Ilyin is originally from Chud, Nerekhta district. Alphabetical list of landowners of the Kineshma and Nerekhta districts of the Kostroma province. Yartsov Akim Grigorievich

Center of Nerekhta district.

Population 22.5 thousand people (2012). Ras-po-lo-zhen on the Ne-rekh-ta river, near the confluence of the So-lo-ni-tsa river into it. Junction of railway lines. It is connected by road to Kostroma.

For the first time it was mentioned in Le-to-scribe Pe-re-yas-lav-la-Suz-dal-skogo in 1213 (1214) when describing between -before the internecine struggle of the sy-no-vey of the ruler of the world-prince All-in-lo-yur-e-vi-cha Big Nest. In the XIV-XVI centuries, Nerekhta was a large trade-in-re-mess-garden with numerous so-la-ny var-ni-tsa-mi (first written mention of the so-le-va-re-niy in Nerekhta from-no-sit-xia to 1423), under the great princes mo-s -kovsky (not-one-times-but-from-them into the possession of their wives) and tsars, as well as large mo-na -sty-ryam (in the cha-st-no-sti, the Trinity-Ser-gie-vu monastery and the trans-yas-lav-sko-mu Gorits-ko-mu monastery). Bu-du-chi-large in all-se-le-ni-ny, Nerekhta, however, never had fortification structures. In the 2nd half of the 16th century, when-nad-le-zha-la tsa-re-vi-chu Fe-do-ru Iva-no-vi-chu. In the Time of Troubles in the summer of 1609, ra-zo-re-on the Polish-Lithuanian troops (probably, from A.I. Lee -sov-sko-th). After this, the volume of non-Recht's so-le-va-re-nium decreased, and then it became completely beautiful -ti-moose. Re-established its significance as a trading center in the 2nd quarter - the middle of the 17th century, in 1654 it was opened here -ta ta-moz-nya. In 1719, he was named near the city of the Ko-st-Rom province of the Moscow province. From the 2nd half of the 18th century, an important center of po-lot-nya-no-go production, as well as various re-messages (including iko-no-pis-no-go, sa- ok, sir). Since 1778, Nerekhta has been a county town in the Ko-st-Rom province (1778-1928; until 1796, Ko-st-Rom-skoe-on-the-st-no-st-vo). Nerekhta suffered from the fires in 1785, 1815 and 1838. In 1887, the Yaro-Slavl - Kost-Ro-ma railway passed near the city (the Nerekhta station was built 0.5 km from the city, now not - in his features), in 1898 the opening of traffic along the Ne-rekh-ta - Se-re-da railway line. District center of the Kos-Rom province (1928-1929), Ivanovo industrial (since 1936 Ivanovo) region (1929-1944) , Kos-Rom region (1944-1963, since 1964). Since the 1970s, metal has been developed in the city.

Among the cities of the Kos-Rom region of Nerekhta, you have the highest level of preservation of historical urban development. The city was built according to the regular plan of 1781 after the heat of 1785 with the participation of the architect S.A. Vo-ro-ti-lo-va from the village of Bol-shie So-li, entered the Ne-rekht district. In the center of the ra-di-al-no-kol-tse-voy system-te-we are located on the right bank of the Ne-rekh-ta Tor-go river -vaya square (now not Freedom Square; when the class-si-ci-stic appearance was created in the 19th century), from which the streets lead , continuing to reach Kost-ro-mu, Yaro-Slavl, Suz-dal and Nizhny Novgorod. Plan skor-rek-ti-ro-van in 1803 and 1838-1839.

The most ancient preserved buildings are 5-domed churches: a 2-pillar church with a “Yaroslavsky” porch in honor of the Vladimir Icon of God Ma-te-ri (1676-1688, southern aisle of the 1770s; ros-pi-si ar-te-li yaro-slav- Russian writers led by M.A. So-p-la-ko-vym, 1775; Iko-no-stas from the village of Ku-li-gi, 1800s; year, a warm church with a 6-column class-si-cy-stic portico was built, designed by the architect P .I. Fur-sov), the former Bo-go-ro-di-tse-Sre-ten-sko-go monastery (founded in 1634, closed in 1764); pillarless Kazan Cathedral (1709-1713, on the site of the wooden cathedral of Saints Boris and Gleba; beyond the top niya ut-ra-che-ny; ros-pi-si ar-te-li So-p-la-ko-va, 1780) with do-mi-ni-ru-shchi in the center of Nerekhta class. -cystic co-lo-col-ney (1837-1848); the pillarless God-manifestation church on the left bank of Ne-rekh-ty (1710-1725; Russian-pi-si art-te-li of Yaro-Slav mas-te-rov led by A. and I. Shus-to-vy, 1768-1769; in 1987, us-ta-nov-len Iko-no-stas around 1776 from the village of Ver- house of the So-li-ga-lich district; the chapel of St. Nicholas was founded in 1717; a refectory of the 1st half of the 19th century, a tent vaya ko-lo-ko-nya of the 18th century, laid down in the 1930s, restored in the 1980s, architect A.P. Cher-nov); Bla-go-ve-schen-skaya church of the “eight-me-rik on chet-ve-ri-ke” type (1713-1720s; refectory with the chapel of St. or-gy - around 1772; ros-pi-si of the 2nd half of the 18th century;

