Strelnja (Kaliningrad)

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settlement
Strelnja / school
tits Стрельня
Federal district Northwest Russia
Oblast Kaliningrad
Rajon Bagrationovsk
Earlier names School tits (until 1946)
population 185 inhabitants
(as of Oct. 14, 2010)
Time zone UTC + 2
Post Code 238437
License Plate 39, 91
OKATO 27 203 804 007
Geographical location
Coordinates 54 ° 30 ′  N , 20 ° 36 ′  E Coordinates: 54 ° 30 ′ 0 ″  N , 20 ° 36 ′ 0 ″  E
Strelnja (Kaliningrad) (European Russia)
Red pog.svg
Location in the western part of Russia
Strelnja (Kaliningrad) (Kaliningrad Oblast)
Red pog.svg
Location in Kaliningrad Oblast

Strelnja ( Russian Стрельня , German Schultitten ) is a place in the Russian Oblast Kaliningrad ( Koenigsberg area (Prussia) ) and belongs to the Gwardeiskoje selskoje posselenije (rural community Gwardeiskoje (Mühlhausen) ) in the Bagrationovsk district ( Prussian Eylau district ).

Geographical location

Strelnja is located 13 kilometers northwest of Bagrationovsk (Prussian Eylau) on a side road that branches off north of Gwardeiskoje (Mühlhausen) from the Russian trunk road A 195 (former German Reichsstraße 128 ) in a westerly direction and via Krasnosnamenskoje (Dollstädt) to Pogranitschnoje (Hussehnen) leads.

Strelnja-Nowaja is today the name of the former Schrombehnen (now Russian: Moskowskoje) railway station of the former East Prussian Southern Railway , which is still in operation between Kaliningrad (Königsberg) and Bagrationovsk.

history

Gutsdorf, formerly known as Schultitten , was incorporated into the newly established district of Groß Lauth (now Russian: Newskoje) in 1874. He was in the district of Preußisch Eylau in the administrative district of Königsberg in the Prussian province of East Prussia . In 1905, parts of the Wisdehnen manor district (Russian: Lyubminowo) are reclassified into the Schultitten manor district, in 1910 Schulitten had 295 inhabitants.

On September 30, the Schultitten manor was converted into a rural community and the Karlshof (Tambowskoje) suburb was reclassified from Schultitten to Vierzighuben (now also in Russian: Tambowskoje). On April 1, 1936, Schultitten lost its independence and was incorporated into the community of Schrombehnen (Moskowskoje).

In 1945 Schultitten came to the Soviet Union with northern East Prussia and in 1946 received the Russian name " Strelnja ". Until 2009 the place was incorporated into the Gwardeiski soviet (Dorfsovjet Gwardeiskoje (Mühlhausen) ) and has since been - due to a structural and administrative reform - a "settlement" (Russian: posssjolok) classified place within the Gwardeiskoje selskoje posselenije (rural community Gwardeiskoje ) in Bagrationovsk Raion .

church

Due to its predominantly Protestant population, Schultitten was parish before 1945 in the parish of the village parish Mühlhausen (today in Russian: Gwardeiskoje). It belonged to the church district Preußisch Eylau (today Russian: Bagrationowsk) within the church province of East Prussia of the Church of the Old Prussian Union . The last German clergyman was Pastor Otto Nikutowski .

Today Strelnja is again in the catchment area of ​​a now Evangelical-Lutheran parish in Gwardeiskoje. It is now a subsidiary of the Church of the Resurrection in Kaliningrad (Koenigsberg) within the Kaliningrad provost of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of European Russia (ELKER).

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. Rolf Jehke, district of Groß Lauth / Schrombehnen
  3. Uli Schubert, community directory, Prussian Eylau district
  4. According to the Law on the Composition and Territories of Municipal Forms of the Kaliningrad Oblast of June 25th / 1. July 2009, along with Law No. 253 of June 30, 2008, specified by Law No. 370 of July 1, 2009
  5. Location information-picture archive East Prussia
  6. Ev.-luth. Provosty Kaliningrad ( Memento of August 29, 2011 in the Internet Archive )