Where to find military maps of the Voronezh province. Voronezh province. Other materials for this province

In 1725, the Azov province was renamed Voronezh.

In 1727 districts were abolished and counties were restored. In the same year, the cities of Belokolodsk, Romanov, Sokolsk were included in the Bakhmut province. After 1727 Khoperskaya (Novokhoperskaya, Novaya Khoperskaya) fortress was assigned to the Tambov province, the city of Ostrogozhsk became part of the Belgorod province.

Instead of New Tranjament, in 1730, near Cherkassk, a fortress of St. Anna, which received its name according to the personal decree of January 22, 1731.

In 1732, the city of Borisoglebsk was assigned to the Voronezh province.

According to the atlas of Russia published by the Academy of Sciences in 1745, the Voronezh province still consisted of five provinces. In the list of cities in the Bakhmut province, Borovskoy, Krasnyansky Sukharev were absent, Mayaki, Tor, Tsarev-Borisov were named for the first time. The cities of Belokolodsk, Ostrogozhsk, Romanov, Sokolsk were assigned to the Voronezh province, the fortresses of Pavlovsk and Tavrov were transferred to the category of cities. The composition of the Yelets province included with. Ranenburg, in the Tambov - Borisoglebsk.

In 1760, the fortress of Dmitry of Rostov (St. Dmitry) was founded, to which in 1763 the population of the destroyed fortress of St. Anna.

By a personal decree given to the Senate, dated October 11, 1764, in the Voronezh province, the cities of Verkhososensk and Olshansk were assigned to Korotoyak, Zemlyansk and Kostensk - to Voronezh, Belokolodsk, Demshinsk, Romanov - to Sokolsk, Orlov - to Usman, Narovchat, Troitsky Ostrog - to Krasnoslobodsk, Chernavsk - to Yelets, Dobry - to Kozlov.

In 1765, the city of Ostrogozhsk was transferred to the Sloboda-Ukrainian province, and the Bakhmut province of the Voronezh province was assigned to the Novorossiysk province.

In 1767, the Voronezh province consisted of four provinces. The Voronezh province included the cities: Belokolodsk, Borisoglebsk, Verkhososensk, Voronezh, Demshinsk, Zemlyansk, Korotoyak, Kostensk, Olshansk, Orlov, Pavlovsk, Romanov, Sokolsk, Userd, Usman and Khoperskaya fortress, Bityutskaya volost. Yeletskaya united the cities: Dankov, Yelets, Efremov, Lebedyan, Livny, Chernavsk and Skopinsky volost. Tambov was made up of the cities: Verkhny Lomov, Dobry, Insar, Kozlov, Nizhny Lomov, Ryazhsk, Tambov. The Shatsk province included the following cities: Kadom, Kasimov, Kerensk, Krasnoslobodsk, Narovchat, Temnikov, Trinity Ostrog, Shatsk.

By November 1775, the following cities were listed in the Voronezh province: Voronezh, Demshinsk, Korotoyak, Userd, Usman. The Yelets province included Dankov, Yelets, Efremov, Lebedyan, Livny. The list of cities in the Tambov province includes Verkhny Lomov, Insar, Kozlov, Nizhny Lomov, Ryazhsk, Tambov; Shatsk province - Kadom, Kasimov, Kerensk, Narovchat, Temnikov, Shatsk. According to the "Institution for the Administration of the Provinces" of November 7, 1775, the provinces were abolished, and the counties were retained.

In December 1778, Dankovsky, Elatomsky, Kasimovsky, Ryazhsky, Skopinsky counties became part of the Ryazan governorship, formed in accordance with a nominal decree given to the Senate, dated August 24, 1778.

By personal decree given to the Senate, on September 5, 1778, the Yelets and Livensky districts with the city of Chernavsky, Voronezh province, were transferred to the established Oryol vicegerency.

According to the nominal decree given to the Senate, "On the establishment of the Kursk province" dated May 23, 1779, the Valuysky district was transferred to the Voronezh province.

According to the nominal decree given to the Senate, “On the compilation of the Tambov governorship of fifteen counties” dated September 16, 1779, the list of counties included Borisoglebsky, Kadomsky, Lebedyansky, Novokhopersky, Tambovsky, Temnikovsky, Usmansky, Shatsky. The rank of cities was lost by Belokolodsk and Demshinsk.

