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Village Kublik

The village was mentioned in 1785 in the “Geographical Dictionary of the Kingdom of Poland and Other Slavic Countries”, Vol. VIII:

1775

The village of Kublik from written sources is also mentioned during the construction of the Dnieper-Bug Canal in (1775-1848). Also thanks to the canal, the village gained an important territorial significance, which influenced its economic growth.

Since 1795 in the Russian Empire, in Grodno Gubernia. The village is on Napoleon’s map of 1812:

1812

The village on Schubert’s map of 1826-1840:

szubert 1826-1840

The village on the military topographic map of the Russian Empire for 1846-1863:

WTKRI 1846-1863

In 1858 the village, the center of the village community of Osowiec volost, Kobryn district, Grodno province. It was a part of the Liachowicze estate of the landlord Georgy Szemiet. In 1886 there were 41 courtyards and 530 inhabitants. In 1905 the village had 760 inhabitants. In the archives of RGIA, F. 1344 Op. 5 Д. 974 there is a record of the village, the extreme dates of December 14, 1884. - January 05, 1884:

Second (peasant) Department of the Senate. On the resolution of the dispute between Princess Drucka-Lubecka and the peasants of the village of Kubliki on the right to own part of the hayfield in the estate Liachowicze. Grodno province, Kobrin district.

Also the second record RGIA, F. 1344 Op. 9 D. 1039, extreme dates June 13, 1886. - July 06, 1887:

Second (peasant) Department of the Senate. On the resolution of disputes arising between the landlady Lubecka and the peasants of the village Kublik, in the delimitation of land allotments. Grodno province, Kobrin district.

The village is on a single-surface map:

1-ka

Also on the triple-width map:

3-ka

From 1921 to 1939 it was a part of Poland, in Osowiec commune, Drohiczyn district, Poleskie voivodeship. In 1921 there were 51 yards and 211 inhabitants, of whom 210 were Orthodox. The village is on the Polish WIG link:

WIG

Since 04.12.1939 it was part of the BSSR, in Drohiczyn district, Pinsk region. There were 156 households and 850 inhabitants. From 15.01.1940 in Drohiczyn district, from 12.10.1940 in Popinsk village council. The village is on the map of Red Army:

RKKA

Also the village on the German map kdwr:

kdwr

In the Great Patriotic War in August 1943, Nazi invaders burned 132 yards, killed 17 inhabitants of the village. In February-March 1944 near the village there were fights of Molotov partisans (Pinsk partisan association) with the enemy group for the Dnieper-Bug canal. At the front and in partisan fights 30 inhabitants of the village were killed. Since 1954 it was in Brest region. In 1959 there were 756 inhabitants, in 1970 - 582 inhabitants, in 1995 - 42 yards and 322 inhabitants.

References and materials used in the post: