Kotelnichsky district. Old maps of the Kotelnichesky district My current interests

Regional sites and forums in the Vyatka province

  • Family theme on the forum "Our Vyatka"
  • Family thread on the IOP forum
  • Search for ancestors, relatives, acquaintances at the Our Vyatka Forum

Territorial affiliation and history

  • The history of the city of Kotelnich begins in the 12th century: "The Tale of the Vyatka Country" (a literary monument of the late 17th - early 18th centuries) reports that the city was founded in 1181 by Novgorodians on the site of the captured Mari town of Koksharov.
  • In 1459, in connection with the campaign of the troops of the Grand Duke of Moscow Vasily II to Vyatka, Kotelnich was first mentioned in Russian chronicles as a taken town. In 1489, Kotelnich, Orlov and Khlynov were again finally taken by the Moscow army and became part of the Russian state.
  • In 1719, in accordance with the Second Petrine reform, the Kotelnichesky district was formed as part of the Vyatka province of the Siberian province, as an area around the city of Kotelnich. Also Kotelnichesky mill.
  • In 1727, the districts were transformed into counties, and the Kotelnichesky district, together with the Vyatka province, was transferred to the Kazan province, which was divided into 6 provinces: Kazan, Sviyazhsk, Penza, Ufa, Vyatka and Solikamsk. Subsequently, the territory of the province was repeatedly reduced, Astrakhan, Nizhny Novgorod, Simbirsk, Saratov, Orenburg provinces, parts of the Vyatka, Perm, Tambov, Penza, Kostroma, Vladimir, Samara provinces were separated from its composition.
  • Vyatka vicegerency is an administrative-territorial unit of the Russian Empire, which arose in 1780. The Vyatka vicegerency was transformed in 1796 into the Vyatka province. Kotelnichesky county.
  • According to the revision of 1795, repairs were made to Onchutinsky - Kotelnitshnaya quitrent camp, Podgorodnaya volost. BLACK SOSH PEASANTS
  • Since 1796 - Kotelnichesky district of the Vyatka province
  • According to :
  • List of populated places in the Vyatka province according to the data of 1859-1873: Anchutinskaya (Kolbina), post. kaz. at the wells Kotelnichesky district, 11 households, 107 inhabitants
  • Register of villages and residents for 1891: Anchutinsky; Kolbinsky. Vyatka province, Kotelnichesky district,
    Smertinskaya volost, Kolbinsky society Parish with. Pokrovskoe, Rozhdestvenskaya c. 29 families (6 - Vesniny, 23 - Kolbiny), 212 inhabitants. Melniki; izvoz.
  • List of populated places in the Vyatka province according to the 1926 census: vil. Kolbiny (o), Anchutinsky Kotelnichesky uyezd, Kotelnicheskaya volost Smertinsky 51 households, 246 inhabitants
  • 1920 - the Smertinsky village council was formed. The territory of which stood out from the Smertinskaya volost of the Kotelnichsky district of the Vyatka province. The center of the Smertinsky village council was with. Pokrovskoe.
  • In 1929, the Vyatka province and all counties were abolished. The territory of the Kotelnichsky district became part of the Kotelnichsky district of the Nizhny Novgorod Territory.
  • In the 1930s-50s, the village of Kolbino, the Smertinsky Village Council
  • since 1933 - ... Gorky region
  • since 1935 - ... Kirov region
  • since 1937 -… Kirov region
    From 1939-1959 - The Executive Committee of the Smertinsky Rural Council of Workers' Deputies /village council/ of the village of Pokrovskoye, Kotelnichsky District, Kirov Region.
  • On the basis of the decision of the Kotelnichsky District Executive Committee of February 28, 1959, the Smertinsky Village Council was abolished. Its territory became part of the Pokrovsky village council of the Kotelnichsky district.
  • ? Orphanage No. 81 in the village of Kolbino, Kotelnichesky district
  • In the 1970s-90s, the village of Kolbino Pokrovsky Village Council
  • 09/10/1998 deregistered (ceased to exist). Decision of the Kirov Regional Duma No. 06/115 dated 10/09/1998.

Toponymy of the village of Kolbino

Initially, the repair was called Onchutinsky, then (from the end of the 19th century) Anchutinskaya, and was settled by the Kolbins, who, apparently, received this surname before the foundation of the repair. "Anchutki" are devils, evil spirits. Where such a name could come from has not yet been reliably answered.

