Briefly about our city: Lytkarino is a city in the Moscow region, located 6 km. southeast of Moscow along Novoryazanskoye Highway. The population is 58 thousand people. Lytkarino is famous for its optical glass plant (LZOS), large factories and aviation industry centers (CIAM, LMZ, NIIP), and the Volkusha quarry. On the territory of the city there is a large Lytkarinsky food processing plant, and in 2021 the Avantage data center was built.
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Excavation work has begun in the forest behind LZOS. The workers say that there will be a road here. The end of the ski track......
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Explain what kind of pigs you need to be?! Who should clean it up? Only 3 managed to take photos, 2 escaped...
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Quarter 2, building 12 - another sidewalk that is never cleaned by Mosavtodor. When will you start working? ⠀…
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Climate
The climate in Lytkarino is moderate continental. Winter is long and cold. The coldest month is January, the average temperature reaches -11 degrees. Summer is warm and short. July is considered the hot summer month, with an average temperature of +19.1 degrees.
Industry of the city of Lytkarino:
- Euroliftmash;
- Lytkarinsky Optical Glass Factory;
- Lytkarino industrial railway transport enterprise;
- Production of metal structures LLC "DiPos";
- Food industry company JSC Sterion.
News of the city of Lytkarino
All Lytkarino news
December 8, 2021 334 0
Karatekas from Lytkarino showed excellent results
December 7, 2021 286 0
Lytkarinsky karatekas from the city of Borovsk brought 36 medals
December 3, 2021 380 0
Extension of the period of disability is available to residents of Lytkarino in an online format
December 2, 2021 571 0
The renovation of the bathhouse complex in Lytkarino is more than half complete
December 1, 2021 536 0
The skating rink in the central park of culture and recreation will be filled for the residents of Lytkarino
November 30, 2021 446 0
The stadium of Lytkarino school No. 5 is available to citizens for sports
November 26, 2021 475 0
More than 18 thousand passengers took the river route to Lytkarino in 2021
November 25, 2021 420 0
“Safe Region” in action: more than 100 cameras will be installed in Lytkarino next year
November 25, 2021 545 0
Lytkarin residents are invited to vote for the arrangement of dedicated lanes on Novoryazanskoye Highway
November 24, 2021 466 0
At what temperature in the apartment should Lytkar residents contact the management company?
Add city newsLytkarino
Encyclopedia of Russian villages, 2007
Lytkarino
There is an assumption that the city of Lytkarino (28 km southeast of Moscow) got its name from a river that once flowed in these parts. Mention of it is found in the Scribe books of 1628. The legend says: in dry times, Lytka resembled a stream that could be forded without getting your shins wet (“Lytka” - leg, shin). Perhaps it is precisely this that is indicated in the Land Survey Books of the Chudov Monastery in the early 80s of the 17th century as a boundary marker.
In addition to the former village of Lytkarino (in earlier sources - the village of Lytkorino, Vytkorino, Itkorino), the modern city limits also include the ancient villages of Alchevo, Petrovskoye, Usady and Turaevo.
The results of excavations in the 50s of the 20th century showed that the territory in question on the left bank of the Moscow River was inhabited already in the first centuries of our era, which was facilitated by favorable conditions for human life.
The ancient origin of Lytkarino is evidenced by a 15th-century document given to the Chudov Monastery by a certain nun Martha, the widow of Boris Volodimirovich, “for the commemoration of relatives” (kept in the manuscript department of the Russian State Library). Unfortunately, the text of the document is partially lost, and its exact dating is missing. However, experts managed to clarify it (1429-1461) with the help of the inventories of the Chudov Monastery, where Lytkarino appears, among other things, in the grant of this charter to Prince Vasily Vasilyevich (Dark) in 1451-1461 “for the right to slaughter the fishing channel on the monastic land of Itkarine ..."
From then until the beginning of the 18th century, Lytkorino (written in the 17th-18th centuries) remained church property, until in 1702 Peter I donated it to his former mentor “Prince-Pope” N.M. Zotov (1643/44 – 1717/18).
The 250-year period preceding this event is represented in the funds of the Chudov Monastery by a rather modest volume of documents on Lytkorino. But even from them one can trace the participation of the villager in the current economic life of the main monastery.
