city of regional subordination with administrative territory[1] / urban district[2] | |
Istra city Istra urban district | |
Flag | Coat of arms |
- (1,56 %)
Istrinsky district
- an administrative-territorial unit (district) and a municipal entity of the same name (municipal district), which existed until March-July 2022 in the north-west of the Moscow region of Russia.[5]
On March 10, 2022, by law No. 21/2017-OZ, the municipal formation of Istrinsky municipal district was transformed into the municipal formation of Istra urban district
with the abolition of all previously included settlements.[6]
On July 8, 2022, the administrative-territorial unit of Istra district was transformed into the city of regional subordination of Istra
with administrative territory
.[7][5]
The administrative center is the city of Istra.
The head of the Istra city district is Tatyana Semyonovna Vitusheva.
Story
On July 12, 1929, the Voskresensky district
with its center in the city of Voskresensk as part of the Moscow District of the Moscow Region. It included the city of Voskresensk, the working village of Dedovsky and the following village councils of the abolished Voskresensky district of the Moscow province:
- from Eremeevsky volost: Gorkovsky, Dukhaninsky, Eremeevsky, Ivanovoaleksinsky, Kashinsky, Kozino-Nefedevsky, Kurtasovsky, Lytkinsky, Makrushinsky, Maksimovsky, Manikhinsky, Nadovrazhinsky, Nikolsky, Pavlo-Luzhetsky, Sannikovsky
- from Luchinsky volost: Buzharovsky, Bukarevsky, Velyaminovsky, Dubrovsky, Efimonovsky, Zenkinsky, Ivanovo-Oktyabrsky, Iskrovsky, Kostrovsky, Lukinsky, Luchinsky, Nikulinsky, Petrovsky, Sychevsky, Telepnevsky, Filatovsky.
- from Nikolskaya volost: Lvovsky, Mansurovsky, Pirogovsky
- from Pavlovsk volost: Anosinsky, Buzlanovsky, Voronkovsky, Glukhovsky, Dmitrovsky, Zakharkovsky, Ilyinsky, Isakovsky, Krasnovidovsky, Kryukovsky, Leninsky, Leshkovsky, Nakhabinsky, Nikolo-Uryupinsky, Novonikolsky, Pavlo-Slobodsky, Petrovsky, Pokrovsky, Rozhdestvensky, Slavkovsky, Talitsky, Yuryevsky
- from Pyatnitskaya volost: Alekhnovsky, Lechishchevsky, Sinevsky.
On May 20, 1930, the Lytkinsky s/s was transferred to the Skhodnensky district. Soon Isakovsky and Sychevsky s/s were abolished.
On July 30, 1930, the Moscow District, like most other districts of the USSR, was abolished, and the Voskresensky District became directly subordinate to the Moscow Region. But due to the fact that there were two Voskresensk districts on the territory of the Moscow region, on December 27, 1930, the district center - the city of Voskresensk was renamed Istra (after the name of the river), and the district was renamed Istra district (Post. All-Russian Central Executive Committee) (Collection of Legislation and orders of the Workers' and Peasants' Government of the RSFSR, Section 1. No. 2 of January 10, 1931 - Article 23). On December 15, the Glukhovsky s/s was transferred to the Kuntsevo district.
On September 27, 1932, Buzlanovsky, Voronkovsky, Zakharkovsky, Ilyinsky, Nikolo-Uryupinsky, Novonikolsky and Petrovsky s/s were transferred to the Krasnogorsk region. At the same time, Verkhurtovsky, Kartsevsky and Yakuninsky s/s were transferred from Solnechnogorsk district to Istrinsky.
On June 21, 1935, the Verkhurtovsky s/s was transferred to the Novo-Petrovsky district.
On December 13, 1938, a rural settlement was formed in the Istra region. Nakhabino. Nakhabinsky s/s was abolished.
On July 17, 1939, Anosinsky, Gorkovsky, Dubrovsky, Eremeevsky, Efimonovsky, Iskrovsky, Kartsevsky, Kashinsky, Krasnovidovsky, Kryukovsky, Kurtasovsky, Lechishchevsky, Leshkovsky, Lvovsky, Maksimovsky, Manikhinsky, Nadovrazhinsky, Petrovsky, Pirogovsky, Sannikovsky, Slavkovsky, Talitsky, Telepnevsky, Filatovsky, Yuryevsky and Yakuninsky s/s. Dmitrovsky s/s was renamed Timoshkinsky, Nikolsky - Ermolinsky, Lukinsky - Davydovsky, Bukarevsky - Brykovsky.
August 21, 1940 r.p. Dedovsky was transformed into the city of Dedovsk.
On June 14, 1954, Brykovsky and Zenkinsky s/s were merged into Bukarevsky s/s, Ivanovo-Oktyabrsky and Pavlo-Luzhetsky into Ivanovsky, Pokrovsky and Timoshkinsky into Obushkovsky. Alekhnovsky, Ivanovoalekseevsky, Kozino-Nefedevsky, Makrushinsky, Nikulinsky, Pokrovsky, Rozhdestvensky, Sinevsky and Timoshkinsky s/s were abolished. On August 5, the r.p. was formed. Snegiri (transformed into a holiday village in 1956).