Version 1.

A possible source is the church name Onesiphorus (Greek “beneficial, useful”), which in Rus' was more often pronounced as Antsifer. This name has several colloquial forms with the stem Anch- or Onch-, for example: Anchifer and Onchifer, Anchuta, Anchutik, Onchuta, Oncha and others ()

Now about the name of the village. I heard this story from my grandmother when I was in elementary school. The founders of the village were two brothers. One of which was called Anchifir and colloquially simply Anchutka. Children, respectively, were called anchutenki. Nicknames were often given in the villages. It is customary to write Anchutkino in documents, and Anchutenki has always been used in conversations. My mother and all the villagers called me that.

Perhaps the founder of the repair was also Antsifir (Onchuta) Kolbin.

Version 2. According to local historian Starostin, "the Vyatka Kolbins come from the Vologda region, where there is even the Kolba River, and many villages of the Kolbins." I have not yet found the grounds for this version, but we will believe the specialist. Also in the Vologda region there is the village of Anchutino in the Vologda district of the Vologda region (formerly the Vologda district) and there was the village of Anchutinskaya (Ukhtomskaya volost, Kadnikovsky district of the Vologda province), which were founded before the Vyatka repair. According to the "List of populated places in 1859" they had 13 households, and in the Vologda district at the same time there were at least two villages of Kolbino.

Perhaps the founders of the Vyatka repair came here from the Vologda village of Anchutinsky or Anchutino.

Other versions.

  • There is also the village of Anchutino in the Yurinsky district of Mari El. The village was founded at the end of the 18th century. The first settlers of Anchutin were people who came from the Vyatka province and from the Upper Povetluzhye.
  • Another village Anchutino was located in the Ketovsky district of the Kurgan region. Formerly - Kurgan district, Mitinskaya volost. The village of Anchutina near the Upper Utyak River was founded around 1753 by the peasant Gavriil Postovalov.
  • It is interesting to know other variants of the origin of the name and twin toponyms.

Sources of genealogical information for the Vyatka province (Kotelnichesky district, peasants)

