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Where in Ilsky. Ilsky Krasnodar region reviews from those who moved. More details about Ilsky streets on the map

The current village of Ilsky, stretching for several kilometers along the banks of the Il River, can safely be called the ancestor of all settlements in the Seversky region. It was founded earlier than other villages and farms - in 1863.

The first batch of settlers arrived here on June 27, 1863. This date began to be considered the founding day. The Cossacks who founded the village were mainly from. Over the course of a century and a half, many different events have taken place. I would like to dwell on some of them in more detail.

Military fortification

For the offensive movement into the territory of the lands of the Trans-Kuban highlanders, in the spring of 1860, three military Cossack detachments were formed. The task of , who was stationed on the territory of the region, was to occupy such a strategically important point in the land of the Shapsugs, so that “having erected a fortification, we would be able to gather troops in it, spreading their actions in all directions...”. The point was chosen in the village of Kabanitsa on the upper reaches of the Il River in the center of the Shapsug population. In mid-May 1860, troops of the Sredne-Shapsug detachment founded the Il fortification on the Il River, designed for an infantry battalion. It housed the headquarters of the Sredne-Shapsug detachment. 703 Cossacks, a cavalry team, 42 constables, 11 trumpeters and a paramedic were permanently stationed in the new fortification. The later famous Minister of War D.A. also took part in the detachment’s combat operations. Milyutin, who served at that time in the Caucasus.

The fortification was not designed for long-term military residence, and the winter of 1861 turned out to be very harsh. The lower ranks especially suffered from severe frosts, their hands and feet were frozen, as reported by their commanders. By the fall of 1861, the garrison of the Ilsky fortification was transferred to another location, and the fortification itself, which had lost its strategic significance, was abolished.

Cossack village and the first settlers

In 1863, it was decided to build villages. From May 17 to June 10, the military measured and arranged a place for the Cossacks to settle. The settlers arrived led by G.K. Chernov from the Novospasovskaya, Starodubovskaya and Petrovskaya villages of the Azov Cossack army. The head of the party was instructed to “observe and take care of the settlers, as befits a good leader, to preserve the people and all their property and livestock.”

Arriving at the place of settlement, the Cossacks saw that there was a forest all around the village, among which there were occasionally clearings in which the Circassians sowed grain. Upon arrival, the settlers built huts for themselves, in which they lived until winter, and by winter they built huts. All the settlers came with good cattle, riding on oxen. The land was plowed with wooden plows, which they made themselves, mowed with scythes, and some threshed with flails, others with wooden rollers, and still others with carts. It was decided to name the village Ilskaya in honor of the river on which it was founded.

Years later...

Decades have passed, more than one generation has changed, but Ilchan residents remember their famous village residents. Often in the newspaper “Kuban Regional Gazette” one could find notes with memories of the residents’ past. The famous village paramedic Joseph Zyuzin, who was later elected ataman of the village, was respected both during his life and after his death. He had to work hard to stop the epidemic of diseases among the residents.

By 1886, a wooden school appeared in the village, and the first school building according to a standard design was built here in 1876; in 1896, on the corner of the current Pobeda and Sovetskaya streets, the building of the ministerial Cossack school appeared.

The villagers also remembered Deomid Kuts, who in 1867 was sent to honorable service in the convoy of Emperor Alexander II. The military singing choir (today the Kuban Cossack Choir) also included Ilchan residents - in 1868, Andrei Baranov, a Cossack from the village, joined the choir to sing.

With victory from the Russian-Turkish War of 1877-1878. Non-commissioned officers Philip Beda and Ivan Mamont returned to Ilskaya, awarded medals.

In 1901, the new village ataman, constable Nikolai Ivanovich Koval, stopped the increasing crime rate and brought order to the village. The rector of St. Nicholas Church, priest Lev Chalenko, also had a great influence on the course of life in the village. He was one of the oldest and most honored priests of the deanery, which is why he was chosen as its confessor. Only thanks to the petition of Father Lev, it became possible to open a post office and telegraph in the village.

It began in 1914. For military merits and heroism, the highest military award of the empire - the St. George Cross, 3rd degree - was awarded to the Cossacks of the village Pyotr Prochko, Yakov Borshch, and 4th degree Makar Panchenko, Nikifor Priyma, Dmitry Udaly, Leonty Kulik, Isidor Zazulya, Zakhary Prochko, Klementy Kalyuzhny.