On December 26, 1956, the Mansurovsky s/s was abolished.
On December 7, 1957, the Istra district was abolished, and its territory became part of the Krasnogorsk district.
On August 18, 1960, the Krasnogorsk district was renamed Istra, the city of Istra was approved as the center of the district, while the city of Istra was classified as a city of regional subordination (Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR) (Gazette of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR. - 1960. - No. 30 (101) dated 25 August. - P. 425), the Istra district was restored from part of the Krasnogorsk district in the following composition: the city of Dedovsk, d.p. Bullfinches, village councils Buzharovsky, Bukarevsky, Davydovsky, Dukhaninsky, Ermolinsky, Ivanovsky, Kostrovsky, Leninsky, Luchinsky, Obushkovsky and Pavlovo-Slobodsky. On September 16, Denkovsky, Petrovsky, Onufrievsky, Savelyevsky and Yadrominsky s/s were transferred from the Ruzsky district to Istrinsky.
On July 31, 1962, Davydovsky s/s was abolished.
On February 1, 1963, the Istrinsky district was abolished. Its territory was divided between the Zvenigorod and Solnechnogorsk enlarged rural areas.
On January 13, 1965, the Istrinsky district was restored. It included the city of Dedovsk, settlement. Bullfinches, village councils Buzharovsky, Bukarevsky, Denkovsky, Dukhaninsky, Ermolinsky, Ivanovsky, Kostrovsky, Leninsky, Luchinsky, Obushkovsky, Onufrievsky, Novopetrovsky, Pavlovo-Slobodsky and Yadrominsky.
On February 3, 1994, village councils were transformed into rural districts.
On February 1, 2001, the city of Istra lost its status as a city of regional subordination (Law of the Moscow Region of January 17, 2001 No. 12/2001-OZ, Podmoskovnye Izvestia, No. 20, 01.02.2001).
On April 22, 2004, Denkovsky s/o was abolished, and on June 22, Dukhaninsky s/o[9].
On January 1, 2006, in accordance with the local government reform, the district received the status of a municipal district and was divided into 3 urban and 11 rural settlements.
March 11, 2022 within the boundaries of the abolished municipal formation Istrinsky municipal district
a new municipality,
the urban district of Istra,
[6].
On April 26, 2022, the holiday village of Snegiri was placed under administrative control of the city of Istra (Resolution of the Governor of the Moscow Region dated April 26, 2022 No. 199-PG, Official Internet portal of the Moscow Region Government https://mosreg.ru, 04/26/2017).
On June 14, 2022, the rural settlements of Buzharovskoye, Bukarevskoye, Ermolinskoye, Ivanovskoye, Kostrovskoye, Luchinskoye, Novopetrovskoye, Obushkovskoye, Onufrievskoye, Pavlo-Slobodskoye and Yadrominskoye were abolished (Resolution of the Governor of the Moscow Region dated June 14, 2022 No. 274-PG, Official Internet portal of the Government Moscow region https://mosreg.ru, 06.14.2017).
On June 23, 2022, the city of Dedovsk was placed under the administrative subordination of the city of Istra (Resolution of the Governor of the Moscow Region dated June 23, 2022 No. 295-PG, Official Internet portal of the Government of the Moscow Region https://mosreg.ru, 06/23/2017).
July 8, 2022 administrative-territorial unit Istra district
transformed into the city of regional subordination
of Istra
with administrative territory.[7][5]
Municipal-territorial structure
In 2006-2017, the Istra municipal district included 3 urban and 11 rural settlements[6]
№ | Urban or rural settlements | Administrative center | Number of settlements | Population | Area, km2 |
1 | Dedovsk | city of Dedovsk | 3 | ↗30 022[4] | 25,52[3] |
2 | Istra | Istra city | 3 | ↗35 419[4] | 22,88[3] |
3 | Bullfinches | holiday village Snegiri | 9 | ↘3417[4] | 47,89[3] |
4 | Buzharovskoe | Buzharovo village | 32 | ↘2810[4] | 162,08[3] |
5 | Bukarevskoe | Glebovsky village | 17 | ↘10 099[4] | 67,08[3] |
6 | Ermolinskoe | Agrogorodok village | 20 | ↘3363[4] | 131,32[3] |
7 | Ivanovskoe | Pavlovskoe village | 19 | ↘2812[4] | 83,59[3] |
8 | Kostrovskoye | Kostrovo village | 25 | ↘2841[4] | 105,84[3] |
9 | Luchinskoe | village Luchinskoye | 23 | ↘4651[4] | 80,44[3] |
10 | Novopetrovskoe | Novopetrovskoe village | 25 | ↘6594[4] | 205,20[3] |
11 | Obushkovskoe | Pokrovskoye village | 12 | ↘1993[4] | 55,42[3] |
12 | Onufrievskoe | Onufrievo village | 11 | ↘1108[4] | 61,92[3] |
13 | Pavlo-Slobodskoe | village of Pavlovskaya Sloboda | 13 | ↗14 285[4] | 59,06[3] |
14 | Yadrominskoe | Kursakovo village | 28 | ↘1949[4] | 160,73[3] |
How to get there
There are three ways to get from Moscow to Istra - by car, bus and train. By car it is better to go along the Volokolamsk or Novorizhskoe highway. Istra is connected to the capital by bus routes No. 580 and 372. Buses run from the Myakinino metro station and the Tushino bus station. Travel time is 55-75 minutes. The movement interval is about half an hour.
