Pgm Rybinsk district. Yaroslavl provincial boundary archive, city of Yaroslavl, Yaroslavl province. PGM Boriso Glebsky district

In terms of composition and content, the documents of the fund are divided into 2 main groups:
1. Documents of general office work of surveying and land management institutions. This group is represented by cases on the preparation and conduct of all types of land surveys, on the amicable delimitation of dachas, on the renewal of boundary signs, on the examination of plans and survey books, on the measurement of land during a judicial inspection, on the allocation of allotment land to one place, etc.
2. Cartographic documents formed in the process of surveying and land management. They are represented by copies of plans and survey books (the originals were kept in the archives of the Land Survey Office), copies of plan and geodetic descriptions of land plots, plans and copies of plans for the distribution of allotment land into plots, etc.

Historical reference

s Land surveying - delimitation of land holdings and legally securing their boundaries. In Russia, systematic survey work began under Ivan the Third with the introduction of the local system. In the 16th and 17th centuries, the allocation of estates and verification of their size were carried out by compiling scribe books. The development of surveying technology led to the introduction under Peter the Great of geometric surveying and drawing up plans.
According to the instructions of 1754, special bodies were created to carry out land surveying: the Senate Land Survey Office (the highest body) and the Moscow Provincial Land Survey Office. To speed up the land surveying process, on September 19, 1765, a special manifesto announced the “New Principles of State Land Surveying,” which consisted of establishing amicable land divisions instead of mandatory verification of land rights. The Manifesto of 1765 actually consolidated the boundaries of the properties that had developed by 1765, and warned the owners, under threat of fines and deprivation of land, that they should not extend their possessions beyond the boundaries in which the manifesto found them.
Instead of demarcating individual properties, demarcation was introduced “to the names of dachas,” during which the district boundaries of villages, hamlets, wastelands and other dachas were established, regardless of whether they belonged to one or several owners. The delimitation of common dachas into separate ones was not envisaged and was postponed until the end general survey.
The general management of survey work was entrusted to the Survey Expedition created in 1765 (from 1794 - a department) of the Senate. The central institution for general land surveying and the second instance of the land survey court was the Land Survey Office created in 1766 (since 1808 - the Land Survey Corps). She was entrusted with the management of the work of provincial survey offices, which were opened in one or several provinces and carried out the general delimitation of land there.
So, to carry out land surveying in the Kostroma, Suzdal and Yaroslavl provinces, by decree of the Senate of January 18, 1773, the Kostroma Land Survey Office was organized. Her tasks included monitoring land surveying in the counties, drawing up, checking and issuing plans and land survey books to owners, collecting duties and fines
etc. In disputes about the boundaries of property, the provincial survey office was the first instance of the survey court.
Special surveying, i.e. The demarcation of the general demarcation of common dachas was carried out on the basis of instructions dated April 18, 1767 on special land surveying and the rules for special land surveying through county surveyors dated October 2, 1806. The extremely low pace of special land surveying forced the government on January 18, 1836 to announce “On preparatory measures for the speedy special delimitation of lands." If, within a three-year period, landowners did not make up “love stories” and did not submit them to the district court for special land surveying, the government intended to begin forced demarcation.
Next step To speed up the work on special land surveying, provincial mediation commissions were established on June 21, 1839, and intermediaries were established in counties (to find on-site conditions for the negotiation of the parties).
A special place among the bodies responsible for land surveying was occupied by the provincial land surveying unit (provincial drawing department) - a land surveying institution that was under the jurisdiction of the provincial government. The beginning of the organization of provincial drawing offices was laid by the establishment of the positions of provincial and district land surveyors on the basis of the “Institution for the management of provinces” in 1775. According to the “Manual for provincial and district land surveyors” of July 30, 1828, all land surveying management in the province was concentrated in the hands of the governor and provincial board with the direct subordination of the provincial land surveyors who were in charge of the provincial drawing rooms. The provincial drawing room consisted of a provincial land surveyor and county land surveyors (according to the number of counties in the province).
Since 1839, provincial and district land surveyors were entrusted with carrying out special land surveying through intermediaries and directing the work of provincial commissions and intermediaries. But legally they did not carry out any special land surveying. For land surveying, they were used as executors, and the legal part of land surveying belonged to the district courts and mediation commissions.
After the reform of 1861, the volume of work of provincial and district land surveyors increased significantly due to the fact that they were entrusted with the formal delimitation of peasant plots from landowners' lands, for which a copy (plan) and a geodetic description were drawn up.
The provincial boards and provincial drafting houses were entrusted with the responsibilities of the district courts, which were liquidated on November 20, 1864, to approve love stories and to supervise the production of special land surveying through district surveyors, as well as to store plans and survey books. The boundary documents of the district courts and chambers of the civil court, as well as documents received by the district courts from intermediaries, were also deposited there. Thus, an archive was formed at the provincial drafting room.
On January 16, 1868, new rules for boundary work were introduced. Now the provincial land surveyor became the head of the boundary part of the province. His duties included general supervision of the boundary part and supervision of the boundary affairs of the provincial government. The functions of the provincial drafting room were to prepare cases for consideration by the provincial government and to carry out the orders of the provincial government. Judicial and boundary cases on disputes that arose during special delimitation were assigned to the jurisdiction of district courts. The renewal of boundaries became one of the main types of work of the boundary departments of provincial boards.
As special land surveying ended towards the end of the 19th century, mediation commissions were closed. Subsequently, individual survey cases were carried out by survey departments of provincial boards (through district surveyors). Almost complete cessation of the activities of survey institutions at the end of the 19th - beginning of the 20th century. led to a close merger of the work of the provincial drafting department and the survey department. An almost single body was formed.
The work of surveying institutions revived only in 1906 with the beginning of the Stolypin agrarian reform, for which land management commissions were created. Assistants to the provincial land surveyor and clerks from the provincial drafting room were involved in the work of the commissions. The provincial drafting department was also entrusted with technical supervision of the work carried out by the commissions. In the period 1906 - 1917 plans were drawn up for allocating the lands of rural societies between their members into cut-off plots, allocating inter-strip lands, etc.
Having existed until 1917, provincial land surveying institutions were abolished with the establishment of Soviet power.

