Mikhaylovskoye, Republic of Karelia
Mikhaylovskoye
Михайловское | |
|---|---|
Village | |
Village chapel in Mikhaylovskoye | |
|
Flag Coat of arms | |
Mikhaylovskoye Mikhaylovskoye | |
| Coordinates: 61°00′52″N 33°43′57″E / 61.01444°N 33.73250°E | |
| Country | Russia |
| Region | Republic of Karelia |
| District | Olonetsky District |
| Rural settlement | Mikhaylovskoye Rural Settlement |
| Population (2013) | |
• Total | 377 |
| Time zone | UTC+3:00 |
Mikhaylovskoye (Russian: Михайловское) is a village (selo) in Olonetsky District, Karelia, Russia. It is located by the river Kirga between the lakes Dolgoye and Loyanskoye, about 52 kilometers (32 mi) away from the district center Olonets.[1] As of 2013, the village had a population of 377.[2]
Mikhaylovskoye is the municipal center of the Mikhaylovskoye rural settlement within the Olonetsky District. Aside from Mikhaylovskoye itself, the municipality includes the villages of Gizhino and Tashkenitsy.[3]
The Ludic language is traditionally spoken in the village, and Mikhaylovskoye is a center of Ludic culture in the Svir region.[4]
History
Historically, the area of modern Mikhaylovskoye was called Loyanitsy (Ludian: Kujär’v), while its main village was known as Mikhaylovskaya (S’ür’d’). The earliest known mention of Loyanitsy dates to 1563, when it was a volost under the Vazhiny parish (pogost). In a document from 1582 or 1583, a wooden church dedicated to Saint George is mentioned in Mikhaylovskaya. Loyanitsy would eventually become a separate parish, being mentioned as such in 1845, and a new brick church had been built on the site of the older wooden church in 1823.[4]
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Loyanitsy comprised 11–12 villages:[4]
- Gizhino, Tashkenitsy, Palnavolok, Mikhaylovskaya and Kirga by the lake Loyanskoye;
- Ustye, Kukoynavolok, Nyukhovo, Yakovlevskaya and Novikovo by the lake Dolgoye;
- Moshnichye along the river Vazhinka, comprising Moshnichye proper and Vasilyevskaya, which were counted as separate villages in some censuses, but together in others.
In 1873, the villages had a combined population of 1,099, most of whom were Karelians. Some Russians also lived in the parish center Mikhaylovskaya, while the residents of Vasilyevskaya were recorded as "Chuds".[4]
By 1926, the area had been reorganized into the Mikhaylovsky selsoviet, with its center in the village of Ustye. In that year, the selsoviet had a population of 2,243, which began to decline soon after due to dekulakization and the Great Purge. Starting in the late 1950s, many villages in the selsoviet were abolished as unpromising and their population was relocated into the central settlement of Mikhaylovskoye, established on the site of Ustye.[4] The villages of Mikhaylovskaya, Kirga, Palnavolok and Ustye had been merged into one settlement in 1957.[1]
The village church burned down in 1924[4] or 1928.[1] Currently, there is a village chapel (eukterion) in Mikhaylovskoye.[5]
References
- ^ a b c Mitin, I. I. (2009). "Михайловское". Карелия : Энциклопедия в трёх томах. Vol. 2. Petrozavodsk: PetroPress. p. 227. ISBN 978-5-8430-0125-4.
- ^ "Численность населения в разрезе сельских населенных пунктов по состоянию на 1 января 2013 г." [Population of rural localities on 1 January 2013]. fulltext.library.karelia.ru (in Russian). p. 14. Retrieved 23 January 2026.
- ^ Законодательное Собрание Республики Карелия. Закон №813-ЗРК от 1 ноября 2004 г. «О городских, сельских поселениях в Республике Карелия (с изменениями на 5 июня 2019 года)». Опубликован: газета "Карелия", №124, 126, 4 ноября — 11 ноября 2004 г.. (Legislative Assembly of the Republic of Karelia. Law #813-ZRK of 1 November 2004 On the Urban, Rural Settlements in the Republic of Karelia (as amended on 5 June 2019). ).
- ^ a b c d e f Pahomov, Miikul (11 February 2017). Lyydiläiskysymys : Kansa vai heimo, kieli vai murre? [The Ludian Question] (Doctoral thesis) (in Finnish). University of Helsinki. pp. 66–70. ISBN 978-951-51-2903-1. Retrieved 23 January 2026.
- ^ "Михайловское. Часовня Казанской иконы Божией Матери" [Mikhaylovskoye. Chapel of Our Lady of Kazan.] (in Russian). sobory.ru. Retrieved 23 January 2026.