Electric trains to Istra depart from Rizhsky Station. You should choose directions to Novoierusalimskaya, Rumyantsevo, Shakhovskaya, Volokolamsk. You can take the train on the platforms near the Dmitrovskaya, Tushino, and Voikovskaya metro stations. Travel time from the station is from 80 minutes.
Population
Population | ||||||
1931[10] | 1939[11] | 1970[12] | 1979[13] | 1989[14] | 2002[15] | 2006[16] |
62 434 | ↗80 366 | ↗84 677 | ↗88 000 | ↗90 572 | ↗115 753 | ↘112 973 |
2009[17] | 2010[18] | 2011[19] | 2012[20] | 2013[21] | 2014[22] | 2015[23] |
↗113 960 | ↗119 641 | ↗119 960 | →119 960 | ↘119 882 | ↗120 619 | ↗120 703 |
2016[24] | 2017[4] | |||||
↘120 526 | ↗121 363 |
Pokrovskoye-Rubtsovo Estate
Address: pos. Pokrovskoye-Rubtsovo How to get there: from Rizhsky station to the station. Novoierusalimskaya, then bus number 25
The estate was built in the 17th century by the boyars Nashchokins. It flourished at the end of the 18th century, when the estate was owned by the Golokhvastov nobles. The house was rebuilt in the style of late classicism, and a landscape park was laid out. At this time, Alexander Herzen, who was the owner’s cousin, was here. In 1890, the estate was bought by Savva Morozov. He entrusted the reconstruction of the estate to the architect F. Shekhtel. At this time, many famous people came to the estate: A. Chekhov, V. Kachalov, V. Klyuchevsky.
Currently, a two-story house, an outbuilding, a church, and a park have been preserved. The estate is available for external inspection.
Settlements
Main article: List of settlements in the Istra urban district
There are 240 settlements in the urban district (formerly Istra district).
List of settlements | ||||
№ | Locality | Type | Population | former urban or rural settlement |
1 | Agrotown[25] | village | ↗1665[26] | Ermolinskoe |
2 | Aduevo | village | ↗6[26] | Ermolinskoe |
3 | Alexandrovo | village | ↗14[27] | Kostrovskoye |
4 | Alekseevka | village | ↗10[26] | Onufrievskoe |
5 | Aleksino | village | ↗225[26] | Ermolinskoe |
6 | Alyokhnovo | village | ↗280[26] | Buzharovskoe |
7 | Ananovo | village | ↗3[26] | Buzharovskoe |
8 | Andreevskoe | village | ↗160[26] | Ermolinskoe |
9 | Anosino | village | ↗277[26] | Obushkovskoe |
10 | Antonovka | village | ↗7[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
11 | Armyagovo | village | →0[26] | Buzharovskoe |
12 | Babkino | village | ↗33[26] | Buzharovskoe |
13 | Berezovka | farm | ↗8[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
14 | Bodrovo | village | ↘11[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
15 | Bolshoye Ushakovo | village | ↗10[26] | Buzharovskoe |
16 | Greyhounds[28] | village | ↗111[26] | Pavlo-Slobodskoe |
17 | Boriskovo | village | ↗8[26] | Ivanovskoe |
18 | Borki | village | ↗64[26] | Ivanovskoe |
19 | Bochkino | village | ↗7[26] | Onufrievskoe |
20 | Brykovo | village | ↘17[26] | Bukarevskoe |
21 | Budkovo | village | ↗2[26] | Yadrominskoe |
22 | Buzharovo | village | ↘1033[26] | Buzharovskoe |
23 | Bukarevo | village | ↘12[26] | Bukarevskoe |
24 | Bunkovo | village | ↗51[26] | Luchinskoe |
25 | Butyrki[29] | village | ↗57[26] | Yadrominskoe |
26 | Vasilyevskoye-Golokhvastovo | village | ↗1[26] | Yadrominskoe |
27 | Velednikovo | village | ↗148[26] | Pavlo-Slobodskoe |
28 | Velyaminovo | village | ↘475[26] | Istra |
29 | Spindles | village | →9[26] | Yadrominskoe |
30 | Verkhurtovo | village | ↗5[26] | Buzharovskoe |
31 | Voronino | village | ↘13[26] | Obushkovskoe |
32 | Voskresyonki | village | ↗10[27] | Kostrovskoye |
33 | Vysokovo | village | ↘78[26] | Ivanovskoe |
34 | Hydroelectric complex named after. Kuibysheva | village | ↗902[26] | Buzharovskoe |
35 | Glebovo | village | ↗89[26] | Bukarevskoe |
36 | Glebovo-Izbishche | village | ↗150[26] | Bukarevskoe |
37 | Glebovsky | village | ↗9316[26] | Bukarevskoe |
38 | Glinka | village | ↗10[26] | Luchinskoe |
39 | Golovino | village | ↘23[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