Yaroslavl province was established under Paul the First in 1796 from the lands that were part of the governorship of the same name, established in turn during the administrative reform under Catherine the Second in 1777. Previously (since 1719) these territories were part of the Yaroslavl province, which was alternately as part of the St. Petersburg and Moscow provinces (until the abolition of the division of Russian provinces into provinces in 1775). During its existence throughout the subsequent pre-revolutionary period, the composition and boundaries of the districts of the Yaroslavl province changed several times. So, in 1796, during the reorganization of the governorship into a province, Petrovsky district was abolished, in 1822 the cities of Romanov and Borisoglebsk were merged, and Romanovsky district was renamed Romanov-Borisoglebsky, etc.

In Yaroslavl province in whole or in part
There are the following maps and sources:

(except for those indicated on the main page of the general
all-Russian atlases, where this province may also be)

Survey map of Yaroslavl province(1778-1797)
Survey map - non-topographic, hand-drawn map of the late 18th century on a scale of 1 inch = 2 versts 1cm=840m or 1 inch = 1 verst 1 cm = 420 m. As a rule, the county was drawn on the parts that are shown on the assembly sheet. Some of the maps date back to the period of Catherine II 1775-96, Paul I, having come to power, changed the boundaries of counties within the provinces (which, in turn, Alexander I returned with some changes to its original place), while some of the maps from the General Survey fund have only survived for this period.
The maps are color, detailed, and divided by county. The purpose of the map is to show the boundaries of land plots. More details

Map of Mende Yaroslavl province(1850s)
Map of Mende - topographical (indicating latitudes and longitudes), map of the late 1850s. The scale is only 1 inch = 1 verst or 1 cm = 420 m.
The maps are color, very detailed, broken down by county. The purpose of the map is to show the boundaries of land plots with location reference.

Modern borders Yaroslavl region differ from pre-revolutionary ones, which is very schematically shown in the figure with a fragment of the Yaroslavl region.



Lists of settlements of the Yaroslavl province in 1865
This is a reference book that contains the following data on settlements: - is it a village, town or village, proprietary or state-owned (state)
- at the well or at what river it is located
- number of households, men and women separately
- distance in miles from the district town and camp apartment (camp center)
- notes containing the presence of churches, chapels, mills, fairs
This material is not presented separately in counties on this website.

76reg. Yaroslavl region

Yaroslavl province(since 1796) as of 1914, consisted of 10 counties: Danilovsky, Lyubimsky, Mologsky, Myshkinsky, Poshekhonsky, Romanovo-Borisoglebsky, Rostov, Rybinsk, Uglich and Yaroslavl districts.

In this collection we included everything that we could find useful in the region over several years of searching in various sources (archives, libraries, Internet resources). Ancient and modern maps, literature on history and archeology, a selection of other useful materials. The maps have different years of printing and different scales, complement each other and allow you to see how the area changed in different periods.

Our Collections will be interesting and useful to search engines, local historians, archaeologists, historians, travelers, and searchers of ancestral roots.

Some of the materials are exclusive and only we have. You can try to find some materials yourself on the Internet. But to collect all this, you need both time and skill. We, for a small amount, offer a ready-made selection of the most useful materials.

You can purchase the collection on DVD (by mail) or remotely: after payment, we upload the entire set to a file hosting service and provide a download link. Download 2-4 GB at modern internet, usually not a problem.

We are sure that you will not regret the purchase and will use the materials for a long time!


Collection No. 76.1. Yaroslavl region, volume 1, 19-20 century

76.A2. Map of the Yaroslavl province 1860. From the Mende atlas. 1 verst in inch (1 cm = 420 m) A fairly convenient map for search engines. Good scale and many interesting details: farms, taverns, chapels, mills, etc. 522 sheets cut into A4. Prefabricated sheet

76.A3. Special map of the western part of Russia, Schubert 1826-40, 10 versts in an inch. In the collection Yaroslavl sheets 19, 20. Read more about map A3. Schubert 10v

76.A6. Map of the headquarters of the German Luftwaffe, 1943. 1:300,000 (1 cm = 3 km) Topographic maps of Osteuropa, publications of the headquarters of the German Air Force (Luftwaffe). In the Collection the entire region (6 sheets).

76.A7. Map of the territories of the USSR, published in the USA in 1955. 1:250,000 (1cm = 2.5km). Condition of the terrain for 1930-40. Created by US Army cartographers based on military maps of the Red Army headquarters of the 1940s. Lots of details (roads to country roads, rivers, crossings, farms, winter huts, etc.) The whole region is in the collection. + bindings for GPS (under OziExplorer).

76.A12. Topographic map of the USSR, 1970-90. 1:100,000 (1cm = 1km). Quite detailed and popular with search engines and tourists. Convenient for comparison with old maps. Entire region + bindings for GPS (under OziExplorer)

A selection of historical books on the region:

Lists of populated places in the Yaroslavl province. 1859 All settlements (cities, churchyards, villages, hamlets) are shown. The number of inhabitants, churches, fairs, archaeological sites and much other interesting information are indicated.

Military statistical review of the Yaroslavl province. 1849 Description of us. points: fortifications, churches, taverns, forts, fords, ferries, post roads, mills, houses of wealthy peasants, number of inhabitants, table of fairs, etc.

Guide to the Yaroslavl province. 1859 Another interesting book on the history, geography and statistics of the province. 370 pp.

Reference book of the Yaroslavl province. 1908 and 1914. Such books were published almost every year. They reflect: positions and specific people who occupied them, fairs that took place that year, religious processions, celebrations, number of residents and other statistical information. Maybe someone will find relatives, maybe useful information For search. From 150 to 350 pages. Download a book from 1908 for a sample.

Scribe materials from the Yaroslavl district of the 16th century, patrimonial lands. A curious book - a modern decoding of the original 16th-century scribal book (the original is almost impossible to read). Perhaps someone will find useful information. 256 pages. Cover, Sample (quality is poor).

Rostov district of Yaroslavl province, 1885 Historical, archaeological and statistical description with drawings and a map of the county. 600 pp.

Additional information! A large selection of materials on the topic of searching and collecting: Directories on coins, awards, jewelry, crosses, antiques, etc. Books, instructions and films on treasure hunting and metal detectors. Symbols of topographic maps, documents, OziExplorer programs, fragments of maps, books and films, other materials and useful programs.

