Maps of the Perm province until 1917. Old maps of the Perm province. Kizelevsky Bus Plant

Abandoned boiler room

On the territory of the Kizelovskaya convoy there is an old destroyed boiler house.

Abandoned workshops of the Lyaminsky plant

In the center of the village of Lyamino there is a huge industrial zone, part of it is still in working order, and part of it is already crumbling into dust. There are also more or less tolerable objects.

Old Kizelovsky elevator

Located on the way to Kospashskie.
The territory of the facility is guarded, but the guard is always helpful and allows those who are eager to look/take a photo/climb.

Locomotive Cemetery

Sump for steam locomotives near Ust-Kisherti.
A tricky entrance right along the railway tracks and voila - you are there.

Abandoned church in the village of Troitsk

Atmospheric church. It stands on a mountain in the center of the village.
Kungursky district.

Suksun Palace of Culture

Almost the center of Suksun, a symbiosis of a dilapidated temple and a palace of culture, built on the site of a churchyard at the temple.

Kungur stoker

The facility is located on the outskirts of the city near the existing market.
Abandoned for a long time. From the top there is a stunning view of the city. The height is around 50-60m.

Taly village

Former logging camp village near the town of Kizel, former station Lunievskaya narrow-gauge railway. Villages that have fallen into disrepair due to the elimination of traditional transport (road) communications

Mine named after Chkalova

Mine named after Chkalova is located near the village of Usva. Coal was mined at the mine. The mine complex consists of many different buildings. The date of construction of the object is 1957.

Ugleuralsky city

Liquidation: 1960. Urban settlement and railway station. on the river Kosaya, right tributary of the river. Kosva, which flows into the river. Kama, the center of the North Ugleuralsk urban settlement.
In 1904, the first coal mine (mines) opened here - “Semenovskaya” (in Soviet time- save for them. Stalin, from November 24 1961 - "Central"), in 1905 a second mine (mine) appeared - "Mariinskaya" (in Soviet times - mines named after Uritsky). Since 1935, there was a mine No. 4, since 1939 - a mine named after Serov. During the Great Patriotic War, the village housed evacuation hospital No. 2565 and the Shakhtar mining artel, transformed on September 26, operated. 1956 to a furniture factory. In 1957 Ugleuralsky was connected to regional center the city of Perm by direct railway line (via Divya and Kukhtym stations). 29 Nov 1965 The Klyuchi state farm, previously known as a subsidiary farm of the Tsentralnaya mine, was organized in the village.

Shumikhinsky village

With the closure of the mines (1997), the population of the village, designed for 50,000 inhabitants, decreased significantly. Today it is home to about 2 thousand residents, of which 1 thousand are pensioners. Repeated attempts were made to completely resettle the endangered village.
In mid-July 2007, geological work began in Shumikhinsky to search for underground sources of water supply. If scientists discover sufficient water reserves, a water intake will be built in the village using groundwater. For now, water is supplied to the settlement according to a schedule from 10 a.m. on Saturday to 8 p.m. on Sunday.

Kizel city

A small town in the Perm region, with dozens, or even hundreds of houses completely destroyed.

Kizelevsky Bus Plant

Bus factory within the city, Kizel. Many destroyed workshops, an abandoned car park.

06/08/2009: the plant itself is in working order.

Rubezhskaya Church

Rubezhskaya Church
Built on the site of a burnt wooden church, at the expense of clerks Dyachkov and Korovin. Relatively simple architectural decor - cornices with arcature belts and curbs, window casings designed in the forms of the late Russian Baroque. In the first half of the 19th century, two porticos were added to the main part of the temple on the north and south sides.
At the beginning of the 20th century. surrounded by forged walls stone pillars fence, which was dismantled in 1962.
There are remains of paintings from the late 18th century on the walls and vaults. The condition is unsatisfactory. Part of the dome of the main temple was destroyed.
Architectural monument Russian Federation.

VKIU training ground

A former military training ground on the outskirts of the city of Perm (opposite the circus across the Kama River).

Viaduct

Old viaduct. Located next to an active railway.
Beautiful. It is difficult to get there in a sedan in the wet season, but it is possible.
Perm region. Oktyabrsky district.

