops Op1305 km and Op1307 km on the Kaliningrad – Mamonowo railway line .
history
Pelvis
The Muschkinos district , known as Stobecken before 1946 (before 1710 Stobecken , before 1785 Sobbecken ), consisted of a few medium-sized courtyards with a railwayman's house before 1945. In 1874 Stobecken was in the newly established District Pörschken incorporated and belonged until 1945 to the district Heiligenbeil in the administrative district of Konigsberg the Prussian province of East Prussia . In 1910, 35 residents were registered here.
On September 30, 1928, the independence of Stobecken ended when the village was incorporated into the municipality of Barsen (now Russian: Kossatuchino).
Lauck
The Muschkinos district, which was mentioned before 1327 Laucyn , before 1670 Laucke , before 1898 Lauk and until 1946 Lauck , dates back to 1325 when it was first mentioned. In 1874 the rural community came to the newly created district of Pörschken (the place no longer exists) in the district of Heiligenbeil in the administrative district of Königsberg in the Prussian province of East Prussia . On August 29, 1906, the rural community was converted into an estate district . In 1910 41 people lived here.
On September 30, 1928, Lauck also lost its independence when Patranken (now Russian: Oktjabrskoje, until 1992: Krasnoarmeiskoje) and Wargitten (now also Russian: Oktjabrskoje) merged with Lauck to form the new rural community of Wargitten.
Pussy cinema
After the annexation to the Soviet Union in 1945, Lauck and Strobecken were combined in 1950 under the Russian name "Muschkino". At the same time Mushkino was assigned to the village soviet Novo-Moskovsky selski sovet in Laduschkin Rajon . Later the place came to the Pogranitschny selski Sowet in Bagrationovsk district . From 2008 to 2016 Mushkino belonged to the rural municipality of Pogranichnoje selskoje posselenije and since then to the urban district of Bagrationovsk.
church
Stobecken and Lauck, with their almost exclusively Protestant population before 1945, were parish in the parish of Pörschken (the place no longer exists today) and thus belonged to the Heiligenbeil church district (today Russian: Mamonowo) within the church province of East Prussia of the Church of the Old Prussian Union . The last German clergyman was Pastor Bruno Link.
Today Muschkino is located in the catchment area of the Evangelical Lutheran congregation in Novo-Moskovskoye (Poplitten), which was established in the 1990s . It is a subsidiary of the Church of the Resurrection in Kaliningrad (Königsberg) and belongs to the Kaliningrad provost of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of European Russia (ELKER).
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ 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)
- ↑ And in the meantime, according to the local directory of Kaliningrad Oblast from 1976, it apparently belonged to Oktyabrskoje .
- ↑ Location information - picture archive East Prussia: Stobecken
- ↑ 120 ha, 5 buildings, 47 inhabitants (all Protestant), Postb. Kobbelbude; according to Community Lexicon Prussia , vol. I (Prov. Ostpreussen), census. Dec. 2, 1895, Verlag der Königl. Extra Bureaus, Berlin (1898), p. 108 and Slownik Geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego , Vol. 11 (1890), Warszawa, p. 344.
- ↑ a b Rolf Jehke, Pörschken District
- ↑ a b Uli Schubert, community register, district of Heiligenbeil
- ^ Location information - picture archive East Prussia: Lauck
- ↑ The Указ Президиума Верховного Совета РСФСР от 5 июля 1950 г., №745 / 3, "О переименовании населённых пунктов Калининградской области» (Regulation 745/3 of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR "About renaming of places in the Kaliningrad region" from July 5, 1950)
- ^ Evangelical Lutheran Provosty of Kaliningrad ( Memento of August 29, 2011 in the Internet Archive )