  • Database on funds of Vyatka churches Download
  • State Archive of the Kirov Region MY pedigree (compilation guide)
  • State archive of documents on personnel of the Kirov region Funds Site
  • State Archive of Socio-Political History of the Kirov Region Funds Site
  • GAKO. f. 237 Vyatka spiritual consistory. For most parishes, parish registers are available from 1749. They are described in three inventories: op. 75 - books for 1735-1848; op. 73 - books for 1849-1865; op. 226 - books for 1883-1918. In other funds, parish registers of churches were found: the Vyatka and Kazan diocese (169 villages), 1756, f. 237, op. 75, d. 206
    • As of 1997:
    • Registers of births of the parishes of the Kotelnichesky district (1779-1864) Op. 225 45 cases
    • Metric books of the Vyatka diocese op. 73 (1849-1867, 1163 cases), op. 226 (1883-1908, 1311 cases)
    • Metric books of the Vyatka diocese of 1909-1918
    • Vyatka and Kazan diocese (169 villages) 1756 f. 237, op. 75, d. 206
  • GAKO. Revision tales
    • 5-10 revision F. 176. - Op. 2. (from 1795 to 1859) op. 2, 8 (see Index to the fund, GAKO, 1974)
    • Revision tales of the population of the city of Kotelnich and the county 1720, 1782 - f. 237, op. 76, d. 3, f. 176, op. 2, d. 2
  • GAKO. F. 237. - Op. 71. Confessional paintings. From 1749 to 1829, but for individual churches they reach the beginning of the 20th century. In the funds of church institutions, confessional paintings of parishioners of churches were found: Vyatka diocese, 1731, 1743, 1758-1777 and further until 1827, f. 237, op. 74, vol. 1, d. 39, 63, 212, 213, 733 ... until 1610.
  • GAKO. The fund "Vyatka provincial conscription presence" contains 823 items. ridge for 1874 - 1918
  • GAKO. The funds of county presences on military service are represented by documents of 7 counties of the province for 1874 - 1918: Vyatka (f. 1156, 449 items), Kotelnichsky (f. 1159, 437 items), Malmyzhsky (f. 871, 394 items), Nolinsky (f. 88 4, 665 items), Orlovsky (f. 885, 427 items), Slobodsky (f. 886, 346 items), Yaransky (f. 1261, 13 items). Among the documents are birth certificates; draft lists; family lists; alphabetical family lists of spare lower ranks; lists of warriors of the 1st and 2nd category; registers of persons released from service; requests, representations, appeals of peasants.
  • Archival funds of GAKO. Recruiting presences (1779-1874). 10 foundations, 213 cases:
    • F.1143 Vyatka provincial
    • F.1138 Kotelnichesky
    • F.798 Malmyzhskoye
    • f. 1139 Nolinskoe
    • f.1144 Orlovskoe
    • f.1140 Slobodskoe
    • f. 1142 Urzhum
    • f.1145 Yaranskoe
    • f.887 Malmyzhskoe
  • Funds of the Archive of the city of Kotelnich (MKU "Archive of the city of Kotelnich")
    • R-129 Smertinsky s / s 1927 1960. Protocols of meetings of voters. Lists of members and candidates for members of the village council. Registration cards of agricultural tax payers. Household books. Minutes of the sessions. Minutes of the meetings of the executive committee. Pay slips
  • List of family lists of the Old Believers of the Vyatka province (XIX - early XX centuries) Download
  • List of populated places in the Vyatka province according to the data of 1859-73.
  • Description of the parishes of the Vyatka diocese for 1912
  • List of parish books stored in the Kirov Museum of Local Lore
  • 1593-1616 Vyatsky books of all Vyatsky five cities for dues and preferential villages and repairs and hay mowing and fishing and all kinds of lands from the year 101 Download
  • Alphabetical index of churches and villages of the Vyatka diocese with their division into deanery districts. Vyatka: Printing house of Maishev, former Kuklin and Krasovsky, 1890, 46 pages. Download
  • Torrent with Vyatka Commemorative Books and Calendars
    Calendar of the Vyatka province 1880, 1881, 1883-1898)
  • Vyatka province. List of populated places according to the data of 1859-1873. St. Petersburg, 1876. PDF, 1136 pages. Torrent
  • Vyatka Provincial Gazette 1838-1901 Download
  • Vyatka Diocesan Vedomosti 1863-1916 Download
  • (Newspaper) Vyatka provincial in the house / Vyatka provincial sheets Torrent
  • Vyatka Diocesan Houses / Vyatka Diocesan Gazette Torrent
  • Vyatka Diocesan Houses / Vyatka Diocesan Gazette Torrent
  • Vyatka Diocesan Houses / Vyatka Diocesan Gazette Torrent
  • Synodiki or commemoration of Vyatka churches. At present, the whereabouts of eleven Vyatka synodicists are known. Most of them (five) are stored in the Kirov Regional Library. A.I. Herzen, four - in the Kirov Regional Museum of Local Lore, one - in the Kirov Regional Art Museum. V.M. I am. Vasnetsov and one - in the library of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
  • Clear sheets. Statements from 1741 to 1915 have been preserved in the GAKO. (GAKO. - F. 237. - Op. 70.), And in some churches - even the Soviet period.
  • Collection of personal information about the parishes of the Vyatka diocese, collected by the Vyatka provincial statistical committee in 1882 (GAKO. - F. 574. - Op. 1. - D. 950/1-ots - 950/11-ots.) ov and spells. ... a description of the natural and climatic features is given ..., the fertility of the land and what varieties of bread are sown, what crafts and seasonal crafts are being developed, that is, a description is given of almost all aspects of the life of local parishioners.
  • RGIA Fund number 577 Name MAIN BUYING INSTITUTION MF Abbreviated name Main BUYING INSTITUTION MF. Cases on the redemption of land plots by temporarily liable peasants.
    Vyatka lips. (op. 9) Inventory

RGADA:

