Pervomaiskoye (Tomsk)
Village
Pervomaiskoye
Pervomaya
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Pervomaiskoje ( Russian Первома́йское ) is a village (selo) in Tomsk Oblast in Russia with 5641 inhabitants (as of October 14, 2010).
geography
The place is about 100 km as the crow flies northeast of the Tomsk Oblast Administrative Center and 10 km northeast of the city of Assino in the southeastern part of the West Siberian lowlands . It is located on the right bank of the Ob tributary Chulym and its right tributary Kujendat .
Perwomaiskoje is the administrative center of the Rajons Pervomaisky and seat of the rural community Perwomaiskoje selskoje posselenije. The municipality also includes the villages of Krutoloschnoje (7 km southeast), Lomowitsk-2 (7 km northeast), Tinderlinka (12 km southeast) and Torbejewo (9 km southeast) as well as the settlements Beljai (3 km southeast), Borissowa Gora (3 km northwest), Maiski (4 km north), Nowy (5 km north-west) and at the Kujendat train station (6 km north-west).
history
The place was founded in 1600 as one of the first villages in the region under the name Pyschkina , possibly after the name of a local prince of the Chulymer . Since the 18th century at the latest, the village bore the Pyschkino-Troitskoye; "Troizkoje" with respect to 1725 in the village built Trinity skirche (Russian Troitskaya Tserkov ).
In 1924 the village became the administrative seat of the Satschulymski rajon (about "Rajon behind the Tschulym"), which was dissolved in 1930. On June 22, 1939, the Rajon was re-established, but now called Pyschkino-Troitski rajon after its center . On February 8, 1963, the Rajon was again dissolved and joined the Assinowski rajon , but in 1965 it was re-established with the simultaneous renaming of the village in Pervomaiskoje as Pervomaiski rajon (from Russian Perwoje maja for " May 1st ").
Population development
year | Residents |
---|---|
1959 | 2885 |
1970 | 3784 |
1979 | 4573 |
1989 | 5851 |
2002 | 5800 |
2010 | 5641 |
Note: census data
traffic
The regional road 69K-3 leads to Pervomaiskoje, which has been crossing the Tschulym west of the town since 2006 on a bridge built in 2000. The road branches off east of Tomsk from the 69K-1 Tomsk border to the Kemerovo Oblast (from there towards Mariinsk ) and runs through Assino. The Kujendat station is located 6 km north-west of Pervomaiskoje at km 197 of the Taiga - Tomsk - Bely Jar line opened in 1976 on the section from Assino .
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)