Vladimiro-Alexandrovskoye
Village
Vladimiro-Alexandrovskoye
Владимиро-Aлександровское
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Vladimiro-Alexandrowskoje ( Russian Владимиро-Александровское ) is a village (selo) in the Primorye region in Russia with 5,708 inhabitants (as of October 14, 2010).
geography
The place is about 100 km as the crow flies east of the regional administration center Vladivostok and 15 km northeast of the port city of Nakhodka . It is located not far from the left bank of the Partisanskaya River (formerly Sutschan ), which flows into the Nachodka Bay of the Sea of Japan a good 10 km south on the northeastern edge of Nakhodka .
Wladimiro-Aleksandrovskoe is the administrative center of the Rajons Partisanski and seat of the rural community Wladimiro-Aleksandrovskoe selskoje posselenije, also includes the 13-km south-east situated village Chmylowka to.
The Partisanskaya near Nakhodka ; on the right in the distance Vladimiro-Alexandrovskoye
history
During the Russian settlement of the region as a result of the 1858 Treaty of Aigun , the village of Alexandrowka (also called Alexandrowskaya sloboda ) was established in 1864 in place of the current location , and in 1865 the village of Wladimirowka (also Wladimirowskaja sloboda ) a little north . Until the mid-1880s, these were the only settlements in what is now the Rajons; Then there was a new surge in resettlement: the two villages grew together under their current name in 1888, and in the 1890s the mail route from Schkotowo (near today's Artyom ) to Olga was passed by. In 1909 the village became the seat of two newly created administrative units: the Suchanskaya wolost and at the same time the Olginski ujesd .
As part of the reorganization of the administration in the Soviet period, Vladimiro-Alexandrowskoje came to the Suchansky rajon on January 4, 1926, with its seat in the mining settlement of Suchansky Rudnik, today's city of Partisansk, a good 25 km north . At the end of 1932, the district administration was moved to Vladimiro-Alexandrowskoje. In February 1935 the Rajon was briefly renamed Wladimiro-Alexandrowski rajon , but already in April 1935 in Budjonnowski rajon, after the Marshal of the Soviet Union Semyon Budjonny . As part of the de-Stalinization in 1957, many such places or areas named after (still living) comrades-in-arms of Stalin were renamed again; so the Rajon got its current name Partisanski. In the period 1935–1957 Wladimiro-Alexandrowskoje also carried the semi-official name Budjon (n) owka, which is still in colloquial use there today.
Population development
year | Residents |
---|---|
1939 | 2337 |
1959 | 2572 |
1970 | 3879 |
1979 | 4446 |
1989 | 5636 |
2002 | 5577 |
2010 | 5708 |
Note: census data
traffic
North of Vladimiro-Alexandrowskoje runs the 400 km long regional road 05N-131 (formerly R447) from Nakhodka over the Rajon centers of the southeast Primorye region Laso and Olga to Kawalerowo . Its southwestern part, including the section around Vladimiro-Alexandrowskoje, is to be expanded into the federal highway A375 to Khabarovsk .
About 4 km to the northwest on the other side of the Partisanskaya near the village of Ekaterinovka is the small railway station of the same name at kilometer 161 of the Ugolnaya (Artyom) - Nakhodka branch of the Trans-Siberian Railway , which went into operation on this section in 1935 and has been electrified since 1966 ; the next major train station is Nakhodka.
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)