The appearance of Nerekht was in many ways op-re-de-la-ut as-built in the 1770-1790s according to the designs of S.A. Vo-ro-ti-lo-va 2-storey churches of the “eight-me-rick on the four-ve-ri-ke” type with ko-lo-kol-nya-mi above the ra-mi: Resurrection-se-niya (lower church of St. Var-va-ry; 1770-1787, ros-pi-si 1795, mid-19th century; in the 1990s smon-ti-ro -van iko-no-stas of the 2nd quarter of the 19th century from the village of Kras-noe-Su-ma-ro-ko-vo) with the most on-line baroque de-co-rum and with a characteristic “vo-ro-ti-lov-sky” ko-lo-ko-lo-o-ra-zny ku-po-lom ko-lo-kol-ni; Pre-ob-ra-zhe-niya (lower church of the Pro-ro-ka of Elijah and the Assumption; 1787-1791; the plan is close to the oval, the end-of-ri-za-li -you are behind the classic triangular fronts; Sky Voyage of the Cross of the State (1787-1788; Russian Pi-si 1810, A.T. De-mi-dov).

After 1785, stone buildings were erected in the class-si-tsiz-ma style: built in the late 1780s - 1800s (the house of Khvo- ri-no-va, in which in 1798 Emperor Pa-vel I was founded; -Bus-lae-va, standing on the Church of God, the merchant Me-sha-li-na; nykh; kva-so-var-nya); residential houses, built after the fire of 1815 (houses of Die-vykh, Gra-du-so-va; sacred to Vla-di -Mir-skaya church, around 1833; estate of merchants Si-mo-no-va and Gud-ko-va; houses on the eastern side of Tor-go-voy square) and 1838 (house of merchants Dya-ko-no-vyh); civil buildings - spiritual government (1824-1825), state rows with 23 columns on the former Trade Square (1836- 1840, pre-resident architect P.I. Fur-sov; tall wings of the 2nd half of the 19th century) with meat shops -tsa Me-sha-li-na (around 1855), with-sut-st-ven-nye places (trans-re-o-ru-do-va-ny in the 1830s from the house merchants of the Se-re-rya-ni-ko-vyh of the 1st quarter of the 19th century).

Among the monuments of industrial architecture: a baroque 2-story building (1761, 2nd floor re-built by -after the fires of 1794 and 1798; now not a city-in-co-mat) at the factory M.Ya. Gryaz-nov-sko-go-Lap-shi-na and M.P. Bol-sho-va-Pas-tu-ho-va (closed around 1790), complex of weaving-to-spinning factory Bryu-ha-no-vyh, Sy -ro-myat-ni-ko-vykh and Dia-ko-no-vykh (founded in 1841; in the 1920-1980s it was called “Red Technique” style-schi-tsa") with buildings from the 1850s to the 1920s.

Built in the spirit of ek-lek-tiz-ma: women’s pro-gym-na-zia (2nd half of the 19th century, including the house of I. Su- words and P. Pa-shchi-ni-na, built after 1815), the building of the As-sign-national Bank and the city thoughts (1880s, based on a building of the late 18th century), Pa-shchi-ni-na trading house (2nd half of the 19th century), railway complex -a road station with a train station in the Russian style (1887-1888), the main building of the zemstvo district hospital (1892; wooden wings with elements of the mo-der-na - early 20th century), pre-housing house of F.V. Sa-vel-e-va (late 19th century); residential houses A.A. Sy-ro-myat-ni-ko-va (stucco de-kor 1871), flax-for-water-chi-ka A. Se-reb-ryan-ni-ko-va (1880s) and other houses, including in the spirit of kir-pich-no-go style and in the style of ne-oklas-si-tsiz-ma (wooden house of the Shi-she-lo estate -howl, early 20th century).

In the strict va-ri-an-te style of modern-turf - the building of the re-al-no-go school (re-built in the 1900s from the building of 1845), men's gymnasium (opened in 1911); pain-n-tsa flax-spinning factory, uk-ra-shen-naya may-o-li-ko-you-mi-slab-ka-mi (1905-1907, pre- -lo-zhi-tel-but by the architect I.V. Bru-kha-nov). Museum of Local Lore (1975; in the building of a former chapel ap-te-ki, early 1900s).

A significant part of a number of buildings from the mid-19th century - 1920s has been preserved (including wooden and half-stone houses with on-laying pattern-cha-that carving, sometimes with the use-of-zo-va-ni-forms of the modern-der-on), wooden 2-story houses with a ball -ko-na-mi (Go-vo-ro-vykh, Dia-ko-no-vykh, late 19th century). School in the style of neo-klass-si-tsiz-ma (1954).

Factors: me-ha-ni-che-sky (fil-li-al of the state scientific-production enterprise "Ba-zalt"; auto-zap-cha- sti, including brake pads, ve-lo-si-peds and more), ceramic materials (brick, de-co- efficient ceramic tiles), reinforced concrete materials. Production of furniture, steel pipes and fittings with thermal insulation and hydro-protective shells mi, paper-but-carton containers, sewing and tri-knitted goods, etc. Release of souvenir products tions.