Old Church

Sweet church. It stands in the middle of the village of Dubrovo. It is impossible to drive by without noticing this miracle. You can wander around inside the church and, if you wish, climb onto the belfry or roof. From time to time, pigeons fly under the ceiling and bricks fall down. Don't be alarmed.

St. Nicholas Church

It was built at the expense of the salt industrialist G.F. Shustov.
Stone. Until 1764 - the cathedral church of the Pyskorsky Nikolaev Monastery, then - a parish and, from 1840 - a cemetery. Now not in use, the condition is serious.

Transfiguration Church

The Transfiguration Church was built in 1782-1808. at the expense of parishioners. It had three altars: the summer altar - the Transfiguration of the Lord, the Entry into the Temple of the Blessed Virgin Mary (until 1820 dedicated to St. Nicholas the Wonderworker) - in the winter aisle on the right, and the Annunciation - in the winter aisle on the left. The church is one-story, refectory, with a two-story main volume, single-domed. Completed with an octagonal dome. Located in the center of the village (lower part) on the right bank of the Kamgorka River, on the banks of the Kama. The building itself was rebuilt several times. The author of the reconstruction of the church in 1830 was the outstanding Russian architect I. I. Sviyazev. The project included the addition of a five-tier bell tower over the narthex and three Doric porticos on the sides of the narthex, as well as the treatment of the facades in the classicist style.
After perestroika, the village received a slender vertical structure - a bell tower with a high spire. In front of the church building there was a spacious square with trade.
The church was closed in the 30s. The bell tower was dismantled in the 30-40s. The brick was used to build the school. The carved iconostases have not survived. It was used as a village club and a bakery. It has been empty since 1978.

The Perm governorate with the administrative center in the city of Perm was created in 1780 during the territorial transformations of Catherine the Second (by Decree of November 20/December 1) on lands that once constituted historical region, called in ancient chronicles Biarmia, Peremiya and Perm the Great. Before the formation of the governorship, this area was part of the Solikamsk and Perm provinces, first of the Siberian and then of the Kazan province (in addition to Perm the Great, the province also included the cities of Cherdyn and Sol Kamskaya), as well as the Orenburg and Tobolsk provinces. The new governorship included two regions - Perm proper, which covered the north, west and south of the governorship, and the neighboring Yekaterinburg region, which included its eastern lands in the Trans-Urals, and the governorship itself was divided into sixteen counties (Alapaevsky, Dolmatovsky, Irbitsky, etc.). In 1783, the Chelyabinsk district was excluded from the Perm governorship (from the Yekaterinburg region) and transferred to the Orenburg governorship.

In the Perm 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)

2 layouts of land surveying of the 18th century. (1780-90s)
The survey map is not topographical (it does not indicate latitudes and longitudes), a hand-drawn map of the late 18th century. (after changing the boundaries of the provinces in 1775-79) on a scale of 1 inch 2 versts or in 1 cm 840 m. As a rule, a single county was drawn on several sheets, which are shown on a single composite sheet. Currently, all land survey maps at our disposal for the Perm province date back to the reign of Catherine the Second 1775-96. The maps are colored and very detailed.
The purpose of the survey map is to indicate the boundaries of land plots (so-called dachas) within the county.

Lists populated areas Perm province 1875 (according to 1869)
This is a universal reference book containing:
- status of the village (village, hamlet, owner or state);
- location of the settlement (in relation to the nearest highway, camp, well, pond, stream, river or river);

- distance from the district town and camp apartment (camp center) in versts;
- presence of a church, chapel, mill, etc.
The book contains 381 pages plus general information.

Lists of populated places in the Perm province in 1905


- there is no connection to rivers and roads;
- population in different sections;
- nationality and class of residents;
The information in the book is current as of January 1, 1904
The book contains 526 pages and has an alphabetical index.

Lists of populated places in the Perm province in 1909
This is a one-stop reference guide that contains the following information:
- type of settlement, volost affiliation;
- number of yards in locality and its population (men and women separately);
- distance from several points in miles;
Lists have been released by district.