On the basis of a nominal decree given to the Senate, dated September 25, 1779, the Voronezh governorship was formed from 15 counties (district): Belovodsky, Biryuchensky, Bobrovsky, Bogucharsky, Valuysky, Voronezhsky, Zadonsky, Zemlyansky, Kalitvyansky, Korotoyaksky, Kupensky, Livensky, Nizhnedevitsky , Ostrogozhsky, Pavlovsky. The town of Belovodskaya or Stary Derkul (Belovodsk), the town of Biryuchy (Biryuch), the palace settlement of Bobrovaya (Bobrov), the settlement of Boguchar (Boguchar), the village of Slobodka under the Zadonsky Monastery (the town of Zadonsk), the town of Kalitva (the city of Kalitva), the town of Kupenka (the city of Kupensk), the settlement of Livenka (the city of Livensk), with. Lower Maiden (Niznedevitsk). The cities of Verkhososensk, Kostensk, Olshansk, Orlov, Tavrov, Uryv, Userd lost their rank. The Voronezh governorship was finally formed on December 13, 1779.


Map of the Voronezh vicegerency

The Penza vicegerency, established in December 1780, by a personal decree given to the Senate, dated September 15, 1780, included Verkhnelomovsky, Insarsky, Kerensky, Krasnoslobodsky, Narovchatsky, Nizhnelomovsky, Troitsky counties - the territories of the former Tambov and Shatsk provinces of the Voronezh province.

According to the nominal decree “On the addition to the names of the cities of the Tambov governorship of Spassk and Borisoglebsk, the names of those rivers on which they have a position” dated December 17, 1780, Borisoglebsk received the addition “at the Raven River” to distinguish it from the city of the same name in the Yaroslavl governorship.

According to the nominal decree given to the Senate, dated February 10, 1782, the city of Novokhopersk with the district were transferred from the Tambov governorate to Saratov. By decree of August 5, 1782, a part of the Borisoglebsky district of the Tambov governorship was assigned to the Saratov governorate, the city of Gvazda with the district - to Voronezh, part of the Zadonsk district of the Voronezh governorship passed to the Tambov governorate.

In the "Topographic description of the Voronezh vicegerency" dated June 30, 1785, the composition of the districts is indicated. The Belovodsky District included the territories of the former Valuysky Uyezd, the Osinovsky Commissariat (the lowest link in the administrative-territorial division of the Sloboda-Ukrainian Governorate); in the Biryuchensky District - the territories of the former Biryuchensky Commissariat, Verkhososensky, Novooskolsky, Olshansky, Userdsky districts; in the Bobrovsky district - the territories of the former Voronezh, Demshinsky, Orlovsky, Usmansky counties; in the Bogucharsky district - the territories of the former Kalitvyansky, Melovatsky commissariats, Pavlovsky district; in the Valuysky district - the territories of the former Valuysky district, Kupyansky, Svatolutsky commissariats; in the Voronezh District - the territories of the former Voronezh, Kostensky, Orlovsky, Usmansky districts, the Uryvsky Commissar; in the Zadonsky district - the territories of the former Voronezh, Yelets, Lebedyansky, Romanovsky counties; in the Zemlyansky district - the territories of the former Voronezh, Yelets, Zemlyansky, Livensky, Starooskolsky districts; to the district of Kalitvyansky - the territories of the former Kalitvyansky, Osinovsky commissariats, Pavlovsky district; in the Korotoyaksky district - the territories of the former Verkhososensky, Voronezh, Korotoyaksky, Kostensky, Novooskolsky, Olshansky, Userdsky counties, Ostrogozhsky, Uryvsky commissariats; in the Kupensky district - the territories of the former Izyum, Kupensky, Pechenezhsky, Svatolutsky commissariats; in the Livensky district - the territories of the former Valuysky, Novooskolsky districts, Biryuchensky, Svatolutsky commissariats; in the Nizhnedevitsky district - the territories of the former Voronezh, Zemlyansky, Korotoyaksky, Kostensky, Novooskolsky, Olshansky, Starooskolsky districts; in the Ostrogozhsky district - the territories of the former Kalitvyansky, Ostrogozhsky commissariats, Pavlovsky district; in the Pavlovsky district - the territories of the former Voronezh, Dobrensky, Orlovsky, Pavlovsky counties.