40 | Gomovo | village | ↘0[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
41 | Proudly | village | ↗3[26] | Yadrominskoe |
42 | Gorki | village | →18[26] | Bukarevskoe |
43 | Gorki | village | ↘1[26] | Yadrominskoe |
44 | Gornevo | village | ↗9[26] | Onufrievskoe |
45 | Gorshkovo | village | ↘2[26] | Luchinskoe |
46 | Gravornovo | village | ↗78[26] | Buzharovskoe |
47 | Combs | village | ↗19[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
48 | Davydkovo | village | ↗37[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
49 | Davydovskoe | village | ↗56[26] | Luchinskoe |
50 | Darna | village | ↗53[26] | Ermolinskoe |
51 | Dedeshino | village | ↗73[26] | Bukarevskoe |
52 | Dedovo-Talyzino | village | ↗7[26] | Bullfinches |
53 | Dedovsk | city | ↗30 500[30] | Dedovsk |
54 | Grandfather's boarding school | village | ↗111[26] | Dedovsk |
55 | Denezhkino | village | ↘30[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
56 | Denkovo | village | ↗109[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
57 | Dergaikovo | village | ↗47[27] | Kostrovskoye |
58 | Share | village | ↘2[26] | Yadrominskoe |
59 | Holiday home "Rumyantsevo" | village | ↘66[26] | Yadrominskoe |
60 | Rest houses named after. A. P. Chekhova | village | ↘0[26] | Luchinskoe |
61 | Dubrovskoe | village | ↗29[27] | Kostrovskoye |
62 | Duplevo | village | ↗58[26] | Yadrominskoe |
63 | Dukhanino | village | ↗206[26] | Ermolinskoe |
64 | Dyakovo | village | ↘79[26] | Buzharovskoe |
65 | Eremeevo | village | ↘1[26] | Ermolinskoe |
66 | Ermolino | village | ↗22[26] | Ermolinskoe |
67 | Efimonovo | village | ↗13[26] | Buzharovskoe |
68 | Zhevnevo | village | ↘29[26] | Pavlo-Slobodskoe |
69 | Zhilkino | village | ↗46[27] | Kostrovskoye |
70 | Zhityanino | village | →1[26] | Onufrievskoe |
71 | Zagorje | village | ↘29[26] | Onufrievskoe |
72 | Zakharovo | village | ↗95[26] | Obushkovskoe |
73 | Zelenkovo | village | ↗30[26] | Pavlo-Slobodskoe |
74 | Green Kurgan | village | ↘73[26] | Bukarevskoe |
75 | Zenkino | village | ↗40[26] | Bukarevskoe |
76 | Zorino | village | ↘4[26] | Buzharovskoe |
77 | Zykovo | village | ↗40[26] | Buzharovskoe |
78 | Ivanovskoe | village | ↗132[26] | Ermolinskoe |
79 | Ivanovskoe | village | ↗83[26] | Ivanovskoe |
80 | Ivanovskoe | village | ↗56[26] | Pavlo-Slobodskoe |
81 | Ilyino | village | ↗58[26] | Bukarevskoe |
82 | Isakovo | village | ↘97[26] | Pavlo-Slobodskoe |
83 | Istra | city | ↗33 558[30] | Istra |
84 | Karasino | village | ↗46[26] | Onufrievskoe |
85 | Kartsevo | village | ↗36[26] | Buzharovskoe |
86 | Kachabrovo | village | ↗5[26] | Ivanovskoe |
87 | Kashino | village | ↗94[26] | Ermolinskoe |
88 | Kiselyovo | village | ↗8[27] | Kostrovskoye |
89 | Kozenki | village | ↗21[26] | Obushkovskoe |
90 | Kolshino | village | ↗9[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
91 | Roots | village | ↘9[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
92 | Korsakovo | village | ↗22[27] | Kostrovskoye |
93 | Kostrovo | village | ↘2388[27] | Kostrovskoye |
94 | Koterevo | village | ↗53[26] | Luchinskoe |
95 | Kotovo | village | ↗35[26] | Luchinskoe |
96 | Kotovo | village | ↘344[26] | Luchinskoe |
97 | Red hill | village | ↗63[26] | Luchinskoe |
98 | Krasnovidovo | village | ↗203[26] | Ivanovskoe |
99 | Red | village | ↘172[26] | Bukarevskoe |
100 | Red Village | village | ↗77[26] | Obushkovskoe |
101 | Kryukovo | village | ↗36[26] | Ivanovskoe |
102 | Kryuchkovo | village | ↘32[26] | Luchinskoe |
103 | Kurovo | village | ↗129[26] | Yadrominskoe |
104 | Kursakovo | village | ↗1577[26] | Yadrominskoe |
105 | Kurtnikovo | village | ↘5[26] | Buzharovskoe |
106 | Heaps | village | ↗8[26] | Bukarevskoe |
107 | Heaps | village | ↘39[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
108 | Lamishino | village | ↘3[26] | Buzharovskoe |
109 | Lamishino | farm | ↗24[26] | Buzharovskoe |
110 | Lamonovo | village | ↗19[26] | Ivanovskoe |