Only Lytkorino was not the first real estate received by the tsar’s favorite in the Ostrovets camp of the Moscow district at the turn of the 17th-18th centuries. Back in 1699, Pyotr Alekseevich “granted our Duma clerk Nikita Moiseevich Zotov for his many services and work by decrees... the thief and traitor Aleshka Sokovnin was given the patrimony... the village of Alchevo with the peasants and the wastelands and with all the land was given as a patrimony...”.
In the patrimonial parish books of 1646, this property was recorded for Prokofy Fedorovich Sokovnin, “that he took as a dowry for Chirkov’s widow Varvara Maksimovskaya, the purchased estate of her husband.” In 1626, the clerk of the order of the Grand Palace, Maxim Chirkov, acquired “in the Moscow district of the palace village of Ostrov the Alchevskaya wasteland and the Boyarinovskaya wasteland and in them there are 45 arable lands in half and in two, therefore, with arable land and with forests and hay fields.” By the mid-40s. having annexed the wastelands of Funikovo and Tyagina, Chirkov became the owner of a decent plot of land near Lytkarino by modern standards.
“... in the year 7159 (1651) March on the 11th day after... by the petition of Prokofiev's wife Sokovnin Varvara, her dowry patrimony of the Alchevo wasteland with the wastelands of 67 was celebrated for her stepson for Aleshka Sokovnin and last 1697... according to our Great Sovereign's personal decree that Aleshkina patrimony of Sokovnin, the village of Alchevo with its wastelands, was assigned to us by the Great Sovereign.”
In 1696, there was a courtyard of patrimonial owners, and “there are ten business people in it, two peasant yards, there are six people in them, and the wastelands of Boyarkovo.” Alchevsk elders and peasants were mowing hay on the Boyarkinsky meadow and near the Moscow River near the village of Petrovsky.
Less than a year had passed, and the said royal estate had already been “registered” to N.M. Zotov. But the “prince-papa” remained dissatisfied with the gift, judging by the remark he made in one of the petitions addressed to Alchevo, where he called it nothing more than a wretched “and small dacha” estate.
Three years later, wanting to somewhat improve his property situation (Alchevo was his only land property), Nikita Moiseevich decided to buy his neighbor Lytkorino - the property of the Chudov Monastery. This was indirectly facilitated by the increasingly active policy of Peter I in the field of limiting church power, which led to the transfer of part of the monastic estates into private hands for a symbolic fee. Which, apparently, was what Zotov was counting on when he approached the Tsar through a monastery order with a request to sell Lytkorino to him. Only the sovereign, who sincerely sympathized with the former mentor, donated the village “without money.” Registration of ownership lasted for 8 months and ended on November 23, 1702 with the issuance of a charter to the “prince-papa”.
According to information from the scribe books of 131–132. (1623-1624) behind the village of Lytkorino, together with the village of Dergousova, it was listed: “the arable land was plowed and overgrown with forests, 76 acres, and good land with an additional 114 acres... and from the same village Lytkorino, 11 acres and a quarter were measured out for estates and for production, Yes, there are stone mountains and between those mountains there is a swamp, according to an estimate of 26 acres.” Total 318 dessiatines. According to census books 186 (1678), in the villages there were “5 peasant and bobyl households,” in which 35 people lived. During the transfer of the estate to Zotov, Dergousovo turned from a village into a wasteland, and later its name completely disappeared from local toponymy.
The newly-minted Lytkorin landowner forced his offspring, Ivan and Konon, to manage this farm, united with Alchevo. One of them, Konon (1690-1740), was luckier, because He quickly freed himself from the occupation imposed on him. In 1704, at the age of 14, Konon was sent to study by Peter the Great in England. The other, Ivan (1687-1723), after several years of his stay here, having reached an extremely dire situation that threatened him with mental illness, finally personally turned to the sovereign and the secret cabinet secretary Makarov with a plea for help. And although the parent was very dissatisfied with this, it was not in his power to return the “prisoners” back.
After the death of the elder Zotov (1717-1718), the Lytkarinsky estate was divided between the heirs: three sons and the second wife of the “prince-papa” - Anna Eremeevna, née Pashkova, whom he married in 1715. Despite the clownish nature of the wedding arranged by the king, the widow still received a quarter of Zot’s fortune.