  • Database "Native Vyatka" "Revision tales and census books of the Vyatka region"
  • Table of cases 1 RS on RV from RGADA.xlsx (source - "Native Vyatka")
  • Table of cases 2 RS on RV from RGADA.xlsx (source - "Native Vyatka")
  • Table of cases 3 RS on RV from RGADA.xlsx (source - "Native Vyatka")
  • Table of cases of the Landratsky census on the RV from RGADA.xlsx (source "Native Vyatka")
  • Refusal books for the estates of the Khlynovsky Assumption Trifonov Monastery for the period 1611–1676. (RGADA. - F. 1209. - Book 154.)
  • The first surviving sentinel book of all Vyatka counties was compiled in 7123 (1614/15) by voivodes Fedor Andreevich Zvenigorodsky, Vasily Terentyevich Zhemchuzhnikov and clerk Mikhail Ordintsov. RGADA. - F. 1209. Local order. - Prince. 1029; There. - Op. 1. - Part 3. - Book. 12. In the Kirov Regional Museum of Local Lore there are copies of microfilms of this sentinel book: KOMK. – No. 13632/1–3. A fine copy is kept in St. Petersburg: RNB. - Q.IV.256.
  • The quitrent books (RGADA. - F. 1113. - Op. 1. Three books, 7123 (1614/15), 7130 (1621/22) and 7131 (1622/23) are in: RGADA. - F. 1209. - Book 1030, 1031, 1032)
  • 1626 Vyatka command hut. Book of bills of sale, mortgages, business (separate) other records. Download
  • Scribes 1628–1629 (RGADA. - F. 1209. - Books 89, 90.) Published.
    • The scribal book of Kotelnich by the scribe Afonasy Tolochanov and the clerk Andrey Ievlev to tax yards outside the right city of Kotelnich 137 g (1629 g) Download
    • Historical materials. Scribe book of Vyatsk suburbs of Slobodsky and Shestakov settlements and districts of letters and measures of Ivan Borisovich Domozhirov and podyachy Ivan Kokushkin on the 137th (1629) (Electronic version) Download
    • Scribe book of tax yards of the city of Kotelnich and the county of 1629 (electronic version) Download
  • 1634-1635 Sovereign letters of voivodship replies, etc.: on the collection of all state revenues of the city of Vyatka and five Vyatka cities and their counties. Download
  • Census books 7154 (1645/46) of the census of Vasily Petrovich Otyaev and Savva Ischein (RGADA. - F. 1209. - Books 518, 519, 321; Ibid. - F. 137. Boyar and city books. - Orlov. - No. 1)
  • In 7170 (1661/62), Ivanis Mikhailovich Kaisarov compiled a sentinel book of all Vyatka households established after the census of 1646 (RGADA. - F. 1209. - Op. empty courtyards were rewritten in Khlynov, Kotelnich and Orlov with districts (RGADA. - F. 137. - Vyatka. - No. 6. - Ch. 1–2.)
  • Census 7186 (1677/78) of Mikhail Petrovich Voeikov and clerk Fyodor Prokofiev (RGADA. - F. 1209. - Book. 339, 340, 520, 521.). Censuses have been published for the city of Khlynov, Kotelnichsky, Oryol counties and Tatar, Besermyansky and Udmurt settlements.
    • Read
    • The census book of the church townships of the city of Kotelnich and the yards in the volosts of the tax and quitrent camp, the census of Mikhail Petrovich Voeikov and clerk Fyodor Prokofiev in 186 (1678). Read
    • 1679 Vyatka letters 159-3-1093 2 Download
  • In 1706, the burmister conducted a census of ladles and doorkeepers (RGADA. - F. 1209. - Books 1060, 1079, 1096, 1097)
  • In 1710, the steward Stepan Danilovich Trakhaniotov rewrote all the Vyatka districts (RGADA. - F. 1209. - Kn. 1034, 1098; Ibid. - F. 214. Siberian order. - Op. 1. - D. 1149)
    • Kotelnichsky district (Vyatka suburb): 1710: Census book of Orlovsky, Kotelnichsky, Slobodsky and Shestakovsky counties. (RGADA. F.350. Op.1. D.1034). Read
    • 1710 Census of the Vyatka land Download
  • Census books compiled by Landrat Prince Yakov Ivanovich Vyazemsky in 1716 (RGADA. - F. 214. - Op. 1. - D. 1595)
  • Census books compiled by landrat Ivan Mironovich Kologrivov in 1717 (RGADA. - F. 1209. - Book. 1099, 1100, 1101.)
  • The materials of the first three revisions for the Vyatka province are stored in the RGADA (RGADA. - F. 350. Landrat books, revision tales. - Op. 2)
  • Download
  • 1720 List extracts. Khlynovsky Orlovsky Kotelnichsky Sloboda Shestakovsky districts. Download
  • 1720 Skaski replenished. Khlynovsky Kotelnichsky Orlovsky Sloboda Sheskovsky districts. Download
  • 1721 350-2-3825 Khlynov, Kai, Kotelnich, Orlov, Sloboda district Download
  • 1722-1727 1st revision. Orlov with the county. Download
  • 1722-1727 1st revision. Kotelnich with the county.Download
  • 1747 2nd revision. Vyatka Spiritual Consistory Download
  • 1747 Revision tales. Kotelnich with the district Download
  • 1747 2nd revision. Kotelnich with the county. Dropped out after the 1st revision. Download
  • 350-2-1545 1763 Kotelnich merchants Download
  • 350-2-1544 1763 Kotelnich lantmilitsky Download
  • 350-2-1543 1763 Kotelnich merchants Download