111 | Lenino | village | ↗404[26] | Bullfinches |
112 | Leonovo | village | ↗14[26] | Buzharovskoe |
113 | Leonovo | village | ↗55[27] | Kostrovskoye |
114 | Lesodolgorukovo[31] | village | ↘185[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
115 | Lechishchevo | village | ↘57[26] | Buzharovskoe |
116 | Leshkovo | village | ↗116[26] | Pavlo-Slobodskoe |
117 | Lisavino | village | ↗25[26] | Ermolinskoe |
118 | Lobanovo | village | ↘153[26] | Pavlo-Slobodskoe |
119 | Meadows | village | ↗28[26] | Ivanovskoe |
120 | Meadows | village | ↘22[26] | Yadrominskoe |
121 | Lukino | village | ↘2[26] | Luchinskoe |
122 | Lukino | village station | ↘27[26] | Ivanovskoe |
123 | Luchinskoe | village | ↗414[26] | Luchinskoe |
124 | Lyshchevo | village | ↘24[26] | Buzharovskoe |
125 | Lvovo | village | ↘0[27] | Kostrovskoye |
126 | Mazilovo | village | ↘1[26] | Buzharovskoe |
127 | Maksimovka | village | ↗22[26] | Ermolinskoe |
128 | Maloe Ushakovo | village | ↘8[26] | Buzharovskoe |
129 | Manikhino | village | ↗27[26] | Ivanovskoe |
130 | Manikhino[32] | village station | ↗1021[26] | Ivanovskoe |
131 | Mansurovo | village | ↗19[27] | Kostrovskoye |
132 | Markovo-Kursakovo | village | ↗16[26] | Yadrominskoe |
133 | Martyushino | village | ↗10[26] | Buzharovskoe |
134 | Matveykovo | village | ↘0[26] | Buzharovskoe |
135 | Medvedki | village | ↗25[26] | Yadrominskoe |
136 | Measures | village | ↗2[27] | Kostrovskoye |
137 | Mikhailovka | village | ↗18[26] | Buzharovskoe |
138 | Mykanino | village | ↗21[26] | Bukarevskoe |
139 | Nadezhdino | village | ↗4[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
140 | Nadezhdino | village | ↘20[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
141 | Nadovrazhino | village | ↗25[26] | Bullfinches |
142 | Nazarovo | village | ↘14[26] | Yadrominskoe |
143 | Nizhnevasilievskoe | village | ↘5[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
144 | Nikitskoye | village | →9[26] | Buzharovskoe |
145 | Nikolskoye | village | ↗28[26] | Ermolinskoe |
146 | Nikulino | village | ↗134[26] | Luchinskoe |
147 | New items | village | ↘23[26] | Pavlo-Slobodskoe |
148 | Novodarino | village | ↗63[27] | Kostrovskoye |
149 | Novopetrovskoe | village | ↘4883[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
150 | Novorakovo | village | ↗34[26] | Buzharovskoe |
151 | Novoselovo | village | ↗76[27] | Kostrovskoye |
152 | Updated Labor | village | ↗72[26] | Ivanovskoe |
153 | Obushkovo | village | ↘193[26] | Obushkovskoe |
154 | Ogarkovo | village | →3[26] | Onufrievskoe |
155 | Ognikovo | village | ↗183[26] | Ermolinskoe |
156 | October | village | ↘141[26] | Bukarevskoe |
157 | Oktyabrskaya factory | village | ↘9[26] | Ivanovskoe |
158 | Onufrievo | village | ↗1022[26] | Onufrievskoe |
159 | "Manikhino" | village | ↘224[26] | Ivanovskoe |
160 | Pavlovskaya Sloboda | village | ↗6327[26] | Pavlo-Slobodskoe |
161 | Pavlovskoe | village | ↗1215[26] | Ivanovskoe |
162 | Padikovo | village | ↘30[26] | Obushkovskoe |
163 | Boarding house "Beryozka" | village | ↘40[26] | Luchinskoe |
164 | Parfenki | village | ↘12[26] | Yadrominskoe |
165 | Pervomaisky | village | ↘1832[26] | Luchinskoe |
166 | Pervomayskoye | village | ↘20[26] | Yadrominskoe |
167 | Petrovo | village | ↗8[27] | Kostrovskoye |
168 | Petrovskoe | village | ↘11[26] | Bullfinches |
169 | Petrovskoe | village | ↗17[26] | Ivanovskoe |
170 | Cockerels | village | ↗21[26] | Luchinskoe |
171 | Pionersky | village | ↗272[26] | Luchinskoe |
172 | Pirogovo | village | ↘1[27] | Kostrovskoye |
173 | Piskovo | village | ↗3[26] | Obushkovskoe |
174 | Podporino | village | ↘14[26] | Ermolinskoe |
175 | Pokoevo | village | ↗14[26] | Yadrominskoe |
176 | Pokrovskoye | village | ↘1013[26] | Obushkovskoe |
177 | Polevshina | village | ↗46[26] | Ermolinskoe |
178 | Most Pure | village | ↘251[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
179 | Rakovo | village | ↘57[27] | Kostrovskoye |
