Tambovskoye (Kaliningrad, Bagrationovsk)
settlement
Tambowskoje / Vierzighuben,
also: Karlshof Тамбовское
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Tambowskoje ( Russian Тамбовское , German Forty Huben or Karlshof, Kreis Preußisch Eylau is) the common name originally two independent places Russian Kaliningrad Oblast (region Königsberg (Prussia) ) used to Gvardeyskoye selskoje posselenije (Town Gvardeyskoye (Mulhouse) ) in Rajon Bagrationowsk ( Preussisch Eylau district ) belong.
Geographical location
Tambowskoje is located 13 kilometers north of the city of Bagrationowsk (Preussisch Eylau) on a side road that runs from Gwardeiskoje (Mühlhausen) on the Russian trunk road A 195 (former German Reichsstrasse 128 ) via Soldatskoje (Lewitten , also: Pilgrim) to Chekhovo (Uderwangen) on the Fernstrasse A 196 (former Reichsstrasse 131 ) leads. There is no train connection.
history
Tambowskoje / Vierzighuben (until 1945)
The district of Tambowskoje, formerly called Vierzighuben, was incorporated into the same district in 1874 when the district of Groß Lauth was established . He was in the district of Preußisch Eylau in the administrative district of Königsberg in the Prussian province of East Prussia . In 1910 Vierzighuben had 217 inhabitants. In 1928 the place expanded to include the Vorwerk Karlshof , which was umgemeindet from Schultitten (Russian: Strelnja) to here.
On May 14, 1930, Vierzighuben was removed from the Groß Lauth district and incorporated into the Knauten district (now Russian: Prudki) - renamed the Mühlhausen district in 1936 (Gwardeiskoje). In 1933 Vierzighuben and Karlshof had 329 inhabitants, and in 1939 it had 345 inhabitants.
Tambowskoje / Karlshof (until 1945)
The small Vorwerk, formerly known as Karlshof , is less than 1 kilometer from the Vierzighuben district. Until 1928 it belonged to the Schultitten estate (today in Russian: Strelnja) and then came to Vierzighuben.
Tambovskoye (since 1946)
As a result of the Second World War , the two places Vierzighuben and Karlshof with northern East Prussia came to the Soviet Union and in 1946 received the common Russian name " Tambowskoje ". Until 2009 they were incorporated into the Gwardeiski soviet (Dorfsowjet Gwardeiskoje (Mühlhausen9 )) and have since been - due to a structural and administrative reform - united and classified as a “settlement” (Russian: possjolok) part of the Gwardeiskoje selskoje posselenije (rural municipality. Gwardeiskoje. Gwardeiskoje ) in Bagrationovsk Raion .
church
With a predominantly Protestant population, Vierzighuben and Karlshof were parish in the parish Mühlhausen (today Russian: Gwardeiskoje) before 1945 . It belonged to the church district Preußisch Eylau (Bagrationowsk) within the church province of East Prussia of the Church of the Old Prussian Union .
Today the church connection between Tambovskoye and Gwardeiskoye has remained. The Evangelical Lutheran parish there is a subsidiary of the Resurrection Church in Kaliningrad (Königsberg) and belongs to the Kaliningrad provost of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of European Russia (ELKER).
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)
- ↑ Location information-picture archive East Prussia
- ↑ Rolf Jehke, district of Groß Lauth / Schrombehnen
- ↑ Uli Schubert, community directory, Prussian Eylau district
- ^ Rolf Jehke, Knauten / Mühlhausen district
- ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. District Preussisch Eylau (Russian Bagrationowsk). (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
- ↑ 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
- ↑ Ev.-luth. Provosty Kaliningrad ( Memento of August 29, 2011 in the Internet Archive )