Based on the materials of the general survey of 1767, it is known that: “of the 3 parts, the village of Lytkarino was lost in 720 by a deed of purchase from Colonel General Ivan Nikitich from his grandfather Vasily Nikitich Zotov and to his native brother Konon Nikitich Zotov the village of Lytkorina from the hay fields 15 des., and a third from the Dergousova wasteland...” That is, after the two Zotov brothers: the writer and translator Ivan and the auditor general Vasily (1668-1729), Lytkarino belonged to the third - Rear Admiral Konon Nikitich.
From the latter, the estate passed to his nephew - Sergeant of the Life Guards of the Preobrazhensky Regiment Nikita Vasilyevich (1710-1738) - the only descendant of Peter the Great's mentor in the male line.
Thus, by the middle of the 18th century, the estate consisted of two landholdings, ¾ of which were owned by the Zotovs, and a quarter by the Pashkovs. This situation (with the exception of the 60-70s of the 18th century) persisted for quite a long time, more than 100 years.
Married to Anna Loginovna, nee Shcherbacheva (Eichler in her second marriage), N.V. Zotov had three children: a son, Ivan, and daughters, Elisaveta (for Prince Yakov Vasilyevich Khilkov) and Ekaterina (for Prince Alexei Vasilyevich Khovansky). After the untimely death of the head of the family, the estate went to his widow. Soon she remarried and with her new husband settled on the estate - Kozmodemyansky (Zotov), on the banks of the Khimki River (northwest of Moscow), which she also inherited from her former husband, and he from his father, Vasily Nikitich Zotov. During the aforementioned land survey of 1767, the Lytkarinsky co-owner was her son from her first marriage, Colonel Ivan Nikitich Zotov (until 1738 - not earlier than 1788).
Together with him, Lytkorino (hereinafter referred to as Lytkarino) shared the Life Guards with captain-lieutenant Pyotr Egorovich Pashkov and brigadier Prince Patrikey Patrikeevich Kildyshev.
Unlike their neighbors who received estate lands and serfs (Zotov - 103, Pashkov - 23 male souls) by inheritance, the Kildyshevs most likely acquired their plot. Documents of that time recorded two representatives of the Kildyshev family - Prince Patrikey Patrikeevich Kildyshev and his son Grigory.
By the 70s of the 18th century, the population of Lytkarino increased approximately 3 times. The total amount of land was 379 dessiatinas 942 sq. m. fathoms, which included: arable lands, forests, hay fields, vegetable gardens, bean fields, hemp fields, stone breaks, ditches, lakes Krugloye, Krivoye and half-Marina, ponds, towpaths, roads and 10 acres of the Moscow River. Of these, the Zotovs owned 315 ½ dessiatines in 1791.
Some idea of the village of that time is given by economic notes from 1773: “the master's house is wooden and there is a regular garden with fruitful trees. Fruits and fish are used for government consumption. The ground is sandy. The peasants are employed by the master, earning a living by arable farming, making and selling large millstones and millstones and whetstones for sharpening scythes and knives. And the women spin flax and wool, weave linen and cloth for their own use.”
Ivan Nikitich Zotov, who owned Lytkarino until 1788, was married twice. His first marriage was to Ekaterina Stepanovna Lopukhina (1735-1780), from whom he had a son, Alexander, and a daughter, Anna (to Prince Mikhail Nikolaevich Golitsyn); the second - on the Frenchwoman Margarita Frantsevna de Weyer (d. 1820). In this union, his only son was born - Nikolai.
In 1788, a certain agreement was concluded between Lytkarin relatives, according to which Zotov’s share in the estate was transferred from hand to hand twice within three days. First, according to the bill of sale dated January 10, I.N. Zotov lost it to his sister Elisaveta Nikitichna (married to Khilkova), then on the 13th she sold Lytkarino on similar terms to her daughter-in-law, de Weyer. In 1793, Zotov’s wife tried to mortgage the property in a state loan bank. Fortunately for the family, Lytkarino did not go under the hammer then.
For a long time, the neighbors in the dacha (Zotovs and Pashkovs) coexisted quite peacefully. The first hint of controversial circumstances between them was heard in the case of the Nikitsky district court in 1784, when nobleman A.V. Naryshkin entered into inheritance rights in the neighboring village of Petrovsky.
