Map of the Nizhny Novgorod province A.I. Mende. Detailed ancient maps of the Nizhny Novgorod province, land surveying of counties, etc. Mende map of the Nizhny Novgorod province online

Maps of Nizhny Novgorod province

Detailed vintage maps Nizhny Novgorod province(regions) 20th century, 19th century, 18th century

The date of formation of the Nizhny Novgorod province is 1779. It included 3 provinces (Nizhny Novgorod, Alatyr and Arzamas) and 6 counties. The population at the beginning of the 20th century was 1,799,500 people, and the total area of ​​the territory was 51,252 km 2.

In our electronic library Maps of the Nizhny Novgorod province are available. We are digitizers of ancient maps, survey maps and economic notes - write orders by email!
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Available:

4 layouts without a year.(Makaryevsky district)
Non-topographic map of reading institutions. The scale is set by eye. The scale is 1 inch = 4 versts or 1 cm = 1680 m.
The map is monocolor, non-detailed. There is no collection sheet as it is unnecessary.
- see sample map

Ardatovsky district
quantity: 19 A3 files (in five parts), the county is made along the borders of Catherine

See sample | prefabricated sheet


Arzamas district
quantity: 18 A3 files (in five parts), the county is made along the borders of Pavel

See sample | prefabricated sheet


Balakhninsky district
quantity: 12 A3 files (in three parts), there are two versions of the map of Balakhninsky district varying degrees safety

See sample | prefabricated sheet



Gorbatovsky district
quantity: 12 A3 files, there are two versions of the map of Gobatovsky district of varying degrees of preservation, the meaning of the second version of the map of Gorbatovsky district is to correspond to the numbers from the EP



Lukoyanovsky district
quantity: 16 A3 files (in four parts) in those borders when the map of Lukoyanovsky district partially included Pochinkovsky district with the city of Pochinki and did not border with Sergachsky, at the border with which there were Knyagininsky district and Arzamas district

See sample | prefabricated sheet




Pochinkovsky district
quantity: 16 A3 files (in four parts)

See sample | prefabricated sheet

Economic notes of Gorbatovsky district, alphabet of Mende dachas

Economic notes of Balakhninsky district, alphabet of Mende dachas
quantity: about 100 sheets, handwritten, useful for 100% linking of dachas to the map of Mende of the Nizhny Novgorod province

Expected:

-General survey plan Nizhny Novgorod province on a scale of 1 inch = 1-2 versts
Year of publication - approximately 1790s.
-Non-topographical map, color

To order PGM - inventory according to RGADA:
Provincial map m-4 c. Nizhny Novgorod province
Map of the Nizhny Novgorod Viceroyalty (for the 13th uyezd) Nizhny Novgorod province
Same m-8 v. Nizhny Novgorod province
Provincial map (for 10 districts) m-4 c. Nizhny Novgorod province 1798
The same (unfinished) Nizhny Novgorod province
"Map for the passage of troops - Nizhny Novgorod province" m-10 century. Nizhny Novgorod province 1799
Provincial map m-16th century. Nizhny Novgorod province
Map of Yaroslavl, Kostroma and Nizhny Novgorod provinces with their districts m-24 century. Nizhny Novgorod province
General district plan m-1 c. Nizhny Novgorod province Ardatov district 1791
The same - 2nd copy. Nizhny Novgorod province Ardatov district
General district plan m-1 c. Nizhny Novgorod province Ardatov district 179..
District map m-4 v. Nizhny Novgorod province Ardatov district
The same (rough) m-4 c. Nizhny Novgorod province Ardatov district
District map m-8 v. Nizhny Novgorod province Ardatov district
The same - 2nd copy. m-8 c. Nizhny Novgorod province Ardatov district
General district plan (atlas) in 5 parts. Part 1 m-2 v. Nizhny Novgorod province Ardatov district
Part 2 Nizhny Novgorod province Ardatov district
continuation >>>