180 | Remyanniki | village | →3[26] | Onufrievskoe |
181 | Rodiontsevo | village | ↘6[26] | Buzharovskoe |
182 | Rozhdestveno | village | ↗40[26] | Buzharovskoe |
183 | Rozhdestveno[33] | village | ↗3335[26] | Pavlo-Slobodskoe |
184 | Rozhnovo | village | ↘19[26] | Luchinskoe |
185 | Rubtsovo | village | ↘4[26] | Yadrominskoe |
186 | Rumyantsevo | village | ↘1558[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
187 | Fishes | village | ↗31[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
188 | Ryzhkovo | village | ↗10[26] | Yadrominskoe |
189 | Rychkovo | village | ↗387[26] | Ermolinskoe |
190 | Savelyevo | village | ↘231[26] | Yadrominskoe |
191 | cages | village | ↘6[26] | Bullfinches |
192 | Sannikovo | village | ↗52[26] | Ivanovskoe |
193 | Safontevo | village | ↗14[26] | Buzharovskoe |
194 | Northern | village | ↗889[26] | Luchinskoe |
195 | Selivanikha | village | ↘25[26] | Bullfinches |
196 | Sinevo | village | ↘72[26] | Buzharovskoe |
197 | Skryabino | village | ↗11[27] | Kostrovskoye |
198 | Slabosheino | village | ↘35[26] | Luchinskoe |
199 | Slavkovo | village | ↗53[26] | Obushkovskoe |
200 | Bullfinches | suburban village | ↗2889[30] | Bullfinches |
201 | Sokolniki[34] | village | ↗116[26] | Ermolinskoe |
202 | Sorokino | village | ↘0[27] | Kostrovskoye |
203 | Pavlovskaya Sloboda station | village | ↘3[26] | Pavlo-Slobodskoe |
204 | Sysoevo | village | ↘0[26] | Ermolinskoe |
205 | Talitsy | village | ↗300[26] | Dedovsk |
206 | Tatishchevo | village | →48[27] | Kostrovskoye |
207 | Telepnevo | village | ↗95[27] | Kostrovskoye |
208 | Trinity | village | ↗22[26] | Yadrominskoe |
209 | Trinity | village | ↘32[26] | Ivanovskoe |
210 | Trusovo | village | ↗110[26] | Istra |
211 | Turovo | village | ↗22[26] | Bullfinches |
212 | Ulyevo | village | ↗6[26] | Onufrievskoe |
213 | Ustinovo | village | ↘30[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
214 | Fedorovka | farm | ↗23[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
215 | Filatovo | village | ↘15[26] | Bukarevskoe |
216 | Frolovskoe | village | ↗12[27] | Kostrovskoye |
217 | Khvolovo | village | →1[27] | Kostrovskoye |
218 | Khmolino | village | ↗29[26] | Bukarevskoe |
219 | Khovanskoe | village | ↗18[26] | Bullfinches |
220 | Hills | village | ↗17[26] | Ermolinskoe |
221 | Canvassers | village | ↘12[27] | Kostrovskoye |
222 | Canvassers | village station | ↗95[26] | Bukarevskoe |
223 | Khutorki | village | ↗166[26] | Yadrominskoe |
224 | Chanovo | village | ↘1[26] | Yadrominskoe |
225 | Chapel | village | →1[26] | Yadrominskoe |
226 | Black | village | ↗56[26] | Pavlo-Slobodskoe |
227 | Chesnokovo | village | ↘29[26] | Obushkovskoe |
228 | Chekhovsky | village | ↘121[26] | Luchinskoe |
229 | Chudtsevo | village | ↘1[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
230 | Shablykino | village | ↘0[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
231 | Shapkovo | village | ↗40[26] | Novopetrovskoe |
232 | Shebanovo | village | ↗11[26] | Yadrominskoe |
233 | Sheino | village | ↗2[26] | Onufrievskoe |
234 | Silk Mountain | village | ↗66[26] | Luchinskoe |
235 | Shishaikha | village | ↗12[26] | Yadrominskoe |
236 | Yurkino | village | ↘2[27] | Kostrovskoye |
237 | Yuryevo | village | ↗45[26] | Obushkovskoe |
238 | Yabedino | village | ↗140[26] | Luchinskoe |
239 | Jadromino | village | ↗39[26] | Yadrominskoe |
240 | Yakunino | village | ↗25[26] | Buzharovskoe |
Estate Filatovo
Address: Filatovo village How to get there: by bus from Istra station (12 km)
The first owners of the estate were the Pleshcheev boyars, who rebuilt this estate in the 17th century. The estate was sold several times. The last owner of the estate, M. Karpova, built a building for the Zemstvo School here, reconstructed a two-story manor house and an outbuilding. The estate has a large park with an area of 7.5 hectares. The estate is an architectural monument of regional significance. Available for external inspection.