On the basis of the nominal decree given to the Senate, "On the new division of the state into provinces" dated December 12, 1796, among others, the Voronezh province was formed. The Sloboda-Ukrainian province was restored within the boundaries of 1765. According to the reports of the Senate approved on May 1 and August 29, 1797, Belovodsky, Bogucharsky, Livensky, Kalitvyansky, Kupensky, Ostrogozhsky districts of the Voronezh province were included in its composition. As a result, the Voronezh province was made up of nine counties: Biryuchensky, Bobrovsky, Valuysky, Voronezhsky, Zadonsky, Zemlyansky, Korotoyaksky, Nizhnedevitsky, Pavlovsky.

According to the Senate decree, according to the highest approved report “On the expulsion from the Sloboda-Ukrainian province to Voronezh three counties and on the restoration of three out-of-state cities in the Sloboda-Ukrainian province” dated March 29, 1802, Bogucharsky, Ostrogozhsky, Starobelsky counties of Slobodsko were transferred to the Voronezh province -Ukrainian province, Novokhopersky district from the Saratov province.


Map of the Voronezh province in 1822

By a nominal decree given to the Governing Senate, dated January 9, 1824, the Starobelsky district was attached to the Sloboda-Ukrainian province. Thus, since 1824, the Voronezh province was divided into 12 counties: Biryuchensky, Bobrovsky, Bogucharsky, Valuysky, Voronezhsky, Zadonsky, Zemlyansky, Korotoyaksky, Nizhnedevitsky, Novokhopersky, Ostrogozhsky, Pavlovsky. In 1859 the uyezds were subdivided into 30 stans. Subsequently, changes in the administrative division were reduced to the introduction, enlargement, liquidation and renaming of volosts in counties. Between 1880 and 1906, the number of volosts increased from 225 to 231.

After the victory of the Great October socialist revolution the administrative-territorial division of the country was revised. By the Decree of the Council of People's Commissars "On the procedure for changing the boundaries of provincial, district and other" of January 27, 1918, local Soviets of workers', peasants' and soldiers' deputies were given complete independence in resolving issues of changing borders, dividing regions, provinces, districts and volosts into parts, education new administrative or economic units.

In 1918, Kalacheevsky uyezd was formed from 22 volosts of Bogucharsky uyezd. April 1, 1918 Biryuchensky district was renamed Alekseevsky. In the province there was a process of formation of new volosts.

By the Decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee “On the administrative division of the Voronezh province” dated January 4, 1923, 12 counties were approved: Bobrovsky, Bogucharsky, Valuysky, Voronezhsky, Zadonsky, Kalacheevsky, Novokhopersky, Nizhnedevitsky, Ostrogozhsky, Pavlovsky, Rossoshansky, Usmansky. Alekseevsky, Zemlyansky and Korotoyaksky counties were abolished. Doktorovskaya, Ivanovskaya and Nizhnestudenskaya volosts of the Zadonsk district were annexed to the Tambov province.

By the Decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee “On Changes in the Composition of the Tambov Governorate” dated January 4, 1923, the Usman county, with the exception of the Karpel, Mordovskaya, Novonikolaevskaya, Chemlykskaya volosts, was annexed to the Voronezh Governorate. The Arkhangelsk volost of the Borisoglebsk district of the Tambov province was transferred to the Novokhopersk district of the Voronezh province. The volosts of the Novokhopersky uyezd were attached to Borisoglebsky uyezd: Gorelskaya, Gubarevskaya, Mazurskaya, Makashevskaya, Peskovskaya, Sukhoyelanskaya, Tantsireiskaya, Tretyakovskaya, Tyukovskaya - and the villages of Kirsanovka (three), Rzhavets of Verkhnekarachansky volost, with. Povorino, Art. Povorino, the villages of Samodurovka, the Soldiers' Vyselki of the Rozhdestvensky volost.

According to the act of the district conference of representatives of the county and provincial executive committees of the Soviets of Workers', Peasants' and Red Army Deputies of February 12, 1923, the boundaries of the counties of the Voronezh province were specified. The composition of the Bobrovsky district was included with. The cradle of the Kolybelsky volost of the Ostrogozhsky district.

The Veselovskaya (later Uspenskaya), Volokonovskaya, Livenskaya, Palatovskaya, and Staroivanovskaya volosts of Alekseevskaya uyezd were transferred to Valuisky uyezd.

Golosnovskaya, Endovishchenskaya, Zemlyanskaya, Lebyazhenskaya, Nizhnevedugskaya, Perlevskaya, Staroolshanskaya, Khvoshchevatskaya volosts of Zemlyansky district were attached to the Voronezh district; Borshchevskaya, Levorossoshanskaya, Oskinskaya volosts of the Korotoyaksky district; Khokholsky volost of the Nizhnedevitsky district.