Price for the entire Collection No. 76.1. in the Yaroslavl region 19-20 centuries. - 1000 rub.
Price for individual materials from 300 to 500 rubles.
Order


Collection No. 76.2. Yaroslavl region, volume 2,
rare maps and books 18-21 centuries

The second volume includes fresh and rare historical maps and materials on the Yaroslavl province, 18-21 centuries, not included in collection 76.1. These materials well complement the materials on the 19-20th century, significantly expanding the time range with ancient maps of 1790, a modern map of 2010, the fresh Trekhverstkaya of 1860, and historical literature:

76.02. Maps of districts of the Yaroslavl province, 1902-18. Scale 2 versts in inches (1 cm = 840 m). Publication of the Statistical Bureau of the Yaroslavl Zemstvo. A fresh, interesting map, with a good scale and lots of small details. So far it has been possible to find only 4 counties: Yaroslavl, Romanovo-Borisoglebsk, Rybinsk and Uglich. Perhaps it will be a useful addition to the well-known Mende map.

76.02.1. Map of Yaroslavl district of Yaroslavl province. 1909 2 sheets 60x100 cm, Title and convention. signs. Arr. 1 Arr. 2

76.02.2. Map of Rybinsk district of Yaroslavl province. 1908 2 sheets 60x100 cm. Title and convention. signs. Sample

76.02.3. Map of Uglich district of Yaroslavl province. 1902 4 sheets 60x100 cm. Title and sample

76.02.4. Map of Romanovo-Borisoglebsky district of Yaroslavl province. 1918 2 sheets 60x100 cm. Sample.

76.A9. General land surveying plans (GLM) for the districts of the Yaroslavl province. 1790. 1-2 versts in an inch (1 cm = 820 m). The maps are over 200 years old, but the accuracy is quite high. Lots of little details. The maps are old, rare, of good scale, although they are difficult to work with - they are drawn by hand, and the state of preservation is sometimes poor (worn holes). The Collection contains:

PGM Borisoglebsky district. 1790, 1st and 2nd layout.

PGM Danilovsky district. 1790, 1st layout.

PGM Lyubimsky district. 1790, 2 layouts.

PGM Myshkinsky district. 1790, 1-layout.

PGM Petrovsky district. 1790, 1-layout.

PGM Poshekhonsky district. 1790, 1-layout.

PGM Romanovsky district. 1790, 1-layout.

PGM Rostov district. 1790, 1st and 2nd layout.

PGM Rybinsk district. 1790, 1st and 2nd layout.

PGM Uglich district. 1790, 1st and 2nd layout.

PGM Yaroslavl district. 1790, 1-layout.

76.A13. Modern map Russia, 2010 1:25,000 and 1:50,000 (1cm = 250m and 500m)! The latest and most detailed map! Indispensable for comparison with old maps, and simply for tourists and hunters! with GPS reference (under OziExplorer).

In the collection 76.2. Set for the Yaroslavl region. - 12 sheets: from 2 to 13. 45x60 cm. Excellent quality.

Price for the entire Collection No. 76.2. With rare cards Yaroslavl region - 2000 rub.
Price for individual materials from 300 to 1000 rubles.
Order

The price of both Collections No. 76.1 and 76.2 is 2500 rubles.

On this page you can download almost all maps of the Yaroslavl province of the 18th-20th centuries. Part of the map is tied to Ozi Explorer. General survey plans, Volga navigation, Economic notes and other statistical information are available for download.

Name example Sat. sheet download

Plans for Dacha Petrovsky district

(dachas are sorted according to the numbers indicated on the PGM)
100soot 1785-1855 4.1Gb
Dacha plans Rostov district(dachas are sorted according to the numbers indicated on the PGM) 100soot 1785-1855 1.2 Gb
Pilot map of the river. Volga
from Rybinsk to N. Novgorod
500m 1929 202.1mb
PGM Petrovsky district 1c 1792 44.8mb
PGM Mologsky district 2v 1796 47.4mb

Map of Romanovo-Borisoglebsky district

2v 1918 83.3mb

PGM Boriso Glebsky district

1c 1792 75.5mb
PGM Borisoglebsky district 2v 1796 34.8mb
PGM Lyubimsky district 2v 1796 149.2mb
PGM Rybinsk district 1c 1792 68.7mb
PGM Rybinsk district 2v 1796 139.9mb
PGM Uglich district 1c 1792 54.7mb
PGM Uglich district 2v 1796 6.9mb
PGM Myshkinsky district 1c 1798 44.3mb
PGM Rostov district 1c 1792 35.6mb
PGM Rostov district 2v 1796 41.9mb
PGM Danilovsky district 1c 1792 71.4mb
PGM Romanovsky district 1c 1790 37.6mb
PGM Poshekhonsky district 1c 1792 122.4mb
PGM Yaroslavl district 1c 1792 25.1mb
Alphabet for the Petrovsky district electronic signature 1909 11.6mb
Alphabet for the Rostov district electronic signature 1909 10.7mb
Atlas of the Volga 0.5v 1877 269.1mb
Mende Map 2v 3434mb
Mende Map linked to Ozi
Lists of populated places 1859 109mb

Maps are available for free download

Maps are not available for free download, to receive maps - write to mail or ICQ

Historical information on the province

The territory of the Yaroslavl province bordered: in the northeast - with the districts of Vologda and Gryazovets - Vologda province, in the east - with Buisky, Kostroma and Nerekhtsky - Kostroma province, in the south and southeast - with Shuisky, Suzdal, Yuryevsky and Pereyaslavsky - Vladimir, in the west - with Kalyazinsky, Kashinsky and Vesyegonsky - Tver, in the north-west - with Cherepovets district - Novgorod province. The administrative border was determined for the most part by conventional lines, but in many places it coincided with tracts. View of the province's territory geographical map resembles an almost regular trapezoid, with two large sides facing southeast and southwest, and two smaller sides facing northeast and northwest.

The greatest extent of the province was in the direction from north to south between the northern end of the Poshekhonsky district and the southern Rostov district, approximately 254 versts, the greatest width from east to west between the eastern end of the Lyubimsky district and the western Mologsky district - 217 versts. The area of ​​the Yaroslavl province was 31293.5 square meters. versts, or 646.76 sq. m. In terms of the size of its province, it is one of the smallest; it ranked 45th among 50 provinces of European Russia. Administratively, the Yaroslavl province is divided into 10 districts: Danilovsky, Lyubimsky, Mologsky, Myshkinsky, Poshekhonsky, Romanovo-Borisoglebsky, Rostovsky, Rybinsky, Uglichsky and Yaroslavsky. 11 cities (one out-of-state one - Petrovsk). The province acquired its composition at the beginning of the 20th century in 1822, when the former 11th district of Borisoglebsky was merged with Romanovsky and both cities were united into one district - Romanov-Borisoglebsk. The most significant districts in terms of area are Poshekhonsky (5234.3 sq. versts) and Mologsky (4437.6), the smallest is Danilovsky (1885.4); the rest fluctuate spatially between 3745.3 (Rostovsky) and 2164.3 (Myshkinsky).

The surface of the province is flat, modified not so much by elevations as by lowlands and basins, which sometimes on the outskirts take on the appearance of mountains. The general main slope of the area of ​​the Yaroslavl province, determined by the flow of the Volga, Mologa and Sheksna, goes in the direction from the northwest in the southeast, while in particular the ridges of hills rush to the southwest. half - mainly from south to north, and in the north-east. - from North to South. Horus, in the real sense of the word, is not; there are only hills, more or less flat, falling steeply only to the river beds. The highest point of the province in the southwest. part of the Yaroslavl district, near the Blagoveshchensky churchyard, which is on the Hill (800 ft. above the Volga level). From Annunciation Hill, very noticeable and continuous branches of heights diverge in three directions: to the N - to Romanov-Borisoglebsk, to E - to the village. Pyatnitskaya Gora and from here, parallel to the Moscow highway, on ss. Karabikha and Kresto-Bogorodskoe; finally to Z - on p. Nikulskoe; then, leaning towards Yu, on p. Davydovo, goes in a western direction parallel to the flow of the river. Mouths. Another similar ridge of hills runs on the right side of the river. Estuaries, forming with their branches slopes for river rivers. Sarah and Gda. The most significant elevations of these branches are seen on the Moskovskoye Highway, near ss. Lyubilok and Poklonov. In the north-east, or Trans-Volga part of the province, the most elevated area under the mountains. Danilov, from where ridges pass, lowering and then disappearing, to the west in Romanovo-Borisoglebsky district, and to the south near the border of Yaroslavl district. In Poshekhonsky district, more noticeable heights are found in the north. half, obviously having a connection with the ridges located in the Vologda province. The space between Mologa and Sheksna is a lowland filled with lakes and swamps, significantly covered with forests. This area is subject to such severe floods in the spring that the waters of the Mologa and Sheksna merge with each other. In general, app. part of the province is a hollow.

Population

According to the 1897 census, there are 1,071,355 inhabitants in the Yaroslav province. (460,597 men and 610,758 women). There are 146,310 urban residents (75,507 men and 70,803 women), rural residents - 925,045 (385,490 men and 539,955 women). The total population density in the province is 34.3 people. per 1 sq. mile; in individual districts it fluctuates greatly: for example, in Yaroslavl district per 1 sq. a mile takes 69.6 hours, in Poshekhonsky - only 21.2; The population density in other counties is between 40.2 (Myshkinsky) and 23.9 (Lyubimsky). In the northwestern part of the province, population density is below average, in the rest of the province it is higher. Populated areas 9784; On average, there is 1 village for every 3 square meters. versts. Small villages (1-5 households) make up 24% (in the Romanovo-Borisoglebsky district there are over 40%); villages with 6 to 10 households, almost 28%; There are 21 large settlements (over 100 houses) in the entire province (0.5%). The least populated villages, with up to 10 people, make up 2.6%. The most populous villages, numbering more than a thousand inhabitants, are only 9: in Yaroslavl district 3, in Romanovo-Borisoglebsky - 1, in Rostov - 4, in Uglich - 1. The population is Great Russian; only in Mologsky district along the river. The Sitskari city comes from the Karelians (see Karelians), who came here in the 17th century; they retained the type and some properties of the Finnish tribe. In addition, representatives of other nationalities live in cities; there are no more than 6000 people. (0.6%). Orthodox and co-religionists - 1,056,762 people, Old Believers and those deviating from Orthodoxy - 9,638, Roman Catholics. - 1669, Protestants - 1356, other Christians - 7, Jews - 1719; other non-Christians - 204. Hereditary nobles - 4269 people, personal nobles - 7011, clergy - 14795, hereditary and personal citizens - 5226, merchants - 5052, burghers - 77000, peasants - 943312, Cossacks - 67, foreigner - 1, Finnish natives, without distinction of classes - 20, persons not belonging to the named classes - 2735, foreign nationals - 287, persons who did not indicate their membership in any class in the census - 563. Women greatly predominate among the rural population, where 539,955 women . there are 385,090 people, while in the urban population there are 75,507 people. and 70803 women. In 1901, 46,964 people were born, 43,467 died, 8,912 were married. The percentage of illegitimate births fluctuates between 3 and 4. The percentage of both births and deaths of males and females is almost the same. More than 40% of mortality occurs in children under 1 year of age; from 1 year to 5 years - up to 13% and from 6 to 10 years - about 3%. High mortality is observed among the urban population.

In 1898, the number of buildings was: stone - 5734, wooden - 307959; in the cities of the former there are 4102, of the latter 11571. Residential buildings made of stone - 2330, wooden - 182518. There were 15897 fire incidents in 25 years, from 1870 to 1894, 58197 buildings burned down, the amount of loss was 27,828,333 rubles.

Administrative division

CountyCounty townArea, sq. verstPopulation (1897), thousand people
1 Danilovsky Danilov 1 885,0 73,350
2 Lyubimsky We love you 2 734,0 73,580
3 Mologsky Mologa 4 437,0 134,105
4 Myshkinsky Myshkin 2 164,0 98,684
5 Poshekhonsky Poshekhonye 5 234,0 114,369
6 Romanov-Borisoglebsky Romanov-Borisoglebsk 2 637,3 74,055
7 Rostovsky Rostov 3 744,3 149,616
8 Rybinsky Rybinsk 2 364,4 90,747
9 Uglichsky Uglich 3 037,8 94,336
10 Yaroslavsky Yaroslavl 2 998,0 136,415

* All materials presented for downloading on the site are obtained from the Internet, so the author is not responsible for errors or inaccuracies that may be found in the published materials. If you are the copyright holder of any material presented and do not want a link to it to be in our catalog, please contact us and we will immediately remove it.



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