Information on the Archive of the Kirov Region:

  • Fedorova I. S. “My family tree. Compilation Guide" GAKO, 1997

Bibliography

  1. Documents of the state archive of the Kirov region on the genealogy of the peasantry of the 18th - early 20th centuries: Archival research Read more
  2. Spitsyn A. A. Code of annalistic news about the Vyatka region. Vyatka, 1883. 44 p.
  3. Alphabetical index of villages and churches of the Vyatka diocese, subdivided into deanery districts, indicating the number of states, clergy and postal address. 1912 Vyatka, Vyatka. spiritual consistory, 1912. 47 p. Vyatka diocese. East-geographical and stat. description (from the maps of Vyat. Gubernia). Vyatka, 1912. 681 p. sec. pag.; 1 l. kart. Information about the churches and the parishes of the diocese according to the counties.
  4. Volosts and the most important villages of European Russia: Vol. 1-8. - SPb., ... Issue. 6.: Provinces of the Ural group and the Far North. Issue. 6.: Provinces of the Ural group and the Far North. [Vyatka, Ufa, Orenburg, Perm, Vologda, Arkhangelsk]. — 1885. Read
  5. "Chronicler about the country of Vyatka". Text of Miller's edition of 1739
  6. Tales of Russian chroniclers about Vyatka Read
  7. Information about the populated areas of the Vyatka province, collected by the provincial statistical committee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs by order of the Minister of Internal Affairs of April 9, 1859.
  8. Calendar of the Vyatka province
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1880 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1881 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1882 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1883 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1884 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1885 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1886 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1887 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1888 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1889 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1890 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1891 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1892 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1893 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1894 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1895 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1896 Download
    • Calendar of the Vyatka province for 1897 Download
  9. Address-calendar of persons serving in the Vyatka province
    1. Address-calendar of persons serving in the Vyatka province for 1871 Download
    2. Address-calendar of persons serving in the Vyatka province for 1875 Download
  10. memorial book
    1. Commemorative book of the Vyatka province for 1854 Download
    2. Commemorative book of the Vyatka province for 1855 Download
    3. Commemorative book of the Vyatka province for 1857 Download
    4. Commemorative book of the Vyatka province for 1860 Download
    5. Commemorative book of the Vyatka province for 1866-67 Download
    6. Commemorative book of the Vyatka province for 1870 Download
    7. Commemorative book of the Vyatka province for 1873 Download
    8. Commemorative book of the Vyatka province for 1880 Read more
    9. Commemorative book of the Vyatka province for 1882 Read more
    10. Commemorative book of the Vyatka province for 1883 Read more
    11. Commemorative book of the Vyatka province for 1884 Read more
    12. Commemorative book of the Vyatka province for 1885 Read more
    13. Commemorative book of the Vyatka province for 1896 Read more
    14. Commemorative book and calendar of the Vyatka province for 1898 Download
    15. Commemorative book and calendar of the Vyatka province for 1899 Download
    16. Commemorative book and calendar of the Vyatka province for 1900 Download
    17. Commemorative book and calendar of the Vyatka province for 1901 Download
    18. Commemorative book and calendar of the Vyatka province for 1902 Download
    19. Commemorative book and calendar of the Vyatka province for 1903 Download
    20. Commemorative book and calendar of the Vyatka province for 1904 Download
    21. Commemorative book and calendar of the Vyatka province for 1905 Download
    22. Commemorative book and calendar of the Vyatka province for 1906 Download
    23. Commemorative book and calendar of the Vyatka province for 1907 Download
    24. Kalinichenko V.P. History of the Vyatka province. Kirov: Euro-copy, 2007. 128 pages - 1000 copies. Download
    25. Encyclopedia of the Vyatka land. 2008 10 volumes
    26. Veshtomov A. History of the Vyatchans. Kazan: Typo-lithography of the Imperial Kazan University, 1907 221 pages Read
    27. Administrative-territorial division of the Vyatka province - the Kirov region. 1917-2009 Kirov: 2011
    28. Administrative-territorial division of the Vyatka province. 1905 M.V. Melanin and others - Kirov: Express, 2012. 744 pages - 100 copies.
    29. Khudyakov M.G. History of the Kama-Vyatka region. Izhevsk: Udmurtia, 2008 416 pages - 1300 copies Read
    30. From the history of the Vyatka region. responsible editor Patrushev V.N. - Kirov: VGPU Publishing House, 1997. 128 pages - 1000 copies. Download
    31. Vereshchagin A.S. From the history of ancient Russian Vyatka. Vyatka: Provincial Printing House, 1905 55 pages Download Download
    32. Map of the Vyatka province of 10 counties. / The Russian Atlas, consisting of forty-three maps and dividing the Empire into forty-one provinces. S.-Pb. 1800 Download
    33. Map of the Vyatka province. / Pocket postal Atlas of the entire Russian Empire, divided into provinces, showing the main postal roads. S.-Pb. 1808 Download
    34. General map of the Vyatka province in 1822 showing the postal and major roads, the station and the distance between them. /Geographical Atlas of the Russian Empire, the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Finland Download
    35. Map of the Vyatka province, divided into 11 districts according to the State Property Departments. / Maps of the provinces subordinate to the Office of the First Department of State Property with the application of brief statistical statements (Atlas of Gribovsky). S.-Pb. 1843 Download
    36. A collection of church building letters for the construction of churches in the Vyatka diocese / [collector of letters V. Shabalin]. - Vyatka, 1914. - 513, VII p. Download
    37. Sudovikov M.S. The history of the merchants of the Vyatka region in the documents of the State Archive of the Kirov region (1780–1927) // Vyatka entrepreneurship: history and personalities. – P. 150–166.
    38. Map of the Kostroma and Vyatka governorships. / Atlas of the Russian Empire, published for the use of youth. S.-Pb. 1794
    39. Entrepreneurial dynasties of the Kama-Vyatka region of the XVIII-XX centuries: Collective monograph / Ed. ed. auto preface N.P. Ligenko Izhevsk: Udmurt Institute of History, Language and Literature, Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences 2008
    40. Population census. v.10 Vyatka province. N.A. Troinitsky (ed.) (St. Petersburg, 1901)
    41. Mamaev V.L. Local history program "Vyatka village". Kirov, 1993
    42. GAKO, Fedorova I.S., "MY PEDIGREE" (compilation guide), Kirov, 1997
    43. Vyatka. Materials for the history of the city of the XVII and XVIII centuries. Moscow, 1887. Format PDF, 315 pages. Download
    44. Supplement to the works of the editorial commissions for the preparation of regulations on the peasants. Information about landowners' estates. Volume I. Astrakhan, Vladimir, Vologda, Voronezh, Vyatka, Kazan, Kaluga, Kursk provinces
    45. Russia. A complete geographical description of our fatherland. [In 19 volumes] + maps / Russia. A complete geographical description of our fatherland. [In 19 volumes] + maps Volume 05. Urals and Urals. Vyatka, Perm, Ufa and Orenburg provinces - 1914 Torrent
    46. Kalinichenko V.P. - History of the Vyatka Governorate: Study Guide Torrent
    47. Kirov Regional Museum of Local Lore. Catalog of maps (according to the museum funds) Vasiliev, S. History of the Vyatka region from ancient times to the beginning of the 19th century [Text] / S. Vasiliev, N. Bekhterev. T.1. - Vyatka, 1870.
    48. Veshtomov, A. The history of the Vyatchans from the time of their settlement at the Vyatka River until the opening of the governorship in it [Text]. – Kazan, 1908.
    49. Vasiliev S., Bekhterev N. History of the Vyatka region from ancient times to the beginning of the 19th century. T.1. Vyatka, 1870.
    50. Encyclopedia of the land of Vyatka. T.1. Cities. Kirov, 1994
    51. Encyclopedia of the land of Vyatka. T.4. Story. Kirov, 1995
    52. Index of materials for studying the history and statistics of the Vyatka province: Issue. 1-. - Vyatka: Lips. type., 1882. - 22. Issue. 1 / Comp. I.F. Tokmakov. - 1882. - 20 p. hide

    My current interests:

    1. GAKO. Registers of births of the Kotelnich district (1779-1864) F.237 Op. 225 (45 cases), Metric books of the Vyatka diocese 1909-1918
    2. GAKO. Materials of the All-Russian Agricultural Census of 1916-1917 in the fund of the Vyatka Provincial Statistical Committee f. 574, Kotelnichesky district op. 6 (household census cards) =Viewed=
    3. GAKO. Revision tales in the fund of the Vyatka State Chamber f. 176, op. 2, 8, in the fund of the Vyatka Scientific Archival Commission (f. No.), the Vyatka Provincial Magistrate (f. No.), the Vyatka Ecclesiastical Consistory (f. No. 237).
    4. GAKO. Family lists in the fund of the volost boards of the Kotelnich district of the Vyatka province.
    5. GAKO. Collection of documents of the "Vyatka provincial recruiting presence" for 1780 - 1874. Funds of the district recruiting presence of the Kotelnich district (f. 1138, 8 items). Fund "Vyatka provincial conscription presence" 823 units. ridge for 1874 - 1918 Funds of county presences for military service for 1874 - 1918. — Kotelnichsky (f. 1159!, 437 items). "Family Recruit List", "List of Killed, Wounded and Missing"

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Province
Center
Educated
abolished
Square
Population

Kotelnichsky district- an administrative-territorial unit as part of the Vyatka governorship and the Vyatka province that existed in -1929. The county town is Kotelnich.

Geographical position

The county was located in the west of the Vyatka province and bordered on the Vologda and Kostroma provinces. The area of ​​the county was 10,066.6 versts² (11,456 km²) in 1897, and 12,557 km² in 1926.

Story

In 1719, in accordance with the Second Petrine reform, the Kotelnich district was formed as part of the Vyatka province of the Siberian province, as an area around the city of Kotelnich. In 1727, the districts were transformed into uyezds, and the Kotelnich uyezd, together with the Vyatka province, was transferred to the Kazan Governorate.

Officially, the Kotelnichsky district was registered in 1780 as part of the Vyatka governorship (since 1796 - the Vyatka province).

Demography

  • Bataevskaya (center - village Korotaevskaya),
  • Vaginskaya,
  • Vasylkivska,
  • Verkhnopizhma,
  • Gvozdevskaya (center - the village of Karpushki-Gvozdevo),
  • Darovskaya,
  • Igumnovskaya,
  • Kazakovskaya (center - village Kazakovskaya (Kopyly),
  • Kiselevskaya (center - Makaryevo village),
  • Klyuchevskaya (center - Troitskoye village),
  • Krasavskaya,
  • Kruglyzhskaya (center - village Mulinskaya),
  • Medvedevskaya (center - village Klopovskaya),
  • Molosnikovskaya (center - the village of Ekaterininskoye),
  • Morozovskaya,
  • Petrovskaya (center - Okatyevo village),
  • Pishnurskaya,
  • Ryazanovskaya (center - repair Kokushkinsky),
  • Sintsovskaya,
  • Smertinskaya,
  • Sobolevskaya,
  • Sorvizhskaya,
  • Sosnovskaya (center - Arbazh village),
  • Spaso-Preobrazhenskaya (center - Spasskoye village),
  • Toropovskaya,
  • Shubenskaya.

In 1926 there were 14 volosts:

  • Klyuchevskaya (center - Novo-Troitskoye village),
  • Krasovskaya (center - Bogorodskoye village),
  • Kruglyzhskaya,
  • Sorvizhskaya,
  • Spasskaya,
  • Trotskaya (center - the village of Makaryevskoye),
  • Khalturinskaya (center - village Borki),
  • Chernovskaya,
  • Chistopolskaya (center - Pishkur village),
  • Shubenskaya (center - Vondanka village),
  • Yumskaya (center - Svecha station).