The structure of the Zadonsky district included the Arkhangelsk, Dmitryashevskaya, Kolabinskaya, Fominonegachevskaya volosts of the Zemlyansky district.

Bykovskaya, Kastorenskaya, Krasnodolinskaya, Nikolskaya, Orekhovskaya volosts of Zemlyansky district were included in the Nizhnedevitsky district.

Aleinikovskaya, Alekseevskaya, Verkhnepokrovskaya, Verkhososenskaya, Zasosenskaya (later Budenovskaya), Ilovskaya, Matrenogezevsky, Nagolenskaya (later Shcherbakovskaya), Olshanskaya volosts of Alekseevsky district were attached to the Ostrogozhsky district; Kolbinskaya, Korotoyakskaya, Krasnenskaya, Novoukolovskaya, Novokhvorostyanskaya, Raskhovetskaya, Repyevskaya, Starobezginskaya, Tresorukovskaya, Uryvskaya volosts of the Korotoyaksky district.

The structure of the Rossoshansky district included Kharkov, Shelyakinskaya volosts of the Alekseevsky district; Aidarskaya, Belogorskaya, Vsesvyatskaya, Goncharovskaya, Yevstratovskaya, Karayashnikovskaya, Lizinovskaya, Novokalitvyanskaya, Olkhovatskaya, Podgorenskaya, Rivne, Rossoshanskaya, Sagunovskaya, Starokalitvyanskaya volosts of the Ostrogozhsky district.

The structure of the Usmansky district included Aleksandrovskaya, Matrenskaya, Mikhailovskaya, Sadovskaya, Shchuchenskaya volosts of Bobrovsky district; Verkhnekhavskaya, Ivanovskaya, Shchukavskaya volosts of the Voronezh district.

By a decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of May 9, 1923, the Starobezginskaya volost of the Ostrogozhsky district of the Voronezh province was transferred to the Novooskolsky district of the Kursk province.

According to the Decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee “On the administrative division of the Voronezh province” dated May 12, 1924, the Zadonsky, Kalacheevsky and Pavlovsky districts were abolished.

The villages of Upper Katukhovka, Ivanovka of the Katukhov volost and Khrenovyselskaya volost without the villages of Brilliantovka, Mikhailovka and Tarasovka of the Voronezh uyezd were transferred to the Bobrovsky district; the village of Kolybelka, Kolybelskaya volost, Ostrogozhsky district; Vorontsovskaya, Klepovskaya, Livenskaya, Shestakovskaya volosts completely and Losevskaya volost without the settlements of Aleksandrovo-Donskaya, Babkovo, Beryozki of Pavlovsky district.

The Kalacheevsky district was included in the Bogucharsky district, with the exception of the volosts transferred to the Novokhopersky district; Verkhnemamonskaya, Gnilushenskaya, Gorokhovskaya, Zhuravskaya, Nizhnemamonskaya volosts of Pavlovsky district.

The villages of Bretchin, Bublikov, Vlasov, Klimov, Martyntsev, Nagolnoe, Papushin, Khreshchevaty, Cherepov of the Shcherbakovskaya volost of the Ostrogozhsky district were included in the Valuysky district.

Zadonsky uyezd was completely merged into the Voronezh uyezd; was transferred from Nelzha of the Poddubrovsky volost of the Usman district.

The composition of the Nizhnedevitsky district included the Golosnovskaya volost without the villages of Verkhnyaya Snovka, Golosnovka, Ivanovka, Nizhnevedugskaya, Staroolshanskaya volosts of the Voronezh district.

The Novokhopersky uyezd included Vasilyevsky volost without the villages of Kolodeevka and Krutinsky, Velikoarkhangelskaya volost and farms No. 41-66 of the Verkhnetishanskaya volost of Bobrovsky uyezd; Berezovskaya, Vorobyovskaya, Nikolskaya volosts without the village of Krasnopolye, the northern segment of the Krasnozagorenskaya volost without settlements of the Kalacheevsky district.

The Novopokrovskaya volost of Bobrovsky district was transferred to the Ostrogozhsky district; the villages of Veselaia, Golopuzovo, Krasnenkaya, Nikolsky, Uspensky volost, Valuysky district; Oskinskaya volost, Voronezh district; with. Rossosh of the Rogovatsky volost and with. Krasnolipye, Istobinskaya volost, Nizhnedevitsky district; the villages of Andrianovka, Kolesnikov, Yurasovka, Karayashnikovskaya volost, and the villages of Zapolny, Kravtsov, Limarov, Novogeorgievskiy, Shaporenkov, Shelyakinskaya volost, Rossoshansky uyezd.