Near Nerekht there is: in the village of Troitsa - Troi-tse-Sy-pa-nov Pa-ho-mie-vo-Ne-rekht-sky monastery (founded in the middle of the 14th century, closed in 1764, rebuilt in 1992; Troitsky Cathedral, 1675-1676; refectory and southern aisle - 1830-1834, architect P .I. Fur-sov; shat-ro-kol-nya - 1683-1684; and 1689); in the village of Te-te-rin-skoe - the 5-domed Assumption Church (1720-1724, colorful ros-pi-si art-te-li mas-te-rov from the village of Bol -shie So-li, 1795-1799; icon-no-stas of the 2nd half of the 18th century, reigned in 1906 by P.O. Trub-ni-ko-vym - 1805-1806 years, contractor P.A. Vo-ro-ti-lov) with a unique 5-tier class-si-cy-stistic co-lo-kol-ney (1815-1820, Italian architect J. Ma-ri-chel-li); in the village of Tat-ya-ni-no - the Church of the Ro-zh-de-st-va of Christ-sto-va type “eight-me-rik on chet-ve-ri-ke” in the spirit of the Moscow ba- rock-co (1734, ko-lo-kol-nya of the 1st quarter of the 19th century); in the village of Kras-noe-Su-ma-ro-ko-vo - estate-ba Kras-noe (Trinity Church, around 1766; ros-pi-si ko-st-rom-skih mas-te- ditch I. and L. Nos-ko-vykh, 1768; a regular park of the late 18th century; In the villages of Vladych-noye, Vos-kre-sen-skoye, Vy-go-lo-vo, Gri-gor-tse-vo, Ems-na, Knya-gi-ni-no, Ku-li- gi, By-em-whose, Pro-ta-so-vo, Fe-do-rov-skoye - 5-headed churches with tent-ro-you-mi ko-lo-kol-nya-mi in spirit-he ar-hi-tek-tu-ry of the 17th century (1760-1790s).

Additional literature:

Di-ev M.Ya. The city of Ne-rekh in the 18th and first quarter of the 19th century. // Works of the Ko-st-Rom-scientific society for the study of the local region. Ko-st-ro-ma, 1919. Issue. 13;

Me-sha-lin I.V. Eco-no-mi-che-skoe description of the Ne-rekht district of the Ko-st-Rom-government. Ne-rekh-ta, 1927;

An-d-re-ev A.F., Bol-sha-kov I.G., Mag-nitsky M.P. Ne-rekh-ta. Ko-st-ro-ma, 1963;

Kud-rya-shov E.V. Early memory of the pro-mus-linen ar-hi-tech-tu-ry Ne-rekh-you // Ar-hi-tech-tur-noe-succession and res- tav-ra-tion. M., 1988. Issue. 3;

Bol-sha-kov I.G., Mi-he-ev E.L., Ba-din V.V. Ne-rekh-ta. Yaro-Slavl, 1989;

De-mi-dov S.V., Kud-rya-shov E.V. No-reh-ta. M., 1996;

Archeo-logia of the Ko-st-Rom region. Ko-st-ro-ma, 1997.

During the period of studying the land holdings of the Kozlovsky princes in the Kostroma province, it was possible to identify the names of landowners, neighbors of the Kozlovsky princes and their relatives. Naturally, this list does not pretend to be a complete index of the names of all landowners in the indicated counties. Study of archival sources on the possessions of the book. The Kozlovskys in the Kostroma province covered the border territory between the Nerekhta and Kineshma districts, which ran along the Volga from the mountains. Plyos to the mountains. Kineshma. In this place, the left bank of the Volga was located on the territory of the Kineshma district, and the right bank belonged to the Nerekhta district. The right tributary of the Volga, the Sunzha River, also separated these counties. Nerekhtsky stretched along its left bank, and Kineshmasky along its right bank.

Familiarity with archival documents on this area made it possible to identify many unknown names of landowners.

The sources studied included scribal, census and refusal books; affairs of old and young; revision tales, cases of general and special land surveys.

AVDULIN SERGEY MATVEEVICH

AVDULIN STEPAN ALEXEEVICH - Solicitor of a satisfying palace

ALEXEYEV ALEXEY FEDOROVICH - collegiate advisor

ARGAMAKOV MATVEY SEMENOVICH

ARTEMIEV IVAN SERGEEVICH - hysterical

AFANASIEV PROKHOR - from free farmers of the village. Skomoroshki of Kineshma district.

BAKUNIN ALEXANDER PAVLOVICH - actual state councilor

BALAKIREVA PRASKOVYA VASILIEVNA - married to Grigory Afanasyevich Yartsov

BARYATINSKY FEDOR IVANOVICH - prince, steward His wife, princess Ustinya Petrovna Baryatinskaya

BASKAKOVA NATALIA ABRAMOVNA

BASKIN IVAN

BESTUZHEV NIKITA EVDOKIMOVICH - ensign. His wife is born. Fedchishcheva Mavra Mikhailovna

BIBIKOVA NASTASYA SEMENOVNA - general's nee Princess Kozlovskaya

BIBIKOV ALEXANDER ALEKSANDROVICH - privy councilor

BIBIKOV ALEXANDER ILYICH - General-in-Chief, Senator

BIBIKOV VASILY ALEXANDROVICH - major general

BIZYAEV IVAN IVANOVICH - lieutenant

BLINOV DMITRY NIKOLAEVICH, student

BLUDOV SEMEN YURIEVICH - soldier of the Preobrazhensky regiment. His wife Marya Danilovna Bludova