As a result of the reverse reorganization of Russian governorships in the province under Paul the First, in 1796, the Perm governorate was renamed into the province of the same name, which, after the consolidation of some counties due to the abolition of others (Alapaevsky, Dolmatovsky and Obvinsky), amounted to twelve districts - seven in the western , the European part (Permsky, Krasnoufimsky, Kungursky, Osinsky, Okhansky, Solikamsky and Cherdynsky districts) and five in the Asian, Trans-Ural (Verkhotursky, Ekaterinburgsky, Irbitsky, Kamyshlovsky and Shadrinsky districts). During the times of Catherine the Second and Alexander the First, the Perm province (vicerarchy) was administratively subordinate to the Perm and Tobolsk governor-general.
After the restoration of the diocese of the same name in Perm in 1799, the affairs of the church were in charge of the bishops of Perm and Yekaterinburg (until 1835), Perm and Verkhoturye (after the opening of the Perm vicariate in Yekaterinburg) and, finally, after 1855, the bishops of Perm and Solikamsk. During the time of Alexander the First, the borders of the Perm province retained the same outlines from the times of Catherine the Second and Paul the First, including a number of places in the north (Cherdynsky and Verkhoturye districts) and south (in particular, southern border Krasnoufimsky district), which initially had straightened borders. Subsequently, the straightened border remained only in the northeast of Verkhoturye district. The internal borders of the districts of the Perm province themselves also repeatedly underwent some changes in the subsequent pre-revolutionary period of its history.

The time has come to write about the white and dark spots of the Perm province. Before that, there was my investigation into the disappearance and also. How, you ask, aren’t Perm Province and Perm the Great one and the same? As it turns out, no.

First, let's look at the map “Part of Siberia from Salt Kama to Tobolsk” from the 1745 atlas. Yes, yes, once upon a time the Perm region was included in the concept of “Siberia”. Moreover, even modern Kirov region belonged to Siberia. And the border between Europe and Asia ran along the line from Azov to the White Sea.

We look at the part on which the modern Perm region is drawn. True, then no one even thought about any Perm province. Moreover, after the city of Perm the Great disappeared at the beginning of the 18th century, the toponym “Perm” generally began to be slowly forgotten and fade into oblivion. Thanks to Catherine II. It was she who in 1781 ordered the establishment of the Perm province and the construction new town Perm, where I am now writing these lines. But in 1745 there was nothing even close to this.

As you can see, the modern Perm region was then divided into several parts. At the very top is Cherdynsky district. This is actually part of the land of Perm the Great. The so-called Kama Perm. There was also Vychegda Perm. If you look at the map, it is higher and to the left. There, in an area once called Vilegodskaya Permets, I was born. Just below Cherdyn lies Solikamsk district. It was never part of Perm the Great, but is mentioned in all historical documents. But below is where the fun begins.

From the blog

Estates of the Barons Stroganovs. An appanage principality that existed almost until the establishment of the Perm province. I have information about him. Anyone who has been at least in any way interested in the history of the Perm region knows the text of the charter of Tsar Ivan the Terrible dated 1564: “ And the Tsar and Grand Duke Ivan Vasilyevich of All Rus' granted Grigory Anikeev his son Stroganov, ordered him to sit in that empty place, 88 miles below Great Perm, along the Kama River, on the right side of the Kama River with the mouth of the Lysva River, and on the left side of the Kama opposite the Pyzno Kurya, down on both sides of the Kama to the Chusovaya River, set up a town on the black forests (Orel, of course) and near that town along the rivers and lakes and up to the peaks of the forest, plow up the arable land near that town, and set up courtyards , and he should call the unwritten and untaxable people to that town" Actually, it describes the lands that we see on the map.

And now the question is - what were these lands called before the Stroganovs came to them? No, not Perm the Great. It, as I already wrote, was higher and occupied the north of the modern Perm region. Let's look at the maps.