The matter came to litigation after the death of Margarita Frantsevna in 1820. It all started with a seemingly harmless desire of representatives of the new generation of Lytkarinsky landowners to clarify the boundaries of the land that belonged to them. The main defendants in the case were the actual state councilor Nikolai Ivanovich Zotov (1782-1849), to whom, by a personal decree of June 21, 1803, the count title of the ancestor Nikita Moiseevich was returned, and the guard captain-lieutenant Alexey Alexandrovich Pashkov (1760-1834). ). Pashkov inherited the local estate in 1810 from his father, collegiate assessor Alexander Ilyich, and he from his second cousin (“great-grandbrother”), Pyotr Yegorovich, known for the palace on Mokhovaya (will of 1795).
The outcome of the lengthy trial is unclear. However, it can be assumed that the Zotovs eventually bought out Pashkov’s share. In any case, in the 30s, the Pashkov family name disappeared forever from local documents, and the Zotovs could now rightfully call Lytkarino, granted to their ancestor Peter the Great, “the family nest.” The family’s desire to finally connect their fate with this place is also indicated by the fact that E.N. Chernysheva, née Zotova, in the nearby Petrovsky family tomb at the Peter and Paul Church. The first to be buried there was the ashes of her father, N.I. Zotova.
Some reference publishing houses provide information about the construction under N.I. Zotov of the main master's wooden mansion. And although it is refuted by a stone slab made of sandstone kept in the Lytkarino Museum of History and Local Lore with the inscription: “This house was built by Princess M.A. Chernysheva 1880". There is reason to believe that during its construction the foundation and other parts from the previous building were used. The earliest surviving building of the estate complex is the two-story human services (1846) - the only stone structure for the entire existence of the estate.
Lytkarino of the first half of the 19th century was a middle-class noble estate with traditional, typical buildings and a regular ancient park. The serf population of the village of the same name grew slowly but steadily. By the middle of the century, compared to the 1814 census (just over 100 people), it doubled (298 people per 40 households). On the contrary, the number of street people decreased (from 12 to 8 people). The local peasantry lived mainly by livestock farming and arable farming and was engaged in the extraction of “millstone” sandstones and snow-white loose sand at five Lytkarino quarries. Having such priceless deposits and numerous reservoirs in his property, an enterprising owner would certainly have organized the corresponding production. However, the Zotovs in this regard did not seek to use the natural resources at their disposal. As a result, until the 30s of the 20th century, Lytkarino remained a quiet patriarchal corner within a fairly developed industrial area.
Of the two daughters N.I. Zotova and E.A. Kurakina (Natalya - for Prince Pavel Petrovich Golitsyn and Elizaveta), Lytkarino went to the youngest, who married the future Minister of War and member of the State Council - Alexander Ivanovich Chernyshev. She became his third wife (the first was Teofila Ignatievna Radziwill (1796-1828), the second was Elizaveta Aleksandrovna Beloselskaya-Belozerskaya (1803-1824)). Chernyshev asked permission to marry the maid of honor of the court of Their Imperial Majesties, Countess Zotova, from the sovereign himself. In the 20s XIX century he was adjutant general to the royal person.
Soon after the wedding, which took place in September 1825, Alexander Ivanovich took his young wife to Taganrog, “where Emperor Alexander I was already lying on his deathbed.” From that moment on, his wife “was destined to share with him [Chernyshev] the greatness and honors that befell him.” In 1826, Nicholas I elevated Alexander Ivanovich to the title of count, and in 1841 to the princely dignity. In 1849 he was granted the title of lordship. The Most Serene Princess (since December 5, 1837, a lady of state), “being a well-educated woman of high merit,” occupied an authoritative position in the capital’s St. Petersburg society, and raised her daughters “as grand duchesses.” On December 5, 1850, she received the Order of St. Catherine, 1st class, from the hands of the emperor.
The close, trusting relationship between the reigning Romanovs and the Chernyshevs is evidenced by the voluminous official and personal correspondence included in volumes 121 and 122 of the RIO collection (the originals are stored in the personal archive of the Baryatinskys in the manuscript department of the RSL).
With an extremely busy business and social life, the family clearly did not have time to personally deal with the provincial estate that had become so distant. In the early 30s, the Chernyshevs settled in the northern capital, where they had houses on Millionnaya (later owned by the Baryatinsky descendants) and on Malaya Morskaya Street.