Economy
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There are 20 large industrial, 16 agricultural, 9 construction enterprises and about 1000 small businesses in the region.
In the east of the region, near the village of Pavlovskaya Sloboda is located [35]. A large industrial site is also developing, on which a number of foreign-owned industrial enterprises have been built or are in the process of construction (Perfetti Van Melle confectionery factory, President cheese factory, Danfoss and Grundfos engineering plants, Corrugated cardboard and corrugated packaging production, Istra branch of Arkhbum OJSC) and to Russian investors.
New Jerusalem
The main attraction of Istra is the New Jerusalem Monastery. Patriarch Nikon founded the monastery back in 1656. The name was chosen for a reason. Its creators wanted to replicate the holy places of Palestine. The Resurrection Cathedral, for example, was designed in the image and likeness of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.
Resurrection Cathedral on a postcard from 1890
It is curious that the monastery became a kind of cultural center. Back in the 17th century, it had a rich library, including books on philosophy and history. In total there were about 600 volumes. There were poetry and music schools at the monastery. The first Russian church museum was opened here.
Time passed. The fame of the monastery spread throughout the country. Not everyone could afford to make a pilgrimage to real Palestine, and the New Jerusalem was relatively accessible. Many pilgrims flocked to the shores of Istra. At the beginning of the last century, up to 35 thousand believers came here during the year. In the 20th century, the fate of the monastery was typical. The monastery was closed, and the premises were given to the regional museum of local lore.
At the very beginning of the war, Istra was captured by the Germans. During this period, the Resurrection Monastery was destroyed, which the Nazis mined and blew up. Only a quarter of a century after the end of the war, the monastery was rebuilt from the ruins. Services in the temple began in the 90s. Now the complex has about 20 architectural structures. There is a museum “New Jerusalem” and an open-air Museum of Wooden Architecture.
Notes
- from the point of view of the administrative-territorial structure
- from the point of view of the municipal structure
- ↑ 123456789101112131415
(Moscow region. Total area of municipal land - ↑ 12345678910111213141516
Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2022 (Russian) (July 31, 2017). Retrieved July 31, 2022. Archived July 31, 2022. - ↑ 123
Law of the Moscow Region No. 11/2013-OZ dated January 31, 2013 “On the administrative-territorial structure of the Moscow Region” - ↑ 123
Law “On the organization of local self-government in the territory of the Istrinsky municipal district” - ↑ 12
Law of the Moscow Region “On classifying the city of Istra, Istrinsky district, Moscow region, as a city of regional subordination of the Moscow region, abolishing the Istra district of the Moscow region and amending the Law of the Moscow region “On the administrative-territorial structure of the Moscow region”” - Law of the Moscow Region dated July 23, 2012 No. 119/2012-OZ “On amendments to the Law of the Moscow Region “On the status and boundaries of the Istrinsky Municipal District and newly formed municipalities within it”” (adopted by resolution of the Moscow Regional Duma dated July 12, 2012 No. 33/ 22-P)
- Handbook on the administrative-territorial division of the Moscow region 1929-2004. - M.: Kuchkovo pole, 2011. - 896 p. — 1500 copies. — ISBN 978-5-9950-0105-8.
- Administrative-territorial division of the USSR (as of January 1, 1931). I. RSFSR (undefined)
. Access date: August 19, 2013. Archived August 19, 2013. - All-Union Population Census of 1939. The current population of the USSR by regions and cities (unspecified)
. Retrieved November 20, 2013. Archived November 16, 2013. - All-Union population census of 1970. The actual population of cities, urban-type settlements, districts and regional centers of the USSR according to census data as of January 15, 1970 by republic, territory and region (unspecified)
. Retrieved October 14, 2013. Archived October 14, 2013. - All-Union Population Census of 1979. The current population of the RSFSR, autonomous republics, autonomous regions and districts, territories, regions, districts, urban settlements, village-district centers and rural settlements with a population of over 5,000 people (unspecified)
. - All-Union population census of 1989. Population of the USSR, RSFSR and its territorial units by gender (undefined)
. Archived from the original on August 23, 2011. - All-Russian population census 2002. Volume. 1, table 4. Population of Russia, federal districts, constituent entities of the Russian Federation, districts, urban settlements, rural settlements - regional centers and rural settlements with a population of 3 thousand or more (unspecified)
. Archived from the original on February 3, 2012. - Alphabetical list of settlements in municipal districts of the Moscow region as of January 1, 2006 (unspecified)
(RTF+ZIP). Development of local self-government in the Moscow region. Access date: February 4, 2013. Archived January 11, 2012. - The size of the permanent population of the Russian Federation by cities, urban settlements and regions as of January 1, 2009 (unspecified)
. Retrieved January 2, 2014. Archived January 2, 2014. - Population census 2010. Population of Russia, federal districts, constituent entities of the Russian Federation, city districts, municipal districts, urban and rural settlements (Russian). Federal State Statistics Service. Access date: February 9, 2013. Archived April 28, 2013.