To order an EP - inventory according to RGADA:
1. Brief provincial report card. 1 Tables No. 788-792 have different data for the Nizhny Novgorod province (1784-1797).
2. Same. 1 Nizhny Novgorod province (1784-1797).
3. Same. 1800 1 Nizhny Novgorod province (1784-1797).
4. Same. 1 Nizhny Novgorod province (1784-1797).
5. Same. 1 Nizhny Novgorod province (1784-1797).
6. Alphabet of dachas in thirteen counties. 64 m.f. Nizhny Novgorod province (1784-1797).
7. Alphabet of villages, churchyards and other settlements, indicating their distance from the provincial and district cities, the amount of church land, etc. 58 m.f. Nizhny Novgorod province (1784-1797).
8. Economic notes for 268 dachas (dacha numbers 221-268 were added later), alphabets of dachas and owners and time sheets. m.f. Nizhny Novgorod province Ardatov district
9. Economic notes on 220 dachas. 40 m.f. Nizhny Novgorod province Ardatov district
10. Alphabets of dachas and owners. 8 m.f. Nizhny Novgorod province Ardatov district
11. Alphabets of owners. 4 m.f. Nizhny Novgorod province Ardatov district
12. Alphabets of dachas and owners. 1800 24 m.f. Nizhny Novgorod province Ardatov district
13. Brief report card. 1 Nizhny Novgorod province Ardatov district
14. Economic notes for 331 dachas (dacha numbers 320-331 were added later), alphabets of dachas and owners and time sheets. m.f. Nizhny Novgorod province Arzamas district

The Nizhny Novgorod province was established in 1714 during the administrative reform of Peter the Great in the territories included in 1708 in the Kazan province (northwest of this province) with the cities of Alatyr, Arzamas, Balakhna, Vasilsursk, Gorokhovets, Kurmysh, Yuryevets, Yadrin and their surrounding lands. However, in 1717, the Nizhny Novgorod province was abolished, and its lands were again included in the Kazan province. In 1719, the Nizhny Novgorod province was restored as part of 3 provinces (Alatyr, Arzamas, Nizhny Novgorod) and 7 cities. In 1779, under Catherine II, the Novgorod governorship was established, which included the entire territory of the former Nizhny Novgorod province, as well as part of the lands that were previously under the administrative subordination of the provinces of Ryazan, Vladimir, and Kazan. (see ending below)

In the Nizhny Novgorod 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, which may also include this province)

2nd layout of land surveying (1778-1797)
A two-layout map of land surveying - non-topographic (latitudes and longitudes are not indicated on it), a hand-drawn map of the last decades of the 18th century, very detailed - on a scale of 1 inch 2 versts or in 1 cm 840 m. A single county was drawn in fragments, on several sheets, shown on a single composite sheet. The purpose of the survey map is to indicate the boundaries of private land plots (so-called dachas) within the county.

1-layout of the Nizhny Novgorod province of Mende, 1850s.
One-page map of Mende - topographic (latitudes and longitudes are indicated on it), drawn map mid-19th V. (after regular changes in the borders of Russian provinces in 1802-03), very detailed - on a scale of 1 inch 1 verst or 1 cm 420 m. The province is divided into squares shown on the collection sheet.

We have at our disposal a full-size electronic version of the map of the Nizhny Novgorod province Mende 1b with a resolution of 300 dpi.

Lists of populated places in the Nizhny Novgorod province 1863 (according to 1859 data)

- status of a settlement (village, hamlet, hamlet - proprietary or state-owned, i.e. state);
- location of the settlement (in relation to the nearest highway, camp, river or river);

- distance from the district town and camp apartment (camp center) in versts;
- presence of a church, chapel, mill, etc.

Lists of water supply to villages of Nizhny Novgorod province 1914
The list of populated places is a universal reference publication containing the following information:
- status of the locality (village, hamlet, hamlet);
- location of the settlement (in relation to the nearest highway, camp, well, pond, stream, river or river);
- the number of households in a settlement and its population;
- distance from the county town, postal station or railway road in versts;
- etc.