N.V. Kiyashko / Newspaper “ZORI”

Here is a map of Ilsky with streets → Krasnodar region, Russia. We study a detailed map of the station. Ilsky with house numbers and streets. Real-time search, coordinates

More details about Ilsky streets on the map

A detailed map of the village of Ilsky with street names shows routes and roads where the street is located. Mira and Sverdlov. The station is located near.

For a detailed study of the territory of the entire region, it is enough to change the scale of the online diagram +/-. On the page there is an interactive map of the village of Ilsky with addresses and routes of the microdistrict. Move its center to find Pervomaiskaya and Dlinnaya streets. The ability to plot a route through the territory using the “Ruler” tool, find out the length of the territory of the village, addresses of attractions.

You will find all the necessary detailed information about the location of the infrastructure - stations and shops, squares and banks, highways and lanes.

Satellite map of Ilskiy with Google search is waiting for you in its section. You can use Yandex search to find the required house number on the folk diagram of the village in the Krasnodar region of Russia, in real time. . St. Lenina and Pionerskaya will help you navigate the territory.

Coordinates - 44.8446,38.5677

Ilsky website, selling goods via the Internet. Allows users online, in their browser or through a mobile application, to create a purchase order, select a method of payment and delivery of the order, and pay for the order.

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Children's store

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Food

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Ilsky Refinery, Ilsky weather for a month
Golovko Nikolay Viktorovich
(acting head since 2011)

Based 1863 Former names Ilskaya PGT with 1947 Population ↗24,831 people (2015) Timezone UTC+3 Telephone code +7 86166 Postal codes 353230-353232 Vehicle code 23, 93, 123 OKATO code 03 243 555 OKTMO code 03 643 155 051 Official site ilskiy.info
on Wikimedia Commons List of soldiers and officers buried in a mass grave in the cemetery in the village of Ilsky.

Ilsky (Ilskaya)- village, since 1947 officially called an “urban-type village”, in the Seversky district of the Krasnodar Territory, the administrative center of the Ilsky urban settlement. Population - 24,831 people. (2015).

  • 1. History
  • 2 Population
  • 3 Administrative device
  • 4 Economics
  • 5 Healthcare
  • 6 Attractions
  • 7 Topographic maps
  • 8 Sources
  • 9 Links

Story

The village of Ilskaya was founded before all other settlements in the Seversky region. On June 16, 1863, by order of the commander of the Caucasian Army, the combined squadron of the Seversky Dragoon Regiment began the construction of a village called Ilskaya, the name was given after the Il River (in Adyghe - brilliant). Already on June 27, 1863, the first batch of Cossack settlers appeared. This date began to be considered the founding day of the village.

There were 234 families of settlers: Cossacks of the former Black Sea army from the right bank villages of the Kuban region (Krylovskaya, Kushchevskaya, Staroderevyankovskaya, Novonizhneteblyevskaya, Elizavetinskaya and Kilyakovskaya), Cossacks of the abolished Azov army, Cossacks of the Don army and peasants of the Poltava and Chernigov provinces (40 families). To alleviate the plight of the settlers, the government provided various benefits: cash rewards, land plots for hereditary ownership, etc.

At first, the village consisted of eight streets, running four to the north and south from the central square; they did not adhere to a clear layout. The houses were built quickly in order to be in time before the cold weather, covered with reeds, straw and marsh grass, which is why they were neither beautiful nor comfortable, and the fences around the estates were surrounded with wattle fences made of hazel and dogwood. For the first three years, the Cossacks of the village, whose duty included periodic cordon service on the southern borders of Russia, were supported by the Kuban army, receiving the so-called “portioned” (various food products), but soon they had to master agriculture (growing grain crops) and breed livestock Rich Cossacks began building mills. The first of them was built on the Il River by Polycarp Chumak. By 1866, the village already had four trading shops, five taverns, one blacksmith shop, a public bathhouse and a small brick factory. Public buildings appeared, including the village administration house made of mud brick, a bread store, which simultaneously served as a storage facility for the reserve grain fund created from the “contributions” of each village family, a chapel for worship (in 1867, a prayer house was built in its place using public funds, and in 1871 - a church). By 1886, a wooden school appeared in the village, and the first school building according to a standard design (with an apartment for the teacher) was built in 1876, in 1896, on the corner of the current Pobeda and Sovetskaya streets, the building of a ministerial Cossack school appeared, and by the end of the 19th century A women's parochial school was also opened. In 1905, a non-resident school named after Turgenev appeared, in 1908 - a non-resident school.

