Manuscripts of works in the Pskov province (geography, ethnography, folklore)

Title Manuscripts of works in the Pskov province (geography, ethnography, folklore)
Series
Summary In 1719, the Pskov and Velikoluki provinces were formed as part of the St. Petersburg province.In 1727, they entered the Novgorod province.In 1772, the provinces of the Pskov and Mogilevskaya provinces were formed from the newly joined from Poland.The Pskov province included 2 old provinces of the Novgorod province (Pskov and Velikolukskaya), as well as two new ones - Dvinskaya (Polish Lifland) and Polotsk from the lands of the former Vitebsk voivodship.At the end of the same year, the Vitebsk province of the Mogilev province was annexed to the Pskov province.Until 1776, the center of the province was the city of Opochka.Since 1776, the Pskov province has been renamed Polotsk.The provinces of Pskov and Velikoluchkaya, which made up the new Pskov province, the center of which became G. Pskov, were separated from it.In 1777, the Pskov governorship was formed, which in 1796 was transformed into the province.Changes in the administrative-territorial division ended in the second decade of the 19th century.At the beginning of the twentieth century, there were 8 counties in the province.The province existed from 1772 to 1777.and from 1796 to 1927, after which she became part of the educated Leningrad region
Display format

Доступно для просмотра только в Электронных читальных залах Президентской библиотеки по всей России и за рубежом