Village Tatarja
- EN
- RU
The village on Schubert’s 1832 map, named Tatarow. It comes from the Polish name Tatarow. It is quite likely that the name appeared during the settlement of Tatars in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, as a hypothesis.
Our village is also shown on the military topographic map of the Russian Empire from 1846-1863:
In 1858, the village in the Kobryn district, Grodno province, in the Ziolow volost, the center of the rural community, part of the Ziolow estate of the landowner Tutkiewicz, had 186 registered souls (state peasants). In 1905, there were 456 inhabitants. The village on the one-verst map:
Also on the three-verst map:
From 1921 to 1939, it was part of Poland, in the Ziolow gmina, Dohiczyn County, Polesie Voivodeship. In 1921, there were 18 households and 106 inhabitants. In the 1930s, there were 55 households and 258 inhabitants. The village on the German military map kdwr:
Also on the Polish map WIG:
Since 1939, it has been part of the Belarus SSR. As of October 12, 1940, there were 258 inhabitants in the Braszewicze village council, >ntopol district, Brest region. The village on the Red Army map:
Ten residents of the village died in the Great Patriotic War. Since 1959, it has been part of the Drohiczyn District, with 186 residents. In 1995, there were 58 households and 121 residents.
References and materials used in the post:
- https://ru.wikipedia.org
- Cities and villages of Belarus, Brest Region
- etomesto.ru