After the Bolshevik coup, the village of Ilskaya was part of the proclaimed Soviet Kuban People's Republic, and from February 16, 1918, part of the independent Cossack Kuban People's Republic.

During the Civil War, the bulk of the Kuban Cossacks, led by generals Shkuro and Ulay, fought against the Bolsheviks with weapons in their hands. This was facilitated by the confiscation and redistribution of military lands, the Bolshevik policy, which contributed to the incitement of national hatred, which led to executions and robberies of Cossacks by nonresidents, looting of Red Army detachments consisting of nonresidents, acts of “decossackization” during the “Triumphal March of Soviet Power” (1918) .

On March 3, 1920, the Red Army began the Kuban-Novorossiysk operation. The Volunteer Corps, Don and Kuban armies, exhausted in battle, retreated under the pressure of a superior enemy. On March 17, the Red Army took Yekaterinodar, the Kuban Army was pressed to the Georgian border and capitulated on May 2-3. The Kuban People's Republic, its government and the Kuban Cossack Army were abolished.

Kuban units that escaped capitulation were evacuated to Crimea. The Russian Army of General Wrangel, these units entered the Kuban Corps under the command of Generals Abramov and Ulagai. After the defeat of the Russian army, these Cossacks who survived the battles ended up in exile.

On September 24, 2011, a monument to the victims of the Civil War was unveiled in Ilskaya in the courtyard of St. Nicholas Church.

During the Great Patriotic War, in the fall of 1942, the village of Ilskaya was occupied by German troops. On the evening of February 19, the operation to liberate Ilskaya was launched. As a result of night battles, by the morning of February 20, 1943, Ilskaya was liberated.

On August 14, 1947, according to the Resolution of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR, the village of Ilskaya was renamed into the workers' village of Ilsky. in everyday life it is still called the village of Ilskaya.

Population

Population
1959 1970 1979 1989 2002 2009 2010 2012 2013 2014
17 086 ↗18 177 ↗18 560 ↗19 077 ↗22 323 ↗23 097 ↗23 781 ↗24 036 ↗24 244 ↗24 508
2015
↗24 831

Administrative structure

In addition to Ilskaya, the Ilsky urban settlement also includes the village of Derbentskaya.

Economy

  • OJSC Ilsky Weighting Plant - NPO Burenie. The plant was built in 1952. Production of clay powder and barite weighting agents for oil and gas and machine-building enterprises.
  • The Ilsky Oil Refinery LLC enterprise is a structural division of Kuban Oil and Gas Company OJSC. The plant was converted into an oil refinery in 2001.

Healthcare

  • Wellness center "Amrita" - center and clinic of Ayurvedic medicine O. G. Torsunov.

Attractions

  • One of the oldest Paleolithic sites of primitive man in Eastern Europe, “Ilskaya-2”, is a monument of republican significance, located on the left bank of the Il River at the southern outskirts of the village.
  • The church building was built in 1873.