BOLOTOVA MARIA FEDOROVNA - collegiate assessor

BUDBERG SOFIA IVANOVNA - Baroness, born Countess Ribeaupierre

VADBOLSKY IVAN MATVEEVICH - prince

VOLKOV DANILA FEDOROVYCH

VOLYNSKAYA NATALIA NIKOLAEVNA - lieutenant

VOLYNSKY VASILY IVANOVYCH - navy captain

VOROBYEVA AGRAFENA SEMENOVNA

VOROBIEV SEMEN SEMENovich

VOSKRESENSKAYA ANNA ABRAMOVNA - landowner

VYAZEMSKY STEPAN DMITRIEVICH - prince, retired dragoon

VYAZEMSKY FEDOR MIKHAILOVICH - prince

GLEBOV Afanasy Sidorovich

GLEBOV DMITRY SIDOROVICH

GLEBOV IVAN GRIGORIEVICH - retired nobleman

GLEBOV PETER SIDOROVICH

GLEBOV YAKOV SIDOROVICH

GOLITSYN VASILY PETROVICH - prince

GOLOVIN IVAN DMITRIEVICH - his wife Praskovya Yakovlevna Golovina

GRAMOTIN ALEXEY FEDOROVYCH - artillery lieutenant

GURYEV LYUBIM SELIVERSTOVICH - collegiate assessor

DOLGORUKY FEDOR FEDOROVYCH - prince

DOLGORUKOVA KATERINA SERGEEVNA - princess

DOLGORUKOVA MARIA ALEXANDROVNA

DOLGORUKOV VASILY LUKICH - prince, steward

DOLMATOV-KARPOV LEV IVANOVICH - okolnichy

DOLMATOV-KARPOV FEDOR BORISOVICH - steward

DROZD-BONICHEVSKAYA EKATERINA DMITRIEVNA - captain's lady

Zhdanov IVAN STEPANOVICH

ZAKHAROV IVAN IVANOVICH

ZAKHAROV PETER IVANOVICH

ZAKHARYIN IVAN LAVRENTIEVICH - Captain of the Vologda Dragoon Regiment

ZAKHARYIN KONON

ZOLOTUKHINA VASILISA SEMENOVNA

ZOLOTUKHIN IVAN AFANASIEVICH - collegiate advisor

ZOLOTUKHIN STEPAN IVANOVICH

ZYKOVA NASTASYA GAVRILOVNA

IGNATIEVA USTINYA LAVRENTIEVNA

ILINA TATYANA IVANOVNA - lieutenant

ISAKOV IVAN FEDOROVICH - prime major

HEELS LUKA BOGDANOVICH - solicitor

KAZAKOVA NASTASYA NIKIFOROVNA

KAZAKOV PETER

KALININ Evdokim Fedorovich - retired corporal

KANTAKUZEN ALEXANDRA IVANOVNA - princess, born Countess Ribeaupierre

KASHINTSOVA CLEOPATRA IVANOVNA - major's wife

KVASHNIN-SAMARIN PETER ANDREEVICH - steward

KLYUSHNIKOV VASILY IVANOVICH - Kineshma merchant

KOZLOVSKAYA MAVRA - princess

KOZLOVSKAYA MARFA DMITRIEVNA - princess, born Potemkin

KOZLOVSKAYA PELAGEYA ISAEVNA - princess

KOZLOVSKAYA PELAGEA MINICHNA - princess, born Kologrivova

KOZLOVSKAYA PRASKOVYA TROFIMOVNA - princess

KOZLOVSKY ANDREY AFANASIEVICH - prince, steward

KOZLOVSKY ANDREY STEPANOVICH - prince

KOZLOVSKY ALEXANDER DMITRIEVICH - prince, city secretary

KOZLOVSKY AFANASY GRIGORIEVICH - prince, voivode

KOZLOVSKY BORIS ANDREEVICH - prince, steward

KOZLOVSKY BORIS PETROVICH - prince, lieutenant

KOZLOVSKY VASILY DMITRIEVICH - prince

KOZLOVSKY VLADIMIR IVANOVICH - prince, collegiate registrar

KOZLOVSKY GRIGORY AFANASIEVICH - prince, boyar

KOZLOVSKY GRIGORY VASILIEVICH - prince, voivode

KOZLOVSKY DMITRY ALEXANDROVICH - prince

KOZLOVSKY DMITRY NIKOLAEVICH - prince, provincial leader of the Kostroma nobility

KOZLOVSKY IVAN BORISOVICH - prince, voivode

KOZLOVSKY IVAN DMITRIEVICH - prince, titular councilor

KOZLOVSKY MARK ANDREEVICH - prince, steward

KOZLOVSKY MIKHAIL GRIGORIEVICH - prince, voivode

KOZLOVSKY NIKITA IVANOVICH - prince,

KOZLOVSKY NIKOLAY IVANOVICH - prince, second major

KOZLOVSKY PAVEL DMITRIEVICH - Prince, inspector of the Moscow Land Survey Institute

KOZLOVSKY SEMYON BORISOVICH - prince, second major

KOZLOVSKY SERGEY PETROVICH - prince, second major

KOZLOVSKY STEPAN GRIGORIEVICH - prince

KOZLOVSKY FEDOR MATVEEVICH - prince, steward.