The estate was remembered when in 1854 Elizaveta Nikolaevna decided to rebury the ashes of her father, who was buried in Strelna. For this purpose, it was planned to build a stone house church and an almshouse for 10-12 people in Lytkarino. This intention was not realized. However, in 1857, the landowner nevertheless acquired the neighboring village of Petrovskoye, where she built a family tomb at the Peter and Paul Church. Another sad circumstance pushed her to such an action - the death of His Serene Highness.
Chernyshev died on June 8, 1857 in the town of Cattellammeri di Stabia in Italy, and his ashes were transported to his homeland and buried in Petrovsky. The restored marble slab from the sarcophagus of Minister of War Chernyshev can still be seen on one of the walls of the temple. The inscription on it eloquently speaks of Alexander Ivanovich’s services to the Fatherland.
In 1859, Princess Chernysheva began remodeling the family crypt, not expecting that after 5 years her son, the captain of the Cavalry Guard Regiment, adjutant Lev Alexandrovich (1837-1864), would be buried in it. At different times, several more representatives from this family found their last refuge here: E.A. Zotova, née Kurakina (1787-1869), M.V. Chernysheva, née Titova (1840-1878) and E.N. herself. Chernysheva (1808-1872). This place became the last refuge for the cornet of the cavalry regiment of His Serene Highness Prince Lev Lvovich Chernyshev (1864-1892). With his death, the genealogical branch of A.I. Chernysheva stopped completely.
According to the will of 1872 E.N. Chernysheva transferred the rights to the manor house with an estate and garden in the village of Lytkarino to her youngest daughter, Princess Maria (1849-1919). It was thanks to her that a new wooden mansion was erected here in 1880, which has survived in a slightly modified form to this day. At the same time, other manor buildings were also repaired. The old regular park has been put in order. The estate was managed by manager N.N. Perfilyev. He also looked after him in the first years of Soviet power, when Chernysheva was already far from here, in Italy, where she died in 1919. Warm memories of landowner Maria Alexandrovna, who transferred 17 acres of land to the peasants, are recorded from the words of local old-timers of the village.
In 1859, 400 people lived in Lytkarino. This number doubled only 70 years later, by 1929. In 1912, there were: a primary zemstvo school, 4 small shops belonging to the local “Consumer Society” and 3 tea shops, one of which traded from the “Sobriety Society”, organized in 1905 the rector of the Peter and Paul Church in the village of Petrovskoye, Father John (Sobolev).
As before the revolution, during Soviet times the local population continued to work in the limestone and sandstone quarries. In the early 30s. In the vicinity of Lytkarino, deposits of especially pure white quartz sand were discovered, which served as the basis for the construction of the Mirror Reflector Plant (now JSC LZOS). He released his first products in 1939. At the same time, the plant for reinforced foam concrete products went into operation. Their residential settlement then received the status of a workers’ settlement (6.4 thousand people). In 1957, Lytkarino with a population of 25.4 thousand people became a city and became part of the Ukhtomsky (later Lyubertsy) district. In the 50s 3 km from it, the construction of the Turaevskaya industrial zone began - a complex of enterprises of scientific and defense significance. Due to the active recruitment of workers to service the new production, the number of townspeople has increased sharply. Subsequently, the population growth rate began to gradually decline. In 1970, there were 39 thousand people in the city. On January 27, 1975, it came under regional subordination. As of January 1, 2006, the population of Lytkarino numbered 50 thousand 946 people.
In the 70s, the Lytkarino optical glass plant took part in the creation of the Large Azimuthal Telescope (BTA) for the Special Astrophysical Observatory of the Russian Academy of Sciences, which was installed in the North Caucasus near the village of Zelenchukskaya. This enterprise is currently the leading Russian manufacturer of optical glass and fiberglass, large-sized astronomical mirrors, space lenses, various optical parts and instruments.
The inclusion of the neighboring settlements of Petrovsky and Volkushi into the city limits expanded its area to 1,720 hectares. Currently, there are 8 secondary schools, two technical schools and two institutes in Lytkarino. The centers of culture and leisure are two Palaces of Culture - “Mir” and “Luch”, as well as the Museum of History and Local Lore, located in a historical manor building. On the territory of Lytkarino there are seven monuments of historical and cultural value (included in the state register).
Methodologist of the Lytkarinsky Museum of History and Local Lore V.V. Kochetkova
List of archival sources: 1. RSL. Department of Manuscripts, f. 28, no. 17. Given from the 15th century without the year of Volodimirova’s wife to the Chudov Monastery. 2. RGADA, f.1209, Columns for Moscow, op.1701, l.310ob; op.1755, l.13; op.1763, l.3. 3. RGADA, f.350, op.2, d.1819, l.14 vol. 1719-1722 4. RGADA, f.156, op.1. Documents about the “buffoon wedding” of N.M. Zotova (1714-1715). 5. RGADA, f.158, op.1-3. About sending to Amsterdam, London, Prague, etc. for training in various “arts and sciences”... I.N. and K.N. Zotov. 6. RSL, department of manuscripts, f.330, room 13, item 2. B.1 No. 261, No. 1. Obedient letter (“Import letter”) to the Duma clerk Nikita Moiseevich Zotov for the estate of the village of Alchevo with the wastelands of the Ostrovskaya volost of the Moscow district, written from the okolnichy Alexei Prokofievich Sokovnin on March 1699 2. 7. RGADA, f. 1320, op. 7, d. 6659 . 1771 Geometric special plan for the Moscow district of Ostrovetsky village of the village of Lytkarin... 8. RGADA, f.27, no.484, part 3, part 9. XVII century Plan of the area between the Nikolo-Ugreshsky monastery and the village of Petrovskoye. 9. RGVIA, f.VUA, archive unit 18859, part 6, No. 430, sheets 105-105v. 1773 Village Lytkarino; No. 427 Petrovskoye village. 10. RSL. Manuscripts Department. F. 19/II. Baryatinsky. 11. CIAM, f.555, op.1, d.51. 1784-1785 12. CIAM, f.555, op.1, d. 146. 1793 13. TsIAM, f.555, op.1, d.224. 1793-1794 14. CIAM, f.81, op.2, d.5346. 1786 15. CIAM, f.80, op.1, d.983. 1794 16. CIAM, f.94, op.1, d.55. 1822-1832 17. CIAM, f.203, op.437, d.13. 1857 Case of consideration of the petition of Princess Chernysheva E.N. on permission to rebuild a church in the village of Petrovsky, Moscow district. 18. CIAM, f.50, op.14, d.1200, pp.88-91ob. No.485. 1851 19. CIAM, f.50, op.14, d.1237. 1857 Bill of Sale No. 192. 20. CIAM, f.50, op.14, d.1200. 1851 Bill of Sale No. 57. 21. CIAM, f.50, op.14, d.816. 1832 Bill of Sale No. 29. 22. CIAM, f.454, op.4, d.17, pp.78-79. Description of the Church of Peter and Paul, Moscow district, village of Petrovsky. 23. TsGAMO, f.2501, op.1, d.3. Documents on the confiscation of the estates of the Chernyshev princes. 24. TsGAMO, f.4997, op.1, d.456, pp.26-27. 1920 Documents on the transfer of the estate of Petrovsky (formerly Prince Baryatinsky) of the Ukhtomsk volost of the Moscow district to the Administration for the reconstruction of the Moskvoretsky system. 25. TsGAMO, f. 4997, op. 1, d. 125, l. 42 (20s) Land department of the Moscow Council of the Republic of Kazakhstan and CD. Reports of surveys by instructors of the Moscow State Department of Agriculture on the condition of former estates and lists of Soviet communist agricultural farms. 26. RGIA, St. Petersburg, f.797, op.22. III-2, d.9, l.3.1852 27. CIAM, f. 299, op.1, d.295. 1894-1918 28. CIAM, f.49, op.3, d.4151. 1864 Case regarding guardianship of the young son of Lev Alexandrovich Chernyshev. 29. CIAM, f.32, op.20, d.621, pp.110-110v. October 13, 1798. Book for recording transactions of broker Suslov. 30. RGADA, f.1355, op.1, unit. archive 378, No. 167, 168, 169, 170. 1781-1796. 31. RGADA, f.281, No. 7379. 1674-1681 32. CIAM, f.184, op.9, d.272, l.408. b/d, b/m. 33. CIAM, f.51, op.8, d.64, 65, 6, 5. Revision tales. 1811, 1815, 1816 34. RGIA, St. Petersburg, f.797, op.24, II-2, d.71, l.14ob. 1855 35. TsGAMO, f.4570, op.1, d.5. The case of closing a church in the village of Petrovskoye.