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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 Kotelnich district

The police chief, who went that morning on the count's order to burn the barges and, on the occasion of this order, rescued a large sum of money that was in his pocket at that moment, seeing a crowd of people advancing towards him, ordered the coachman to stop.
- What kind of people? he shouted at the people, who were approaching the droshky, scattered and timid. - What kind of people? I'm asking you? repeated the chief of police, who received no answer.
“They, your honor,” said the clerk in a frieze overcoat, “they, your honor, at the announcement of the most illustrious count, not sparing their stomachs, wanted to serve, and not just some kind of rebellion, as it was said from the most illustrious count ...
“The count has not left, he is here, and there will be an order about you,” said the chief of police. – Went! he said to the coachman. The crowd stopped, crowding around those who had heard what the authorities said, and looking at the departing droshky.
The police chief at this time looked around in fright, said something to the coachman, and his horses went faster.
- Cheating, guys! Lead to yourself! shouted the voice of the tall fellow. - Don't let go, guys! Let him submit a report! Hold on! shouted the voices, and the people ran after the droshky.
The crowd behind the police chief with a noisy conversation headed for the Lubyanka.
“Well, gentlemen and merchants have left, and that’s why we’re disappearing?” Well, we are dogs, eh! – was heard more often in the crowd.

On the evening of September 1, after his meeting with Kutuzov, Count Rastopchin, upset and offended that he was not invited to the military council, that Kutuzov did not pay any attention to his proposal to take part in the defense of the capital, and surprised by the new look that opened up to him in the camp, in which the question of the tranquility of the capital and its patriotic mood turned out to be not only secondary, but completely unnecessary and insignificant - upset, offended and surprised With all this, Count Rostopchin returned to Moscow. After supper, the count, without undressing, lay down on the couch and at one o'clock was awakened by a courier who brought him a letter from Kutuzov. The letter said that since the troops were retreating to the Ryazan road beyond Moscow, would it please the count to send police officials to lead the troops through the city. This news was not news to Rostopchin. Not only from yesterday’s meeting with Kutuzov on Poklonnaya Gora, but also from the Battle of Borodino itself, when all the generals who came to Moscow unanimously said that it was impossible to give another battle, and when, with the count’s permission, state property was already taken out every night and half the inhabitants left, Count Rostopchin knew that Moscow would be abandoned; but nevertheless this news, reported in the form of a simple note with an order from Kutuzov and received at night, during the first dream, surprised and annoyed the count.
Subsequently, explaining his activities during this time, Count Rostopchin wrote several times in his notes that he then had two important goals: De maintenir la tranquillite a Moscou et d "en faire partir les habitants. [Keep calm in Moscow and escort residents out of it.] If this dual goal is allowed, every action of Rostopchin turns out to be impeccable. For which the Moscow shrine, weapons, cartridges, gunpowder, stocks of bread were not taken out but, why are thousands of residents deceived by the fact that Moscow will not be surrendered, and ruined? - In order to maintain peace in the capital, answers the explanation of Count Rostopchin. Why were piles of unnecessary papers taken out of government places and Leppich's ball and other objects? - In order to leave the city empty, answers the explanation of Count Rostopchin. One has only to admit that something threatened the peace of the people, and any action becomes justified.
All the horrors of terror were based only on concern for the people's peace.
What was the basis of Count Rostopchin's fear of public peace in Moscow in 1812? What reason was there to suppose a tendency to rebellion in the city? The inhabitants were leaving, the troops, retreating, filled Moscow. Why should the people revolt as a result of this?

The old Kotelnichesky county was formed as part of the vast Siberian province during the administrative reform of Peter the Great in 1708. In 1719, the former county town of Kotelnich with the surrounding lands became part of the Vyatka province as a district. In 1727, after the reverse transformation of the districts into counties, the Kotelnichesky county as part of the Vyatka province (which existed until 1775) entered the Kazan province. Under Catherine II in 1780, he was included in the Vyatka governorate. Under Alexander the First, he lost an insignificant part of his lands (south of Kotelnich) in favor of the neighboring Yaransky district, and throughout the subsequent pre-revolutionary period in the history of the province, the borders of the district did not change. The administrative center of the county was the Russian medieval town of Kotelnich, founded, according to the legend set forth in the Tale of the Land of Vyatka, in 1181 by Novgorodians on the site of the Mari town of Koksharov captured by them.

Not all known maps are presented on this page.

Map of a part of the Vyatka province with the Kotelnichesky district in 1821. These county boundaries were preserved until the revolution.


Kotelnichesky district of the times of Paul the First (in 1800).



Kotelnichesky district of the time of Catherine II (in 1792)

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