The structure of the Rossoshansky district included the Kulikovskaya, Novobelyanskaya volosts in full and the Mitrofanovskaya volost without the villages of Kosovka and Fisenkovo ​​of the Bogucharsky district; Buylovskaya and Petrovsky volosts completely and the villages of Aleksandrodonskaya, Babkovo, Berezki of the Losevsky volost of Pavlovsky district.

In connection with the enlargement of volosts in 1924, their number in the districts of the Voronezh province decreased from 214 to 92.

According to the decision of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of June 29, 1925, the Paninskaya volost of the Bobrovsky district of the Voronezh province was transferred to the Voronezh district.

According to the decision of the administrative commission under the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of August 27, 1925, the cities of the Voronezh province were approved: Voronezh, Bobrov, Boguchar, Buturlinovka, Valuyki, Zadonsk, Novokhopersk, Ostrogozhsk, Usman. The cities were transformed into rural settlements: Alekseevka, Kalach, Nizhnedevitsk, Pavlovsk, Rossosh.

On the basis of the decision of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee “On changes in the administrative division of the Voronezh province” dated September 21, 1925, x. Oseledkov, Novomelovatskaya volost, Bogucharsky district.

Kh. Rybalkin, Lutsenkovsky volost, Ostrogozhsky district.

The villages of Bolshiye Yasyrskiye Vyselki, Mikhailovka 6th, Petrovka with settlements of the Shchuchensky volost of the Usmansky district were transferred to the Paninskaya volost of the Voronezh district.

The composition of the Liskinsky volost of the Ostrogozhsky district was included with. The cradle of the Lipovskaya volost of the Bobrovsky district; in the composition of the Lutsenkovskaya volost - the villages of Bereznyaga, Gniloy, Dvororub, Kirpin, Kotlyarov, Leninsky, Lesnoukolovsky, Makovsky, Novosotnitsky, Petrenkov, Redkodub, Hiryakov, Shelyakinsky Karayashnikovskaya volost, the villages of Belozerov, Volkov, Kirpin, Kovalev, Shcherbakovo Shelyakinsky volost Rossoshansky district.

The villages of Gorokhovka, Olkhovatka, Samodurovka of the Verkhnemamonskaya volost of the Bogucharsky district were included in the composition of the Starokalitvyanskaya volost of the Rossoshansky district; in the composition of the Olkhovatskaya volost - x. Novogeorgievsky, Lutsenkovsky volost, Ostrogozhsky district.

The territory of the city of Voronezh includes the settlements of Yamskaya, Privokzalnotroitskaya Privokzalnotroitskaya volost of the Voronezh district.

According to the decree of the Presidium of the Central Executive Committee of the USSR "On the settlement of the borders of the Ukrainian SSR with the RSFSR and the Byelorussian SSR" dated October 6, 1925, the Troitsk volost was transferred completely, consisting of 39 settlements and farms Poyarkov and Peschanka, 2nd (South) Urazov volost, Valuysky district, Voronezh province in the Kupyansky district of the Ukrainian SSR from May 26, 1926.

During the 1920s in the Voronezh province, there was a gradual formation of new administrative-territorial units - village councils, formed around the authorities of the same name - rural Soviets of workers, peasants and Red Army deputies. From December 1, 1925, village councils were disaggregated in the province, their number in 1926 increased from 947 to 1147.

1 Komolov N. A. Fortified cities of the south of Russia in the 30s. 18th century and ensuring the security of the region// Historical Notes. Voronezh, 2006. Issue 12. S. 20.

2 PSSRI. SPb., 1830. T. 16, No. 12256. S. 931-932.

3 Komolov N. A. Administrative and territorial structure of the Central Black Earth region in the XVIII — early XIX in. // Voronezh Bulletin of the Archivist. Voronezh, 2005. Issue. 3. S. 69-93.