KONOVALOVA ALLA PETROVNA

KONOVALOVA EVDOKIA VASILIEVNA

KONOVALOV ALEXANDER IVANOVICH - textile industrialist

KONOVALOV ALEXANDER PETROVICH - textile industrialist

KONOVALOV IVAN ALEXANDROVICH - textile industrialist

KONOVALOV NIKOLAY PETROVICH

KONOVALOV PETER PETROVICH

KOPTEV VASILY ALEXEEVICH - mayor of the mountains Nerekhta

KORCHMIN VASILY DMITRIEVICH - major general

KROTOV STEFAN IVANOVICH - Kineshma merchant

LAGS PLATO KARLOVICH - background, titular advisor

LVOV IVAN IVANOVICH - prince, colonel

MARTYNOVA AVDOTYA FEDOROVNA - collegiate sometnitsa

MORAVEK LYUDMILA DMITRIEVNA - court councillor, born Princess Kozlovskaya

MUSIN-PUSHKIN MIKHAIL AFANASIEVICH

MYATLEVA PRASKOVYA YAKOVLEVNA - admiral

MYACHOKOV NIKOLAY GRIGORIEVICH - lieutenant colonel

NAUMOVA FETIMYA MIKHAILOVNA - nee Zolotukhina

NAUMOV LEV LAVRENTIEVICH

NELIDOVA LYUBOV DMITRIEVNA - nee Princess Kozlovskaya

OVSOVA ELIZAVETA DMITRIEVNA - lieutenant

ORTYUKOV BORIS

ORTYUKOV GRIGORY BORISOVICH

ORTYUKOV NIKITA

PANOVA AVDOTYA ALEKSEEVNA

PANOVA AVDOTYA FEDOROVNA

PANOVA EFROSINYA FYODOROVNA

PANOV IVAN FEDOROVICH - Maly Yaroslavets retired nobleman

PANOV FEDOR VIKULICH

PAPOCHKIN ALEXEY VASILIEVICH - village peasant Zabolotye Kineshma district

PASYNKOV VASILY IVANOVICH - Guard Reitar

PASYNKOV IVAN

PASYNKOV TIMOFEY

POLIVANOV IVAN MATVEEVICH

POLIVANOV ILYA MATVEEVICH

POLIVANOV MIKHAIL IVANOVICH - corporal

POLIVANOV MIKHAIL ILYICH - collegiate registrar

POLIVANOV MIKHAIL KONSTANTINOVICH - lieutenant

POTEMKINA MARFA DMITRIEVNA

POTEMKIN DMITRY FEDOROVYCH - steward, Vologda voivode

PRIIMKOV-ROSTOVSKY VASILY SAVVICH - prince

PRIIMKOV-ROSTOVSKY IVAN IVANOVICH - prince

PRONSKY IVAN PETROVICH - prince, boyar

PROTOPOPOVA ANNA ALEKSEEVNA

PROTOPOPOVA PRASKOVYA DANILOVNA

PROTOPOPOVA PRASKOVYA DEMENTEVNA

PROTOPOPOVA PRASKOVYA DENISOVNA - second lieutenant

PROTOPOPOV VASILY IVANOVICH - lieutenant

PROTOPOPOV SERGEY IVANOVICH - Colonel

PUSHKIN LEV SILYCH

RATKOVA ANNA STEPANOVNA

RATKOV STEPAN MARKOVICH

RZHEVSKY MIKHAIL ALEXEEVICH - steward

RIBEAUPIERRE OLGA IVANOVNA - countess

RIBOPIERRE SOFIA VASILIEVNA - countess

RIBEAUPIERRE ALEXANDER IVANOVYCH - Count, Actual Privy Councilor

RIBOPIERRE GEORGY IVANOVICH - graph

RIBOPIERRE IVAN ALEXANDROVICH - graph

RYUMINA VARVARA ALEXANDROVNA

RYUMIN ALEXANDER ALEKSANDROVICH

SEVASTYANOVA ANNA EFIMOVNA

SEVASTYANOVA ELENA

SEVASTYANOV LEONTY FEDOSEEVICH - retired corporal

SKVORTSOVA ALEXANDRA PETROVNA

SKVORTSOVA ANNA ALEXANDROVNA - titular councilor

SKVORTSOVA VARVARA PETROVNA

SKVORTSOV ALEXANDER PETROVICH - captain

SKVORTSOV PETER ANDREEVICH - titular advisor

SKVORTSOV PETER VASILIEVICH - seconds major

SKVORTSOV PETER VLADIMIROVICH - seconds major

SOBOLEV KRISTINA IVANOVNA

SOBOLEV ALEXEY GRIGORIEVICH

STEPANOVA MATRENA ALEXANDROVNA - guard lieutenant

STRESHNEV TIKHON NIKITICH - boyar

STROEV IVAN

SUKHONIN VLADIMIR ALEXEEVICH - landowner

SYROMYATOV IVAN TIKHONOVICH

SYROMYATOV ILYA TIKHONOVICH

SYROMYATOV SEMEN TIKHONOVICH

TATISHCHEV SERGEY PAVLOVICH

TITOVA TATYANA ALEKSEEVNA - seconds-major

TIKHMENEVA DARIA ALEXANDROVNA

TIKHMENEVA ELIZAVETA ALEKSANDROVNA

TIKHMENEV IVAN GRIGORIEVICH

TIKHMENEV IVAN NIKITICH

TIKHMENEV STEPAN GRIGORIEVICH

TOKMACHEVA ANNA ALEKSEEVNA - major's wife

TOLMACHEVA ANNA ALEXANDROVNA

UGLECHANINOVA SERAFIMA ILYINICHNA - commerce advisor