List of references: 1. Lebedev D. Collection of historical and legal acts I.D. Belyaeva. M., 1881, p. 10, No. 17. Cardboard No. 1. 2. Acts of the socio-economic history of northeastern Rus' at the end of the 14th and beginning of the 16th centuries. T. III. M., 1964, p. 72, No. 33, 37, 102. 3. Russian diplomat. Vol. 2. M., 1997, pp. 83, 84, 89, 91. 4. Russian diplomat. Vol. 9. M., 2003, pp. 61, 64. 5. History of the families of the Russian nobility. M., 1991 Book 2, vol. 2, pp. 96-98. 6. Fedorchenko V. Encyclopedia of noble families. M., 2004, p. 181. 7. Northern district of Moscow. M., 1995, pp. 174-176. 8. Russian archive. Book VI. M., 1879 // Martynov A. Archaeological walks along Moscow streets. 9. Encyclopedic Dictionary. Brockhaus F.A. and Efron I.A. T.XII. St. Petersburg, 1894, p. 687. 10. Russian biographical dictionary. pp.473-481. 11. Nystrem K.M. Index of villages and residents of districts of the Moscow province. M., 1852 12. Kusov V.S. Lands of the Moscow province in the 18th century. T.2. M., 2004, No. 146, Lytkarino village, No. 193 p. Petrovskoe. 13. Cities of the Moscow region: book 1. M., 1979, pp.558-567. 14. Shilov D.N. Statesmen of the Russian Empire 1802-1917. Bibliographic reference book. St. Petersburg, 2002, pp. 802-807. 15. Russian provincial necropolis. T. I, M., 1914, p. 937. 16. Russian portraits of the 18th and 19th centuries. Edition of Grand Duke Nikolai Mikhailovich. T. II, 1906, No. 59, 60, 61. 17. Collection of RIO. T. 121. St. Petersburg, 1906. 18. Collection of RIO. T. 122. St. Petersburg, 1905. 19. Fedorchenko V. Imperial House. Outstanding dignitaries. T. II. M., 2000, pp.521-523. 20. Lyubimov S. Experience of historical genealogies. Petrograd, 1915. 21. Semenova T.A. Family portraits of the Baryatinsky princes // PKNO. 2000. M., 2000, pp.326-334. 22. Semenova T.A. Family portraits of the Baryatinsky princes // PKNO. 2001. M., 2001, pp.330-337. 23. St. Petersburg. Petrograd. Leningrad. Encyclopedic reference book. M., 1982, p. 78. 24. Cities of the Moscow region. Book 1. M., 1979. 25. Kholmogorov V. and G. Historical materials about churches and villages of the XVI – XVIII centuries. (Pekhryansk tithe). Issue 8, M., 1892, pp. 18-19. 26. Sedashev V. Grant of patrimony to the Duma nobleman and printer Nikita Moiseevich Zotov // Memorial book of the Konstantinovsky Land Survey Institute (12th year of publication) for 1908. M., 1909, pp.29-51. 27. Directory of populated areas of the Moscow province (based on materials of the All-Union Population Census of 1926). M., 1929. 28. Archive of the Ministry of Justice “Moscow. Things from old times." Book 3, No. 42, p. 332. 29. Architectural monuments of the Moscow region. T. I, M., 1975. 30. Shamurin Yu. Moscow Region. Part I, issue. 9. M., 1914, p.84. 31. Monuments of estate art. Vol. 1. M., 1928, p.68-69. 32. Provincial necropolis. 33. All Moscow region. M., 1967
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Add news from the Lytkarino companyHistorical facts
The settlement of Lytkarino was mentioned for the first time in 1429. At the end of the 19th century, five limestone mines were operating in the city. Not far from Lytkarino in 1930, a reflector factory was built, which used sand from a quarry in the city of Volkushino. Finnish-style brick houses were built for factory workers.
Until 1939, the settlement was called a village, after which it was transformed into an urban-type settlement. Since 1956, low-rise buildings, a station, a canteen and a bathhouse were built in the village. Four years later, five-story houses, a cultural center and the Turaevo industrial zone were built in the village.
The quarry in the village of Volkushino was flooded with water in 1974.