4 PSSRI. SPb., 1830. T. 20, No. 14786. S. 741-742.

5 There. T. 20, No. 14793. S. 744.

6 There. T. 20, No. 14880. S. 825-826.

7 There. T. 20, No. 14917. S. 866-867.

8 PSSRI. SPb., 1830. T. 20, No. 14922. S. 868-869.

9 There. T. 20, No. 15061. S. 987.

10 There. T. 20, No. 14956. S. 892.

11 There. T. 20, No. 15343, 15485. S. 395, 648.

12 Description of the Voronezh vicegerency in 1785 / Ed. ed. V. P. Zagorovsky. Voronezh, 1982. 148 p.

13 PSSRI. SPb., 1830. T. 24, No. 17634, 17948, 18116. S. 229, 601, 702, 703.

14 There. T. 27, No. 20205. S. 85.

15 GAVO. F. I-64. Op. 1. D. 42. L.1.

16 Voronezh province. List of populated places according to 1859 / Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs; N. Spitzglitz. SPb., 1865. 157 p.

17 Volosts and the most important settlements of European Russia. According to a survey conducted by statistical agencies of the Ministry of Internal Affairs / Central Statistical Committee. SPb., 1880. Issue. 1: Provinces of the central agricultural region. 413 p.; Populated places of the Voronezh province: Reference book / Voronezh provincial zemstvo. Voronezh, 1900. 484 p.; Information about the populated areas of the Voronezh province / Voronezh provincial statistical committee. Voronezh, 1906. 196 p.

18 SU RSFSR. 1918. No. 21. Art. 318.

19 GAVO. F. R-19. Op. 1. D. 362. L. 12-12v.

20 SU RSFSR. 1923. No. 3. Art. 43, 46.

21 GAVO. F. R-452. Op. 1. D. 1. L. 2-4; List of district districts of the Voronezh province by counties: Supplement to the "Bulletin of the Voronezh Gubernia Executive Committee" No. 1 for January 1925. Voronezh, 1925. P. 31-33.

22 SU RSFSR. 1923. No. 41. Art. 442.

23 SU RSFSR. 1924. No. 46. Art. 439; GAVO. F. R-1997. Op. 1. D. 153. L. 1-35.

24 List of district districts of the Voronezh province by counties. Voronezh, 1925. S. 1-33.

25 GAVO. F. R-10. Op. 1. D. 731. L. 135 (minutes of the meeting No. 6).

26 GAVO. F. R-10. Op. 1. D. 1267. L. 12 (minutes of the meeting No. 31).

27 GAVO. F. R-10. Op. 1. D. 1267. L. 19.

28 There. D. 1278. L. 25, 26, 34.

29 There. D. 1267. L. 101-111; Report on the work of the Voronezh Gubernia Executive Committee of the Council of Workers, Peasants and Red Army Deputies of the XIII convocation to the XIV Provincial Congress of Soviets. Voronezh, 1926. S. 13.

At the beginning of the 20th century, the province was divided into 12 counties: Biryuchensky, Bobrovsky, Bogucharsky, Valuysky, Voronezhsky, Zadonsky, Zemlyansky, Korotoyaksky, Nizhnedevitsky, Novokhopersky, Ostrogozhsky and Pavlovsky counties.

Topographic maps

1. Plans of the General Land Survey of the end of the 18th century. Scale in 1 inch - 2 versts (1cm - 840m)

Scale: 2 versts in an inch (in 1 cm - 840 m)

Year of topographic survey: 1785 - 1792

Description:

The maps are detailed, not topographical, these are the very first detailed maps in the history of cartography, the relief is perfectly conveyed on the plans, small objects, villages, villages, farms are plotted, mills, graveyards, etc. are marked, these are the best maps for searching for coins and relics .
The following counties of this province are available:
* Biryuchsky district,
* Belovodsky district,
* Bobrovsky district,
* Bogucharsky district,
* Valuysky district,
* Voronezh district,
* Zadonsky district,
* Zemlyansky district,
* Korotoyaksky district,
* Kolitva County,
* Nizhnedevitsky district,
* Ostrogozhsky district,
* Pavlovsky district;
* Novokhopersky district Scale 1 verst in an inch (in 1 cm - 420 m)

3. Map of the Voronezh province from the atlas of 1843.

Year of topographic survey: 1843

Description:

The maps are not very detailed, they are well suited for historians, local historians and treasure hunters to determine the boundaries of counties. large villages and churches are indicated. Color map from the atlas of 32 provinces, map application: coat of arms of the province. Map sample.

5. Topographic map of the Voronezh province by I.A. Strelbitsky 1865-1871

Year of topographic survey: 1865-1871

Scale: 10 versts in an inch 1:420,000 (in 1 cm - 4.2 km).