UGLECHANINOV KUZMA IVANOVICH

UGLECHANINOV PETER - Kostroma merchant

ULANOV ALEXEY KIPRIYANOVICH

ULANOV IVAN

ULANOV DMITRY IVANOVICH

USHAKOV ALEXEY BOLSHOY GERASIMOVITCH

USHAKOV ALEXEY MENSHY GERASIMOVITCH

USHAKOV BAZHEN IVANOVICH

USHAKOV IVAN GERASIMOVYCH

FEDCHISHCHEV IVAN OSIPOVYCH - retired soldier of the Semenovsky regiment

FEDCHISHCHEV MELENTY MIKHAILOVICH

FEDCHICHEV MIKHAIL OSIPOVYCH

FEDCHICHEV OSIP MELENTIEVICH

KHOLENEV ALEXEY STEPANOVICH - captain

CHASTUKHIN GENNADY VASILIEVICH - Plyos merchant of the 2nd guild, honorary citizen

CHASTUKHIN NIKOLAY GENNADIEVICH - Plyos merchant

CHERKASOV DMITRY PAVLOVICH - second lieutenant

CHERKASSKY DANILA GRIGORIEVICH - prince

CHICHAGOVA AVDOTYA NIKIFOROVNA

CHICHAGOVA AGRAFENA DMITRIEVNA

CHICHAGOVA PRASKOVYA FEDOROVNA

CHICHAGOV ALEXANDER NIKONOVICH - engineering school student

CHICHAGOV ALEXANDER STEPANOVICH

CHICHAGOV ALEXEY SEMENOVICH

CHICHAGOV ANDREY FEDOROVYCH

CHICHAGOV EMELYAN AFANASIEVICH

CHICHAGOV EVSTAFY ANDREEVICH - soldier of the Preobrazhensky regiment

CHICHAGOV IVAN ALEXEEVICH

CHICHAGOV IVAN IVANOVICH - garrison dragoon

CHICHAGOV ILYA FEDOROVYCH

CHICHAGOV MIRON FEDOROVICH - retired watchmaster

CHICHAGOV MIKHAIL IVANOVICH

CHICHAGOV NIKIFOR FEDOROVYCH - retired dragoon

CHICHAGOV NIKOLAY ALEXEEVICH

CHICHAGOV NIKOLAY PETROVICH

CHICHAGOV NIKON NIKOLAEVICH

CHICHAGOV SEMEN SEMENovich

CHICHAGOV SEMYON FEDOROVICH

CHICHAGOV STEPAN ALEXEEVICH

CHICHAGOV FEDOR AFANASIEVICH

CHICHAGOV FEDOR IVANOVICH

CHICHAGOV YAKOV

CHUPRAKOVA FEDOSYA IVANOVNA

SHAKHMATOV VASILY GAVRILOVICH - nobleman

SHAKHMATOV GAVRIL SEMENOVICH

SHAHMATOV SEMYON FEDOROVICH

SHEIN ALEXEY SEMENOVICH - generalissimo

SHESTUNOV ANDREY IVANOVICH - prince

SHIDLOVSKAYA MARIA VASILIEVNA - second lieutenant

SHUVALOV SERGEY FEDOROVICH - captain

SHURLOVA MARIA LAVRENTEVNA - landowner

SHURLOV ANDREY ANDREEVICH - ensign of the Kabardian Infantry Regiment

SHURLOV VASILY ANDREEVICH

SHURLOV PETER VASILIEVICH

SHCHERBATOVA NASTASYA SERGEEVNA - princess

SHCHERBACHEV IVAN

SHCHERBACHEV NAZARIY

SHCHERBACHEV NIKITA

SHCHERBACHEV BORIS FEDOROVICH - State Councillor

SHCHERBACHEV SEMYON NIKITICH - lieutenant

SHCHETNEVA MARFA DOROFEEVNA

SHCHETNEV BORIS KIRILLOVICH

SHULEPNIKOVA VARVARA ALEKSEEVNA - college counselor

SHULEPNIKOV SERGEY ALEKSANDROVICH - guard colonel

YAZYKOVA MARIA IVANOVNA - major's wife

YAMANOVA AGRAFEN DMITRIEVNA

YAMANOVA MARIA

YAMANOVA PRASKOVYA DOROFEEVNA

YAMANOV AKIM DMITRIEVICH

YAMANOV ALEXEY FILIPPOVICH

YAMANOV DOROFEI LAVRENTIEVICH

YAMANOV EFIM IVANOVICH - soldier

YAMANOV EFIM LAVRENTIEVICH

YAMANOV IVAN AFANASIEVICH

YAMANOV IVAN LAVRENTIEVICH

YAMANOV LAVRENTY BAZHENOVICH

YAMANOV MAXIM DMITRIEVICH - retired grenadier

YAMANOV NAUM LAVRENTIEVICH

YAMANOV NIKITA ULANOVICH

YAMANOV NIKIFOR NIKITICH

YAMANOV PETER STEPANOVICH

YAMANOV STEPAN LAVRENTIEVICH

YAMANOV FEDOR IVANOVICH - dragoon

YAMANOV FEDOR NIKITICH

YARTSOVA AVDOTYA VASILIEVNA

YARTSOVA DARIA GRIGORIEVNA

YARTSOVA MAVRA FEDOROVNA

YARTSOVA MARIA SEMENOVNA

YARTSOVA TATIANA GRIGORIEVNA

YARTSOVA ULYANA IVANOVNA

YARTSOV AKIM GRIGORIEVICH

YARTSOV ANDREY AKIMOVYCH - retired nobleman

YARTSOV ANDREY MIKHAILOVICH

YARTSOV ANTON IVANOVICH - soldier of the naval soldiers' first regiment and soldiers of the Vyatka infantry regiment

