About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 22. Chapters: Abramovka, Moscow Oblast, Aleneva, Alaska, Alyoshino, Yegoryevsky District, Moscow Oblast, Barskoye, Moscow Oblast, Davydovo, Orekhovo-Zuyevsky District, Moscow Oblast, Erskine, Minnesota, Gervais, Oregon, Gora (Davydovskoye Rural Settlement), Orekhovo-Zuyevsky District, Moscow Oblast, Gubino, Orekhovo-Zuyevsky District, Moscow Oblast, Guslitsa, Kachemak Selo, Alaska, Kerzhenets River, Kostino, Orekhovo-Zuyevsky District, Moscow Oblast, Lyakhovo, Orekhovo-Zuyevsky District, Moscow Oblast, Nikolaevsk, Alaska, Nizhnetoyemsky Selsoviet, Plamondon, Alberta, Razdolna, Alaska, Rytovo, Semeiskie, Shuvoye, Slobodishche, Moscow Oblast, Ustyanovo, Moscow Oblast, Vetka Island, Vokhna, Voznesenka, Alaska, Vylkove, Woodburn, Oregon, Yelizarovo, Orekhovo-Zuyevsky District, Moscow Oblast, Zaponorye. Excerpt: Nizhnetoyemsky Selsoviet (Russian: ) is the low-level administrative division (a selsoviet) of Verkhnetoyemsky District of Arkhangelsk Oblast, Russia. It was formed along with other fourteen selsoviets in April 1924 and occupied the territory of the former Nizhnetoyemskaya Volost of the former Solvychegodsky Uyezd of Northern Dvina Governorate. The administrative center of the selsoviet is located in the village of Burtsevskaya, at the confluence of the Nizhnyaya Toyma and the Northern Dvina. The volost had been attested through archive records since the 16th century, but its name, known since the 12th century, refers to ancient Finno-Ugric peoples that were then already extinct or assimilated. A station on the ancient trading route along the Northern Dvina River, in the end of the 17th century the volost became a hub of the Old Believers flight to the north. The government suppressed the dissenters, the Russian Orthodox Church responded with continuous missionary activities, and in the 19th century the village was brought...