Saovrashnoye (Kaliningrad)

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settlement
Saowraschnoje
Schwägerau

Заовражное
Federal district Northwest Russia
Oblast Kaliningrad
Rajon Chernyakhovsk
Earlier names Swaygrube (after 1384),
Schwaygrube (before 1469),
Schwegerau (after 1785),
Schwägerau (until 1946)
population 302 inhabitants
(as of Oct. 14, 2010)
Time zone UTC + 2
Telephone code (+7) 40141
Post Code 238178
License Plate 39, 91
OKATO 27 239 802 001
Geographical location
Coordinates 54 ° 37 '  N , 21 ° 37'  E Coordinates: 54 ° 37 '26 "  N , 21 ° 37' 3"  E
Saovrashnoye (Kaliningrad) (European Russia)
Red pog.svg
Location in the western part of Russia
Saovrashnoye (Kaliningrad) (Kaliningrad Oblast)
Red pog.svg
Location in Kaliningrad Oblast

Saowraschnoje ( Russian Заовражное , German  Schwägerau , Lithuanian Švogerava ) is a place in the Russian Oblast Kaliningrad . It belongs to the local government unit Stadtkreis Tschernjachowsk in chernyakhovsky district .

Geographical location

Saowrashnoye is located on the south bank of the Pregel (Russian: Pregolja), 13 kilometers west of Chernyakhovsk (Insterburg) on the federal road A229 (also European road 28 , formerly Reichsstrasse 1 ). The next train station is Pastuchowo -Nowoje (Waldhausen) on the Kaliningrad-Chernyshevskoje railway line (Königsberg-Eydtkuhnen / Eydtkau) - part of the former Prussian Eastern Railway - for onward travel to Lithuania and the Russian heartland.

history

The then Swaygrube place indicated was before 1384 a Prußenfestung . On June 27, 1721, Prince Leopold von Anhalt-Dessau bought the goods there. A few decades later - on August 30, 1757 - Schwägereu was completely burned down in the battle of Groß-Jägersdorf . In 1785 there was again a village with an aristocratic outbuilding , the latter being destroyed by fire on July 26, 1814 to the ground. Already in 1815 the village existed again with a Vorwerk and also the village Hopfenau (no longer exist today). With the exemption of the farmers, Schwägerau was withdrawn from the possession of the Princes of Anhalt-Dessau, but the estate remained in their possession. In 1867 Schwägerau had 558 inhabitants, in 1871 there were 571, of which 440 lived in the village, 100 on the estate, nine in the forestry area and 22 in the railwayman's houses.

In 1874 the rural community Schwägerau and the manor district Schwägerau came to the newly established district of Groß Bubainen (renamed "Waldhausen" in 1930, Russian name: Bereschkowskoje). It belonged to 1945 the district Insterburg in Administrative district Gumbinnen the Prussian province of East Prussia .

In the village of Schwägerau there were 317 inhabitants registered in 1910, while there were 134 on the estate. On September 30, 1928, the rural communities of Hopfenau and Schwägerau and the Schwägerau manor district merged to form the new rural community of Schwägerau. The population in 1933 totaled 478 and was 428 in 1939.

As a result of the war, Schwägerau and northern East Prussia became part of the Soviet Union in 1945 . In 1947 the place was given the Russian name Saovrashnoye and at the same time was assigned to the Bereschkowski selski Sowet in the Chernyakhovsk district . From 2008 to 2015 Saovrashnoye belonged to the rural municipality of Svobodnenskoje selskoje posselenije and since then to the city district of Chernyakhovsk.

church

Before 1945 the population of Schwägerau was almost without exception of Protestant denomination and was parish in the parish of the Norkitten Church (today in Russian: Meschduretschje). That belonged to the church district Insterburg in the church province of East Prussia of the Church of the Old Prussian Union . Today Saovrashnoye is located in the catchment area of ​​the Evangelical Lutheran congregation in Chernyakhovsk (Insterburg) , which was newly established in the 1990s , the parish seat of the Chernyakhovsk church region in the Kaliningrad provost of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of European Russia .

literature

  • Alfred Seidenberg, The memory remains , 2011 (story about the life of the villagers in Schwägerau)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. 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)
  2. ^ D. Lange, Geographical Location Register East Prussia (2005): Schwägerau
  3. Norkitten's goods
  4. ^ Rolf Jehke, district of Groß Bubainen / Waldhausen
  5. Uli Schubert, community directory, Insterburg district
  6. Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. City and district of Insterburg (Russian Chernyachovsk). (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  7. Through the Указ Президиума Верховного Совета РСФСР от 17 ноября 1947 г. «О переименовании населённых пунктов Калининградской области» (Ordinance of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR "On the Renaming of Places in Kaliningrad Oblast" of November 17, 1947)
  8. Evangelical Lutheran Provosty Kaliningrad ( Memento of the original dated August 29, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.propstei-kaliningrad.info