Description:

This map contains currently disappeared settlements, farms, villages and villages, all roads, inns, taverns, springs and wells, as well as mosques and churches, one of the best maps for detecting.
The Voronezh province includes sheets - 59, 60, 61, 74, 75. Map fragment. Collection sheet.

6. Military topographic map of 1865

Year of topographic survey: 1865

Scale: 3 versts in an inch - (1 cm - 1260 m).

Description:

Schubert's military topographic map. One of the best and favorite maps by search engines. It displays all the smallest details: villages, farms, inns, horches, wells, shallow roads, etc. Map fragment.
Scale: 3 versts in an inch - (1 cm - 1260 m). Collection sheet.

Year of topographic survey: 1925 - 1945

Scale: 1:100 000

Description:

Topographic maps of the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army 1925 - 1945
detailed maps with all the villages and farms (including those destroyed during the Second World War), mills, crossings, churches, factories and other small objects.
The positions of our troops and enemy troops (units, combat positions) are marked on the map.
Collection sheet.
Only 12 sheets.

10. Map of the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army 1935 - 1937

Year of topographic survey: 1935 - 1937

Scale: 1:500 000

Description:

Topographic maps of the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army 1935 - 1937
The positions of the owls are marked on the map. troops and troops of Germany, the situation of 1941-42. (headquarters, dugouts, firing points, Combat vehicles, fighting positions).
Maps with villages and farms (including those destroyed in the war), bridges, crossings, churches, factories and other small objects, the list of objects is described in detail in the legend to the map.
Composite sheet The map covers the entire Baltic region, northern, central and southern Europe. Volume - 4.5 GB (one DVD disc)
Map fragments - Fragment 1 Fragment 2 Fragment 3 Fragment 4
General view of one of the maps.

Year of topographic survey: 1941-1942

Scale: 1:250,000 (2.5 km in 1 cm)

Description:

US Army Maps 1955. The maps are perfectly detailed, all settlements are indicated, including the destroyed villages and villages during the Great patriotic war, all roads, military units and military bases, railways and train stations. Although the scale is not very detailed, it allows you to accurately determine the location of the disappeared village. The maps were created on the basis of captured military maps of 1941-42 of the Red Army.
The map covers the entire central part of Russia Assembly sheet ;
You can sort by region.
Map fragment

Other materials for this province

00.

Year: 19th-20th centuries

Description:

Voronezh region. Historical essay. Weinberg L.B. Issue 1. 1885
Notes of the Imperial Russian Geographical Society. Gradual spread of the one-dwelling population in the Voronezh province. 1857
Voronezh province Materials for geography and statistics 1862
german maps Voronezh region scale 1:300,000, 1943
Administrative-territorial division of the Voronezh region Voronezh, 1982
Voronezh in historical and modern-statistical relations. Veselovsky G.M. - 1866
Populated places of the Voronezh province. Reference book. 1900
Materials on the history of Voronezh and neighboring provinces Edited by V.L. Weinberg
Vinnikov A.Z., Sinyuk A.T. On the roads of past centuries 1990 Book on the archeology of the Voronezh region
Sources and manuals for studying the Voronezh region Issue 1, 1888.
Essay on the gradual population of the Voronezh province 1886
Materials on the history of Ostrogozhsk L.B. Weinberg 1886
Cities of the Voronezh province G. M. Veselovsky 1876
Historical, geographical and economic description of the Voronezh province E.A. Bolkhovitinov 1800

The collection is constantly updated

Year: 1860

Description:

The contents of the book: The name of the owner and the name of the estate, the number of peasants and households in the village and estate, the number of households and estates, information and the amount of cash dues, detailed descriptions land belonging to each landowner or peasant of the village. JPG book format.
This book is useful for finding villages where kulaks might well have hidden their money.
Fragment of book 1
Fragment of book 2

Year: 1986

Description:

Covers all districts of the Voronezh region. Monuments are described in detail. This book will be of interest to historians, archaeologists, treasure hunters. The following information is presented: the location of the architectural monument, its type, character, features and other helpful information. Excavations in these places are prohibited. Fragment of a book.