- Moscow region. Estimated resident population as of January 1, 2009-2016
- Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities. Table 35. Estimated resident population as of January 1, 2012 (unspecified)
. Retrieved May 31, 2014. Archived May 31, 2014. - Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2013. - M.: Federal State Statistics Service Rosstat, 2013. - 528 p. (Table 33. Population of urban districts, municipal districts, urban and rural settlements, urban settlements, rural settlements) (undefined)
. Retrieved November 16, 2013. Archived November 16, 2013. - Table 33. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2014 (unspecified)
. Access date: August 2, 2014. Archived August 2, 2014. - Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2015 (unspecified)
. Access date: August 6, 2015. Archived August 6, 2015. - Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2016 (Russian) (October 5, 2018). Retrieved May 15, 2022. Archived May 8, 2022.
- the village of Manikhino-2 station
was included in the village . - ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212
The size of the rural population and its distribution in the Moscow region (results of the 2010 All-Russian Population Census).
Volume III (undefined)
(DOC+RAR). M.: Territorial body of the Federal State Statistics Service for the Moscow Region (2013). Retrieved October 20, 2013. Archived October 20, 2013. - ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 Information on the resident population
as of January 1, 2016
unspecified )
. Administration of the rural settlement of Kostrovskoye, Istrinsky district. Retrieved March 11, 2016. Archived March 11, 2016. - Velyaminovo
was included in the village . - Ovoshchnaya
was included in the village . - ↑ 1 2 3
Estimation of the permanent population of the Moscow region as of January 1, 2022 and on average for 2022 for municipalities
(unspecified)
. Mosoblaststat. Access date: April 20, 2022. - the village of Lespromkhoz
was included in the village . - Grab
was included in the village . - the village of the Scientific-Experimental Farm "Snegiri"
and
the village of the holiday home "Snegiri"
were included in the village . - School named after 15 years of October
was included in the village . - Official site .
- A necropolis from the time of the Cheops pyramid was found in the Moscow region
- Artifacts made of stone were found near the village of Borzye
Skete of Patriarch Nikon
Address: located near the walls of the Resurrection Monastery in the Garden of Gethsemane
The monastery was built in the shape of Athonite residential towers when the patriarch moved to the monastery. This is where he often went to pray with his followers. On the first floor there were various household services, on the second floor there were Nikon’s cell attendants, on the third there were the patriarch’s personal premises: a cell with a small reception room and the Church of the Epiphany with a refectory. On the roof was the Church of Peter and Paul with a bell tower, where you can only ring the bells while bending over and sitting. Now the monastery is the property of the Resurrection Monastery.
Where to eat deliciously in Istra
The city has many different cafes and eateries, which are located mainly in the city center.
- "Istra", st. Lenina, 80
- "Old Mill", st. Panfilova, 55, building 1
- Restaurant "History", st. 9th Guards Division, 9, building 3
- "Pomodoro Royal", st. Lenina, 17
- "Kioto", st. Sovetskaya, 46
You can highlight the restaurant “Vinsky Podrum” on the street. Voskresenskaya Square, 2A, which is based on very nutritious Balkan cuisine. The menu includes dishes from Serbia, Croatia, and Montenegro.
Tesla coil
This is the popular name for the high-voltage test coils built in the forests near Istra by the All-Russian Electrotechnical Institute. Scientists have studied the effects of super-powerful electromagnetic pulses. Local residents say that an anomalous lightning strike 150 meters long was recorded here. Not everyone manages to get to the facility - it is classified as protected. However, some curious tourists manage to make their way to the semi-abandoned site. A landmark for adventure seekers is Zavodskaya Street, 5.
Chekhov's places
Istra, Moscow region, is rich in attractions and traveling through it is interesting not only for pilgrims and lovers of Russian architecture. Literature connoisseurs can visit the places where the writer Anton Pavlovich Chekhov lived. The city has an unusual monument to the classic - four old brick pillars that protrude onto the sidewalk next to the House of Culture. A bust of the writer is installed near the House of Culture, and near the drama theater there is his monument.
Istra, attractions: what to see in one day
If you are limited in time, then pay attention to the main shrine - this is the Resurrection New Jerusalem Monastery on Sovetskaya, 2. In one day you can visit the main temple, a huge museum complex and learn many interesting facts. And then take a walk around the city center.
From the railway station it is cheaper to take buses No. 32, No. 33 to the “Museum” stop. It’s easier and faster to take a taxi. You will spend only 10 minutes on the road and pay 150 - 200 rubles.
The museum complex is open daily from 10 to 19 hours. If you buy a tour as part of a group, you will be able to get comprehensive information about the complex’s facilities. A ticket to it costs 2000. You can explore the exhibits of the permanent exhibition yourself for 400 rubles. A discount ticket to visit the museum will cost 200 rubles.