YARTSOV GAVRIIL VASILIEVICH - Second Lieutenant of the Yaroslavl Infantry Regiment

YARTSOV GAVRILA TERENTIEVICH - reitar

YARTSOV GRIGORY FEDOROVYCH

YARTSOV DMITRY ANDREEVICH

YARTSOV Zakhary Mikhailovich - dragoon

YARTSOV IVAN AFANASIEVICH

YARTSOV IVAN GAVRILOVICH - soldier of the Trinity Infantry Regiment

YARTSOV IVAN IVANOVICH

YARTSOV ILYA ANDREEVICH - lieutenant

YARTSOV IVAN DANILOVYCH

YARTSOV IVAN IVANOVICH

YARTSOV IVAN KIRILLOVICH

YARTSOV KIRILL TRETYAKOVITCH

YARTSOV LAVRENTY ZAKHAROVICH

YARTSOV LAVRENTY YAKOVLEVICH

YARTSOV MIKHAIL AKIMOVITCH

YARTSOV MIKHAIL TRETYAKOVITCH

YARTSOV NIKITA MIKHAILOVICH

YARTSOV NIKIFOR MIKHAILOVICH - dragoon

YARTSOV PETER

YARTSOV SIDOR IVANOVICH - retired dragoon

YARTSOV TERENTY IVANOVICH

YARTSOV ULYAN ANDREEVICH



Plan:

    Introduction
  • 1 Geography
  • 2 History
  • 3 Administrative division
  • 4 Population
  • Notes

Introduction

Nerekhta district- an administrative-territorial unit within the Kostroma governorate and the Kostroma province, which existed in 1778-1929. The county town is Nerekhta.


1. Geography

The district was located in the southwest of the Kostroma province. It bordered with the Vladimir and Yaroslavl provinces. The area of ​​the county was 3,464.2 versts (3,942 km²) in 1897, 1,612 km² in 1926.

2. History

Nerekhta district As part of the Kostroma governorship, it was formed in 1778 during the administrative reform of Catherine II.

In 1796, the Kostroma governorate was transformed into the Kostroma province, consisting of Nerekhta district included the territory of the abolished Plyos district.

In 1918 from Nerekhta district Seredskaya district was allocated to the Ivanovo-Voznesensk province.

On January 14, 1929, the Kostroma province and all its districts were abolished, most of them Nerekhta district became part of the Nerekhta district of the Kostroma district of the Ivanovo Industrial Region.


3. Administrative division

In 1913, the district had 1 provincial town of Plyos and 37 volosts:

  • Armenskaya,
  • Bereznikovskaya,
  • Blaznovskaya,
  • Borisoglebskaya,
  • Gorkinskaya,
  • Gorkovskaya (center - Gorki-Pavlovy village),
  • Dmitrievskaya,
  • Zolotilovskaya (center - Bolshaya Zolotilova village),
  • Ignatovskaya,
  • Ilyinsko-Vvedenskaya,
  • Kovalevskaya,
  • Krasinskaya,
  • Kuznetsovskaya,
  • Kuligo-Maryinskaya (center - Maryinskoye village),
  • Kunestskaya,
  • Maluevskaya,
  • Maryinsko-Alexandrovskaya,
  • Mitinskaya,
  • Nikitskaya,
  • Nikolskaya,
  • Novinskaya,
  • Noginskaya,
  • Odelevskaya,
  • Ostretsovskaya,
  • Pistsovskaya,
  • Rozhdestvenskaya,
  • Sarajevo,
  • Svetochegorskaya,
  • Seredskaya (center - Upino-Sereda village),
  • Sidorovskaya,
  • Sorokhtskaya,
  • Spasskaya (center - Vladychino village),
  • Teterinskaya,
  • Fedorovskaya,
  • Shirokovskaya,
  • Shiryaikhskaya,
  • Yakovlevskaya.

In 1926, there were 6 volosts in the county:

  • Armenskaya,
  • Mitinskaya,
  • Sarajevo,
  • Sidorovskaya,
  • Teterinskaya,
  • Fedorovskaya (center - Nerekhta).

4. Population

According to the 1897 census, 149,859 people lived in the county. Including Russians - 99.9%. 3,092 people lived in the district town of Nerekhta, and 2,164 people lived in the provincial town of Plyos.

According to the results of the All-Union Population Census of 1926, the population of the county was 79,346 people, of which 7,388 were urban (the city of Nerekhta).


Notes

  1. 1 2 3 The first general census of the Russian Empire in 1897 - demoscope.ru/weekly/ssp/rus_gub_97.php?reg=18.
  2. 1 2 All-Union Population Census of 1926 - demoscope.ru/weekly/ssp/rus_26.php?reg=124.
  3. D.F. Belorukov City of Nerekhta. // Villages, towns and cities of the Kostroma region: materials for history. - kostromka.ru/belorukov/derevni/nerehta/239.php. - Kostroma: 2000. - 536 p. - ISBN 5-89362-016-X
  4. Volost, stanitsa, village, commune boards and departments, as well as police stations throughout Russia with the designation of their location - www.prlib.ru/Lib/pages/item.aspx?itemid=391. - Kiev: Publishing House of L. M. Fish, 1913.
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Nerekhta district- an administrative-territorial unit within the Kostroma governorate and the Kostroma province, which existed in -1929. The county town is Nerekhta.