Economic notes to the General Survey of the Nizhny Novgorod Province


For the Nizhny Novgorod province, handwritten economic notes of all counties

Under Paul the First in 1796, as a result of reorganization, the Nizhny Novgorod governorship began to be called a province. At the same time, the counties of Knyagininsky, Makaryevsky, Perevozsky, Pochinkovsky (the last two were not subsequently restored), and Sergachsky were abolished. In 1797, the Nizhny Novgorod province included lands from the Penza province, abolished at the same time. The last changes in the administrative boundaries of the Nizhny Novgorod province and its composition took place during the reign of Alexander the First (in September 1801), when the lands that previously belonged to the Penza province (Krasnoslobodskaya district), which at that time were restored to their previous borders, were excluded from the province. As part of the Nizhny Novgorod province itself, the districts of Knyagininsky, Makaryevsky, and Sergachsky were simultaneously restored. Throughout the subsequent pre-revolutionary period of the history of the Nizhny Novgorod province, its borders and the composition of the districts did not change.

Map of the Nizhny Novgorod province in 1850 from the collection of A.I. Mende is one of the most important cartographic sources, comparable in importance to general survey plans late XVIII century. In total, under the leadership of A.I. Mende compiled atlases of 8 provinces of central Russia: Tver, Ryazan, Tambov, Vladimir, Yaroslavl, Nizhny Novgorod, Simbirsk and Penza.

Map scale: 1:42000 (one verst in one inch, or 420 m in 1 cm). In addition to settlements, it shows the terrain of the area in some detail - ravines, lowlands, plains, rivers, lakes. The lowlands are highlighted in blue, the highlands in pale brown. Next to each name settlement The number of yards in it is indicated in red. The numbers of dachas according to the general survey catalog are indicated in black. Red and black crosses – stone and wooden churches. Chapels are marked with a red (stone) or yellow (wooden) circle with a cross on top. Thin slanting crosses on vertical lines indicate the location of windmills. Several simple crosses in a common frame indicate cemetery sites. The map shows the road network in detail, although road names are not given.

The Mende map is linked to modern map terrain. To go to the map itself, move the cursor to the center of the picture below and left-click.

This is the story...

Nizhny Novgorod province During the regional reform of Peter I in 1708, Nizhny Novgorod was included in the Kazan province. In January 1714, a new Nizhny Novgorod province was separated from the northwestern parts of the Kazan province. In addition to Nizhny Novgorod, the province included the cities of Alatyr, Arzamas, Balakhna, Vasilsursk, Gorokhovets, Kurmysh, Yuryevets, Yadrin with adjacent territories. In 1717, the province was abolished, and the territories returned to the Kazan province.

On May 29, 1719, as a result of the Second Peter's reform, the Nizhny Novgorod province was again recreated. It included 3 provinces: Alatyr, Arzamas, Nizhny Novgorod and 7 cities.

During the administrative reform of Catherine II on September 5, 1779, the Nizhny Novgorod governorate was established, which included the old Nizhny Novgorod province, as well as parts of the previously formed Ryazan and Vladimir governorships and part of the Kazan province.

On December 12, 1796, under Paul I, the Nizhny Novgorod governorship was renamed into a province.

In October 1797, the size of the Nizhny Novgorod province was increased due to the territories received during the division of the Penza province. After the accession of Alexander I to the throne on September 9, 1801, the Penza province was restored to its previous extent.

In connection with the zemstvo reform, in 1865, the institution of local government, the zemstvo, was introduced in the Nizhny Novgorod province.
After October revolution In 1917, the Nizhny Novgorod province became part of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) formed in 1918.

In 1922, the province included Varnavinsky and Vetluzhsky districts of the Kostroma province, Kurmyshsky district of the Simbirsk province and a small part of the Tambov province.

By a resolution of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of January 14, 1929, the provinces were completely liquidated. On the territory of the Nizhny Novgorod province, the Nizhny Novgorod region was formed; the territory of the abolished Vyatka province and small sections of the Vladimir and Kostroma provinces were also included in it.

Nizhny Novgorod province presented:
- Odnolayout(1 verst in one English inch) - 1 cm = 420 meters, one of the most detailed maps from those available in the province.

Available:

1-layout of the Nizhny Novgorod province of Mende, 1850s.

One-page map of Mende - topographical (latitudes and longitudes are indicated on it), drawn map of the mid-19th century. (after the next changes in the boundaries of the provinces of Russia in 1802-03), very detailed - on a scale of 1 inch 1 verst or 1 cm - 420 m. The province is divided into squares shown on the collection sheet.