Topographic maps

  • Map Sheet L-37-114. Scale: 1: 100,000. State of the area in 1985. 1988 edition

Sources

  1. Seversky district. 145 years of the village of Ilsky
  2. 1 2 3 Population estimate as of January 1, 2015 for municipalities of the Krasnodar Territory. Retrieved May 4, 2015. Archived from the original on May 4, 2015.
  3. History of the village of Ilskaya // Mirtesen. November 1, 2009.
  4. O. V. Ratushnyak. Political quests of the Don and Kuban Cossacks during the Civil War in Russia (1918-1920) // White Guard. No. 8. Russian Cossacks in the White Movement. M., Posev, 2005, pp. 17-23
  5. D. D. Bily. Kuban People's Republic // Encyclopedia of the History of Ukraine: Vol. 5: Kon - Kyu. / Editorial Board: V. A. Smoliy (head) and in. NAS of Ukraine. Institute of History of Ukraine. - K.: Naukova Dumka, 2008. - 568 p. : ill. 978-966-00-0855-4
  6. Kuban-Novorossiysk operation 1920 // Civil war and military intervention in the USSR. Encyclopedia. M., Soviet Encyclopedia, 1983.
  7. A. A. Zaitsev. Kuban regional government during the years of revolution and Civil War in Kuban in 1917-1920
  8. A monument to the victims of the Civil War was erected in the Seversky district // Living Kuban. September 27, 2011.
  9. History of the Seversky district
  10. All-Union Population Census of 1959. The size of the urban population of the RSFSR, its territorial units, urban settlements and urban areas by gender (Russian). Demoscope Weekly. Retrieved September 25, 2013. Archived from the original on April 28, 2013.
  11. All-Union Population Census of 1970 The size of the urban population of the RSFSR, its territorial units, urban settlements and urban areas by gender. (Russian). Demoscope Weekly. Retrieved September 25, 2013. Archived from the original on April 28, 2013.
  12. All-Union Population Census of 1979 The size of the urban population of the RSFSR, its territorial units, urban settlements and urban areas by gender. (Russian). Demoscope Weekly. Retrieved September 25, 2013. Archived from the original on April 28, 2013.
  13. All-Union population census of 1989. Urban population. Archived from the original on August 22, 2011.
  14. 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. Archived from the original on February 3, 2012.
  15. The permanent population of the Russian Federation by cities, urban-type settlements and regions as of January 1, 2009. Retrieved January 2, 2014. Archived from the original on January 2, 2014.
  16. All-Russian population census 2010. Volume 1, table 4. Urban and rural population by gender in the Krasnodar Territory. Retrieved January 2, 2015. Archived from the original on January 2, 2015.
  17. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities. Table 35. Estimated resident population as of January 1, 2012. Retrieved May 31, 2014. Archived from the original on May 31, 2014.
  18. 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). Retrieved November 16, 2013. Archived from the original on November 16, 2013.
  19. Population estimate as of January 1, 2014 for municipalities of the Krasnodar Territory. Retrieved April 27, 2014. Archived from the original on April 27, 2014.
  20. About us // Official website of the Center for Ayurvedic Medicine.
  21. Ilskaya site in Kuban
  22. Ilsky Paleolithic sites
  23. Business card of the Ilsky urban settlement on the official website of the Seversky district administration.

Links

  • Official website of the Ilsky urban settlement
  • Information and business portal of the Seversky district
  • Website of the regional newspaper "Zori" - news, events, reports, reviews, photo gallery of the region, newspaper archive, forum, blog
  • Ilsky - article from the Great Soviet Encyclopedia
  • Information about the village of Ilsky on the website of the Seversky district administration

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Ilsky Information About Ilsky village was formed in 1863 as a village Ilskaya . On August 14, 1947, the village was transformed into a village The village of Ilsky is the oldest settlement in.

In the spring of 1860, for military operations beyond the Kuban, three Cossack detachments were formed from Black Sea plastuns: Adagumsky, Labinsky and Shapsugsky. The Shapsug detachment was intended to conduct military operations in the land of the Shapsugs.

The Shapsug detachment was “the most significant in its composition and the most important operations of this year were entrusted to it.” According to the instructions of Lieutenant General G.I. Philipson on March 12, 1860, Major General Rudanovsky was appointed to the post of chief of the Shapsug detachment, while remaining assistant commander of the troops of the right wing of the Caucasian line. In the period from March to May 1860, the Shapsug detachment consisted of 20 ¼ infantry battalions, 6 squadrons and 1 hundred cavalry, 32 guns and 8 rocket launchers. On April 16-17, 1860, the troops of the Shapsug detachment concentrated at the Velikolagerny post in the Kuban. On April 18-21, 1860, a pontoon bridge was built on the Kuban River and a tete-de-pont was erected ».

The main goal of the actions of the Shapsug detachment at this stage was to occupy such a strategically important point in the land of the Shapsugs, so that, “having erected a fortification, we would be able to gather troops in it, spreading their actions in all directions... The point was chosen in the village of Kabanits, on the upper reaches of the Il River , in the center of the Shapsug population."

Describing the fighting against Highlanders, it is worth mentioning their weapons and way of life. From the most distant times, the mountaineers were known as ardent fans of war, spending their lives in campaigns and military exploits to glorify their name. According to their concepts, only a daring robber, a tireless predator and a daring thief received the right to the loud name “dzhigit”. The mountaineers said: “theft and robbery are our occupation, as well as yours – plowing and trade. Our grandfathers and fathers lived by robbery, and if we leave their craft, we will be forced to die of hunger.” Under such concepts and living conditions, everything came down to the ability to control a horse and wield a weapon. The Circassian mastered these qualities down to the subtleties and mastered them to perfection. The entire mountain male population was armed with daggers, swords, rifles and pistols, bows and arrows, protected by chain mail and armor, metal hats, elbow pads and other things.