Geography

The district was located in the southwest of the Kostroma province. It bordered with the Vladimir and Yaroslavl provinces. The area of ​​the county was 3,464.2 versts² (3,942 km²) in 1897, 1,612 km² in 1926.

Story

Nerekhta district As part of the Kostroma governorate, it was formed in 1778 during the administrative reform of Catherine II.

Administrative division

In 1926, there were 6 volosts in the county:

  • Armenskaya,
  • Mitinskaya,
  • Sarajevo,
  • Sidorovskaya,
  • Teterinskaya,
  • Fedorovskaya (center - Nerekhta).

Population

According to the 1897 census, 149,859 people lived in the county. Including Russians - 99.9%. 3,092 people lived in the district town of Nerekhta, and 2,164 people lived in the provincial town of Plyos.

According to the results of the All-Union Population Census of 1926, the population of the county was 79,346 people, of which 7,388 were urban (the city of Nerekhta).

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Notes

Links

  • // Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Efron: in 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - St. Petersburg. , 1890-1907.

An excerpt characterizing the Nerekhta district

On the 22nd, at noon, Pierre was walking uphill along a dirty, slippery road, looking at his feet and at the unevenness of the path. From time to time he glanced at the familiar crowd surrounding him, and again at his feet. Both were equally his own and familiar to him. The lilac, bow-legged Gray ran merrily along the side of the road, occasionally, as proof of his agility and contentment, tucking his hind paw and jumping on three and then again on all four, rushing and barking at the crows that were sitting on the carrion. Gray was more fun and smoother than in Moscow. On all sides lay the meat of various animals - from human to horse, in varying degrees of decomposition; and the wolves were kept away by the walking people, so Gray could eat as much as he wanted.
It had been raining since the morning, and it seemed that it would pass and clear the sky, but after a short stop the rain began to fall even more heavily. The rain-saturated road no longer absorbed water, and streams flowed along the ruts.
Pierre walked, looking around, counting steps in threes, and counting on his fingers. Turning to the rain, he internally said: come on, come on, give it more, give it more.
It seemed to him that he was not thinking about anything; but far and deep somewhere his soul thought something important and comforting. This was something of a subtle spiritual extract from his conversation with Karataev yesterday.
Yesterday, at a night halt, chilled by the extinguished fire, Pierre stood up and moved to the nearest, better-burning fire. By the fire, to which he approached, Plato was sitting, covering his head with an overcoat like a chasuble, and telling the soldiers in his argumentative, pleasant, but weak, painful voice a story familiar to Pierre. It was already past midnight. This was the time at which Karataev usually recovered from a feverish attack and was especially animated. Approaching the fire and hearing Plato’s weak, painful voice and seeing his pitiful face brightly illuminated by the fire, something unpleasantly pricked Pierre’s heart. He was frightened by his pity for this man and wanted to leave, but there was no other fire, and Pierre, trying not to look at Plato, sat down near the fire.
- How's your health? - he asked.
- How's your health? “God will not allow you to die because of your illness,” said Karataev and immediately returned to the story he had begun.
“...And so, my brother,” Plato continued with a smile on his thin, pale face and with a special, joyful sparkle in his eyes, “here, my brother...”
Pierre knew this story for a long time, Karataev told this story to him alone six times, and always with a special, joyful feeling. But no matter how well Pierre knew this story, he now listened to it as if it were something new, and that quiet delight that Karataev apparently felt while telling it was also communicated to Pierre. This story was about an old merchant who lived decently and God-fearingly with his family and who one day went with a friend, a rich merchant, to Makar.
Stopping at an inn, both merchants fell asleep, and the next day the merchant's comrade was found stabbed to death and robbed. A bloody knife was found under the old merchant's pillow. The merchant was tried, punished with a whip and, having pulled out his nostrils - in the proper order, said Karataev - he was sent to hard labor.
“And so, my brother” (Pierre caught Karataev’s story at this point), this case has been going on for ten years or more. An old man lives in hard labor. As follows, he submits and does no harm. He only asks God for death. - Fine. And if they get together at night, the convicts are just like you and me, and the old man is with them. And the conversation turned to who is suffering for what, and why is God to blame. They began to say, that one ruined a soul, that one lost two, that one set it on fire, that one ran away, no way. They began to ask the old man: why are you suffering, grandpa? I, my dear brothers, he says, suffer for my own and for people’s sins. But I didn’t destroy any souls, I didn’t take anyone else’s property, other than giving away to the poor brethren. I, my dear brothers, am a merchant; and had great wealth. So and so, he says. And he told them how the whole thing happened, in order. “I don’t worry about myself,” he says. It means God found me. One thing, he says, I feel sorry for my old woman and children. And so the old man began to cry. If that same person happened to be in their company, it means that he killed the merchant. Where did grandpa say he was? When, in what month? I asked everything. His heart ached. Approaches the old man in this manner - clap on the feet. For me, he says, old man, you are disappearing. The truth is true; innocently in vain, he says, guys, this man is suffering. “I did the same thing,” he says, “and put a knife under your sleepy head.” Forgive me, he says, grandfather, for Christ’s sake.