Year: 1859

Voronezh province- administrative-territorial unit Russian Empire and the RSFSR, which existed from 1725 to 1779 and from 1796 to 1928. The provincial city is Voronezh. The Voronezh Governorate was officially formed on April 25, 1725 as a result of the transformation of the Azov Governorate. It included 5 provinces: Bakhmut, Voronezh, Yelets, Tambov and Shatsk. In 1765, the southwestern parts of the Belgorod and Voronezh provinces were transferred to the Sloboda-Ukrainian province with a center in Kharkov, formed on the basis of the Sloboda Cossack regiments, the Bakhmut province was divided between the Sloboda-Ukrainian and Novorossiysk provinces and the land Don Cossacks. In 1779, during the administrative reform of Catherine II, the Voronezh province was divided into the Voronezh and Tambov governorships. When the Voronezh vicegerency was formed, it included 15 counties: Belovodsky, Biryuchensky, Bobrovsky, Bogucharsky, Valuysky, Voronezhsky, Zadonsky, Zemlyansky, Kalitvyansky, Korotoyaksky, Kupensky, Livensky, Nizhnedevitsky, Ostrogozhsky, Pavlovsky. In 1784, at the Khrenovsky stud farm of Count Alexei Orlov, a new breed of horses, the Orlov trotter, was bred. Mares from Friesland were crossed with Arab and Arab-Danish stallions. On December 12, 1796, under Paul I, the Voronezh vicegerency was again transformed into the Voronezh province. In 1829, a peasant from the Biryuchensky district, Daniil Bokarev, was the first in the world to come up with a method for obtaining oil from sunflower seeds. In the autumn of 1891-summer 1892, the territory of the Voronezh province became part of the main zone of crop failure caused by drought (see Famine in Russia (1891-1892)). After the October Revolution of 1917, the Voronezh province, almost in its entirety, became part of the Russian Soviet Federative Republic formed in 1918. Socialist Republic(RSFSR), except for the southern regions included in the newly created UNR. By the Decree of the Council of People's Commissars "On the procedure for changing the boundaries of provincial, district and other" of January 27, 1918, local Soviets of workers', peasants' and soldiers' deputies were given complete independence in resolving issues of changing borders, dividing regions, provinces, districts and volosts into parts, education new administrative or economic units. By the Decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee “On the administrative division of the Voronezh province” dated January 4, 1923, 12 counties were approved: Bobrovsky, Bogucharsky, Valuysky, Voronezhsky, Zadonsky, Kalacheevsky, Novokhopersky, Nizhnedevitsky, Ostrogozhsky, Pavlovsky, Rossoshansky, Usmansky. In connection with the enlargement of volosts in 1924, their number in the counties of the Voronezh province decreased from 214 to 92. in the city of Voronezh. At the time of formation, the Voronezh Governorate occupied a vast area from Elatma in the north to the Sea of ​​Azov in the south and from Kupyansk in the west to Insar in the east. In the XIX century, the Voronezh province was located in the center of the European part of Russia in the upper reaches of the Don River. It bordered in the west - with Oryol and Kursk, in the northeast - with Tambov, in the east - with Saratov, in the south - with Kharkov provinces and with the Don Army Region in the southeast. The area of ​​the province was 66,580 km² in 1847, 65,892 km² in 1905, and 67,016 km² in 1926. In 1797, Belovodsky, Bogucharsky, Livensky, Kalitvyansky, Kupensky, Ostrogozhsky counties were transferred to the restored Sloboda-Ukrainian province. In 1802, the Bogucharsky, Ostrogozhsky, and Starobelsky uyezds were alienated to the Voronezh province, and the Novokhopyorsky uyezd was transferred from the Saratov province. In 1824, the Starobelsky district was returned to the Sloboda-Ukrainian province. Thus, from 1824 to 1918 the province was divided into 12 districts. In 1918, the Kalacheevsky district was formed from 22 volosts of the Bogucharsky district. April 1, 1918 Biryuchensky district was renamed Alekseevsky. On January 4, 1923, Alekseevsky, Zemlyansky and Korotoyaksky counties were abolished, Rossoshansky county was formed, Usmansky county was transferred to the Voronezh province from Tambov. On May 12, 1924, the Zadonsky, Kalacheevsky and Pavlovsky counties were abolished. Thus, in 1926, the province included 9 counties. Interesting Facts: while in Voronezh, Peter I made a model of the fortress. Built later according to this layout, the fortress was named Kronstadt. The Principium galley was assembled in Voronezh. It was on it that, on the way to Azov, Peter I signed the "Charter on the galleys", which can be considered the first naval charter of Russia. For the first Russian regular Navy in 1696-1711, 215 ships were built in Voronezh. It was they who participated in the conquest of the fortress of Azov. (Based on Wikipedia)

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