Maps of Perm province

Name example collection sheet download
Special card Western Siberia (full) 10v 1860 373mb
Map of Okhansky district 5v XIX century 23.5mb
Plan of Ochersky district of Okhansky district 2v XIX century 31.9mb
Map of Alapaevsky district 5v 1921 23.3mb
Map of part of Rezhevskaya Dacha 500s XIX century 16.6mb
PartAlapaevskaya dacha, Irbitsky district 1c 1882 34.2mb
Land plan of the village of Kirgishan, Krasnoufimsky district 500s 1882 21.4mb
Sat. sheet of square in Kamenskaya Dacha Ekaterinburg and Kamyshlovsky districts 2v 1893 93.8mb
Sivinskaya volost of Okhansky district 1km 1936 182mb
Okhansky district 4v 1858 136mb
Map of the Kama-Votkinsk plant(Sarapul and Okhansky districts) 100s XIX century 177mb
PGM Verkhoturye district 2v 1790 87mb
PGM Ekaterinburg district 2v 1790 51mb
PGM Irbitsky district 2v 1790 33mb
PGM Kamyshlovsky district 2v 1790 57mb
PGM Krasnoufimsky district 2v 1790 105mb
PGM Kungur district 2v 1790 52mb
PGM Osinsky district 2v 1790 94mb
PGM Okhansky district 2v 1790 81mb
PGM Perm district 2v 1790 109mb
PGM Shadrinsky district 2v 1790 76mb
PGM Cherdynsky district 2v 1790 201mb
PGM Solikamsk district 2v 1790 109mb
Pilot map of the Kama River(from Volga to Vishera) 500m 1932 103mb
Pilot map of the Kama River(from Vishera to Nytva) 250m 1942 228mb
Gene. plan of Kamyshlovsky district 7v 1783 14mb
Gene. Shadrinsky district plan 6v XIX century 16mb
Gene. plan of the Kyshtym-Kasli plant district(Ekaterinburg district) 2v XIX century 29mb
South h. Wed. Ural(Ekaterinburg district) 5v 1905 21mb
Map of Yekaterinburg district 10v 1908 26mb
Map of Solikamsk district 10v 1895 21mb
Map of Okhansky district 10v 1887 10mb
Map of Ilimskaya Dacha 2v 1872 20mb
Lists of populated places 1869 446mb
Lists of populated places 1886 306mb

Cards available for free download

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

Historical information on the province

Perm province - administrative unit of the Russian Empire and the USSR in 1781-1923. Located on both slopes Ural mountains. The administrative center of the province was the city of Perm.

Story

On November 20 (December 1), 1780, Empress Catherine II signed a decree on the creation of the Perm governorship consisting of two regions - Perm and Yekaterinburg, and the establishment of the provincial city of Perm

“Respecting the advantageous position of the Yegoshikha plant and the ability of this place to establish a provincial city in it... we order you to appoint a provincial city for the Perm governorship in this place, calling it Perm.”

Lieutenant General Evgeniy Petrovich Kashkin was appointed the first governor-general of the Perm and Tobolsk governorship. In 1780-1781, buildings for official institutions were built, and the Kazan and Siberian highways were laid. The opening of the city and governorship took place on October 18 (29), 1781. Initially, the Perm province included 16 counties: Perm, Ekaterinburg, Cherdynsky, Solikamsky, Okhansky, Osinsky, Kungursky, Krasnoufimsky, Verkhotursky, Kamyshlovsky, Irbitsky, Shadrinsky, Chelyabinsky, Obvinsky, Dalmatovsky and Alapaevsky. In 1783, Chelyabinsk district became part of the Orenburg province.

In 1788, Lieutenant General Alexey Andreevich Volkov was appointed governor, who held this post until his death (August 21 (September 1), 1796). Under his rule, the main public school was founded in Perm, and on November 24 (December 5), 1789, small public schools were opened in Yekaterinburg, Irbit, Shadrinsk, Verkhoturye, Kungur, Solikamsk and Cherdyn. In 1792, the first printing house under the governor's rule was opened in Perm, later renamed the provincial one. Also, Governor Volkov invited Fyodor Khristoforovich Grail, who made a great contribution to the development of medicine in the province, to the post of provincial doctor. During the period of the existence of the Perm and Tobolsk governorships, the Perm province was headed by I. V. Lamb (1781-1782) and I. V. Koltovsky (1782-1796). The famous local historian V.S. Verkholantsev described their activities as follows: “Both of them, in the presence of the governor, were inconspicuous lice. They could not act independently, and therefore it is difficult to say anything about their activities.”
K. F. Moderach

In accordance with the decree of Emperor Paul I of December 12, 1796 “On the new division of the state into provinces,” the Perm governorate was divided into the Perm and Tobolsk provinces. At the same time, the number of counties was reduced: Obvinsk, Alapaevsk and Dalmatov lost their status as county towns. Karl Fedorovich Moderach, a famous engineer who had previously supervised the construction of canals in St. Petersburg, was appointed governor of Perm. Among his many achievements, his contribution to the construction of roads in the province and the planning of Perm streets is especially noted. In 1804, Moderakh headed the specially established Perm and Vyatka General Government. In 1811, at his own request, he was dismissed from service and promoted to senator.