The clothing of the Circassians consisted of a Circassian jacket, a beshmet, a black shaggy kurpei hat with a high top, and in winter they also wore a sheepskin sheepskin coat; They wore leather boots and the same or cloth leggings on their feet. Clothes and shoes were comfortable and beautifully cut, deftly hugged the waist and legs, and fully satisfied the requirements of the rider and equestrian fighter.

The gun was worn in a shaggy felt case over the right shoulder, and the pistol was carried behind the belt, in the back in a cloth case or a leather holster on the belt near the saber. These were, in general terms, the life and character of the Trans-Kuban Circassian during the Caucasian War. All this was adopted from the Circassians by the Cossacks and was then legalized.

The Adagum people, together with the Main Shapsug detachment (Lieutenant General Rudanovsky) and the Middle Shapsug detachment (Colonel Levashov), launched a comprehensive offensive against the Shapsugs between Abin, Khabl and Il. True, for some time the Adagum and Middle Shapsug detachments were limited to reconnaissance and minor skirmishes with the highlanders.

At the end of March, the Main Shapsug detachment moved in two columns to village of Kabanitsy, where a battle with the Shapsugs began. On the site of the village, a redoubt (a small field fortification with an external rampart and a ditch) for one battalion was built, and the main part of the detachment moved further up the Il River. Having climbed the wooded hills of the right bank of the river, the troops occupied a small Empsychiako village. On May 16, the detachment began to cut a clearing one mile wide along the Genoese road to the East towards the Ubin and Afips rivers. For some time, the headquarters of the Main Shapsug Otyarad was located near the village of Empsychiako.

At the beginning of May 1860, troops of the Sredne-Shapsug detachment founded the Il fortification on the Il River, designed for an infantry battalion. It housed the headquarters of the Sredne-Shapsug detachment. 703 Cossacks, a cavalry-rocket team with 8 rocket launchers, 42 constables, 11 trumpeters and a paramedic were permanently stationed in the new fortification. The 2nd battalion of the Stavropol Infantry Regiment was appointed as the garrison for the fortification, and the commander of the battalion, Major Smirnov, on May 19, by order of the commander of the Shapsug detachment, was appointed at the same time as the head of the fortification. On May 20, two companies of the battalion were located in the fortification. Second lieutenant of the Stavropol Infantry Regiment Maivaidov was appointed head of the emerging craftsman team during the fortification and seconded to the military engineering department.

Construction of the fortification was delayed and lasted until October. The main reason for the slowdown was the constant harmless but protracted skirmishes between the mountaineers and the work teams. On October 25, the commander of the Sredne-Shapsug detachment raided mountain settlements on the river. Afips, during which 1,763 head of cattle were killed, and on November 7 an expedition was made to the villages along the river. Ubin, during which a significant number of livestock were also captured and villages were destroyed.

Colonel Levashev with a detachment (6 battalions, 4 hundred Cossacks and 10 guns) moved from the Ilsky fortification to the west, along the so-called Genoese, or Merchant Road, and settled on the Bogai River, destroying several villages with supplies during this movement. On December 1, cutting of the clearing began in the direction of the Ilsky fortification, and at the same time the column, under the command of Colonel Koniyar, foraged along the gorge of the river. Bogai up and down from the squad's location.

“By mid-August, the development of clearings and roads between the Ilsky and Grigorievsky fortifications was completed, and direct communication was opened between these points.”

In the memoirs of D. Milyutin, the famous military minister of the government of Alexander II, we read about this: “The Shapsugsky or Ilsky detachment, under the command of Major General Rudanovsky, consisting of 20 battalions, 2 dragoon regiments and a mass of Cossacks, was appointed to build several fortifications beyond the Kuban and to strike the Shapsugs. Having crossed the Kuban in the twentieth of April, the detachment knocked out the highlanders from aula Kabanits, destroyed it, and on May 5 moved to the place chosen for the construction of the fortification, which later received the name Ilsky.

Colonel Levshov was ordered from the Ilsky fortification to cut a clearing towards the Adagum detachment on the Bugundyr River. And when the Main Shapsug detachment set out from the Grigorievsky fortification on December 3 under the command of Count Evdokimov along the paved road from the Shebsh River to the Ilsky fortification, on December 4 Levashov’s detachment left and joined the Main detachment.

On December 3, a detachment (including 9 battalions, 4 squadrons of dragoons, 4 hundred Cossacks and 10 guns), under the personal command of Adjutant General Count Evdokimov, moved from the fortification through the Ilskoye fortification and on the 4th, having passed the detachment of Colonel Levashev, stopped at the river . Azipse. For the successful construction of a clearing from the river. Azipsa to the river Antkhyr and for greater connection in subsequent actions, was compiled on the river. Habl is an intermediate detachment, under the command of His Majesty's Retinue, Major General Kartsev.

On December 16, leaving part of the troops under the command of Colonel Levashev at Ubin, Major General Prince Svyatopolk-Mirsky moved to the Grigorievsky fortification. From December 18 to 22, the troops of the Shapsug detachment cut a clearing from the Grigorievsky fortification in a direct direction to Yekaterinodar

As a result of the December military operations, a clearing 74 miles long and a mile wide was laid on the land of the Shapsugs. The significance of the clearing laid was great. It became the only road that connected a number of fortified points of Russian troops in the Trans-Kuban region. Much later, a branch of the Vladikavkaz railway will be built along this clearing. The cut clearing coincided with the line of the ancient Genoese road of the 16th century. The road also passed near the Ilsky fortification (the area of ​​the Ilsky site).

The winter of 1861 in Kuban turned out to be unusually harsh. The lower ranks especially suffered from severe frosts, their hands and feet were frozen, as reported by their commanders.

By the fall of 1861, the garrison of the Ilsky fortification was transferred to another location, and the fortification itself was abolished.

In 1863, the first village of the modern Seversky region, Ilskaya, was founded.

Heads of the village of Ilskaya

May 12 - August 6, 1863 captain Gerasim Konstantinovich Chernov(from the Cossacks of the Azov army)

June 3, 1869 - 1871 captain Kirill Ignatievich Kravchenko(from the Cossacks of the Azov army)

Atamans of the village of Ilskaya

1871-1874 sergeant Matvey Tarasovich Rogozny

1875 constable Joseph Zyuzin

1876 ​​constable Nikolai Drapov

1878-1881 clerk Klim Kiriy

1888-1883 constable Efim Bald Horse

1885-1888 sergeant Alexey Nikiforovich Semenchenko(GAKK. F. 454. Op. 2. D. 1924. L. 17)

1889-1892 constable Peter Matyusha

1894-1897 constable Mikhailovsky(GAKK. F. 418. Op. 1. D. 3824. L. 81)

1897-1899 Ivan Vasilievich Nikolaenko

1900 Alexey Nikiforovich Semenchenko

1901 - constable Nikolaev

1902-1907 sergeant Nikolai Ivanovich Koval

1908-1914 Yakov Pavlovich Gorbachev

1915-1916 Matvey Markelovich Whistler

1917-1918 Sergeant Yakov Arsentievich Lukash

1919-1920 Ilya Ivanovich Payfasor

1 to 12.03.1920 Philip Yatskov

NOTES

  1. Ignatovich D.Yu. Combat chronicle of the 82nd Dagestan Infantry Regiment of His Imperial Highness Grand Duke Nikolai Mikhailovich during the Caucasian War (1845-1861). Tiflis, 1897.P.330
  2. State Archive of the Krasnodar Territory (SAKK). F.696. Op.1.D.11. L.29-32
  3. Ibid., l.3
  4. Zisserman A.L. History of the 80th Kabardian Infantry General Field Marshal Prince Baryatinsky Regiment (1726-1880). St. Petersburg, 1881. T.3. P. 388
  5. Right there. P. 388
  6. Lamanov A.D. History of the first Caucasian regiment. Ekaterinodar, 1919. P.16-17
  7. Ponomarev V.P. Essays on the history of the founding of Trans-Kuban villages in the mid-19th century. – Krasnodar, 2007. P. 26
  8. Russian State Military Historical Archive (hereinafter referred to as RGVIA). F. 482. Op. 1. D. 236. L. 41-43.
  9. Zisserman A.L. Op. op. pp. 390, 392
  10. Milyutin D.A. Memories. 1856-1860 - M., 2004. - P. 450-451.
  11. Kisterev A.M. Stanitsa Ilskaya: historical essays. Krasnodar, 1994. P.