In 1919, the Ekaterinburg province was separated from the Perm province, consisting of 6 counties located in its eastern part, beyond the Urals. In 1922, the Sarapul district of the Vyatka province was included in its composition. In 1923, the Perm province was abolished, and its territory was included in the Ural region with its center in Yekaterinburg.

Geography

Perm province bordered:
in the north: with the Vologda province;
in the east: with the Tobolsk province;
in the south: with the Orenburg and Ufa provinces;
in the west: with the Vyatka province.

The Perm province occupied an area of ​​332,052 km2 (291,760 sq. versts), of which about 181,000 km2 (159,000 sq. versts) were in Europe, and 151,000 km2 (133,000 sq. versts) were in Asia. The border between its European and Asian parts ran along the Ural Mountains, which cross the territory of the province from north to south for 640 km (600 versts). Highest Peaks, located on the territory of the Perm province - Denezhkin stone (1,532 m), Konzhakovsky stone (1,565 m), Sukhogorsky stone (1,195 m), Pavdinsky stone (938 m) - lie between 60 ° 30 "north latitude and up to 59 ° 21" s. sh.; further to the south to 58°46" north latitude are located: Lyalinsky Stone (853 m) and Kachkanor (881 m), Azov (610 m) and Volchya Mountain (760 m); none of the peaks of the Ural Mountains within the Perm province reaches limits eternal snow, although many of them have snow until the end of June.
Maksimovsky stone on the Chusovaya River (1912) The territory of the province lies in the basins of the Tobol (Asian part), Kama and Pechora (European part) rivers. The Pechora basin occupies a small part of the province - the north of Cherdynsky district, the tributaries of the Pechora in this territory: Unya, Volosnitsa and Pozheg. Pechora and Volosnitsa are navigable and were used by Cherdyn merchants for trade with the Vologda and Arkhangelsk provinces. The only pier on the Pechora River within the province was the Yakshinskaya pier, 64 km below the mouth of Volosnitsa. The most significant of the rivers of the Tobol basin flowing through the territory of the province are Lozva and Sosva, which at their confluence form the Tavda, Tura, Nitsa and Iset rivers. Sosva is navigable only in summer for 85 km below the Bogoslovsky plant. The development of navigation in this part of the province was hampered by the tortuous course of the rivers, their rocky and rapids beds, and frequent mill and factory dams. The largest part of the province is occupied by the Kama River basin, among whose rivers Chusovaya, Sylva and Kolva are of great commercial importance.

Administrative division

The province was divided into 12 districts, which included 106 districts of zemstvo commanders. 41 camps, 484 volosts, 3,180 rural communities, 12,760 villages, 430,000 peasant households.

In the western (European) part of the Perm province there were 7 counties: Name County town Area (km2) Population (1896-1897)

Perm district Perm 27,270.9 240,428
Krasnoufimsk district Krasnoufimsk 24 485 244 310
Kungur district Kungur 11 373 126 258
Osinsky district Osa 19 246 284 547
Okhansky district Okhansk 14,280.17 276,986
Solikamsk district Solikamsk 29,334.3 237,268
Cherdyn district Cherdyn 70 790 101 265

In the eastern (Asian, Trans-Ural) part of the Perm province there were 5 counties: Name County town Area (km2) Population (1896-1897)
Verkhoturye district Verkhoturye 60 117 208 237
Ekaterinburg district Ekaterinburg 28 291 347 133
Irbit district Irbit 10 119 147 786
Kamyshlovsky district Kamyshlov 15 411 248 860
Shadrinsky district Shadrinsk 18,035.6 319,286

Population

The population of the province at the beginning of the 19th century was 940,200 people. In 1896, in the Perm province there were 2,968,472 inhabitants (1,433,231 men and 1,535,211 women): nobles 5,875, clergy 11,415, honorary citizens and merchants 4,675, burghers 92,817, military class 190,270, peasants 2 662,334, other classes 1,086. By religion: Orthodox - 2,640,418, Old Believers - 172,340, Catholics - 2,155, Protestants - 1,034, Jews - 1,876, Muslims - 133,480, pagans - 16,152, other confessions 1 017.

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