The work program of the optional course of local history “Perm Territory. A. Zelenin Perm and the Perm Territory

Perm local history has a long rich history. Serious research works on the history of the region appeared long before the beginning of book printing in Perm. And the book publishing business, which arose here in 1792, immediately acquired a pronounced local history character.
There are many reasons for such an active local lore movement in the Urals. Here are the features of the history of the region; its political and economic-geographical position; constant attention to the life of the region of the government, its interest in the study and development of the region; a constant influx here (for various purposes and for various reasons) of educated, knowledgeable people from the capitals.

Perm local history developed according to the same laws as the all-Russian local history. The first significant local history works were written by researchers of the Perm Territory - scientists, travelers, statesmen, writers, etc.
These are works related to the 18th century by V. N. Tatishchev, P. S. Pallas, P. P. Rychkov, I. I. Lepekhin, A. G. Humboldt and others.

We note here the works of V. N. Tatishchev, who stood not only at the foundation of Russian science and Russian local history, but also at the foundation of Perm local history, moreover, at the foundation of the history of our city in general. Recall that it was V. N. Tatishchev who determined the place for the construction of the Egoshikha plant - the future Perm. Perm material is constantly found in his famous "Lexicon of Russian historical, geographical, political and civil". Very interesting is his "Legend of the Mammoth Beast" - the history of the Kungur ice cave and the Kungur region.

Vasily Nikitich Tatishchev

The works about the Urals by P.P. Rychkov, who, by the way, became the very first corresponding member of the Academy of Sciences - in 1759, are also interesting.

P.I. Rychkov

Here it is necessary to mention the most interesting “Description of Perm Plants” by Willim de Gennin.
Many of the works that we now consider the main sources for studying the Perm Territory were created by Permians, but on the initiative, on the instructions, as we would say now, of the “center”.

William de Gennin

First of all, this is the famous “Economic description of the Perm province in accordance with the outline of the St. Petersburg Free Economic Society, composed in 1802 and 1802 in the city of Perm” (Perm, 1804), compiled by N. S. Popov under the guidance of the governor K. F. Moderakh. And also: Moselle X. Materials for the geography and statistics of Russia, collected by officers of the general staff. Perm province. Ch. 1-2. Compiled by the General Staff Lieutenant Colonel X. Mosel. - St. Petersburg, 1864.

Of course, the main contribution to the development of Perm local history was made by the Permians themselves - residents of our region, natives of the Perm province or people who lived and worked here for a long time. Thanks to them, we now have such an excellent fund of local history literature, a rich collection of archival documents, in a word, accumulated local history knowledge.

The most interesting local history works of the first half of the 19th century are the already mentioned work of N. S. Popov, and his “Historical and geographical description of the Perm province, composed for the atlas of 1800” (Perm, 1801). Here it is necessary to mention the work of V. N. Berkh “Journey to the cities of Cherdyn and Solikamsk to search for historical antiquities” (St. Petersburg, 1821).

Among the first local historians in Perm, one can also name the manager of the Stroganov estates F. A. Volegov, priests Gavriil Sapozhnikov and Ippolit Slovtsov.

The second half of the 19th century is the heyday of Perm local history. It began with the publication in Moscow by D. D. Smyshlyaev of two volumes of the Perm Collection (1859-1860). By the way, in his review of the first volume of the collection in the Sovremennik magazine, the critic N. A. Dobrolyubov formulated, in essence, another reason for such an active development of local history in the Urals. Introducing to readers a collection of articles about the Perm Territory, remarkable in all respects, N. A. Dobrolyubov wrote: “It is in the provinces that people live who reason, are seriously interested in science and literature, and follow the modern trend of thought with love. It is in the provinces that efficient, strong people usually develop, and from there they come to the capitals "with a thirst for knowledge and work," with fresh energy and love for the cause.

Dmitry Dmitrievich Smyshlyaev

There were people in our region who were able not only to raise local history to the highest level, but also to infect new and new followers with their enthusiasm, and such a phenomenon as Perm local history traditions was born. Following the "Perm Collection", one after another, the most interesting local history publications appear. We note once again that book publishing in the Perm region has never been commercial - it has always been production and local history in nature.

Let's try to formulate what exactly Perm local lore traditions are, why we consider Perm local lore a striking phenomenon in the cultural life of our region.

Traditions are historically developed and passed on from generation to generation experience, practice in any area of ​​social life, reality, etc.

What are the features of local history activities in the Perm province in the 19th - early 20th centuries that allow us to talk about the existing experience and practice in this area?

Apparently, there are three such features, three principles that our predecessors adhered to in one way or another in their activities:

1) continuity;
2) professionalism;
3) organization, coordination of local history activities.

1. Continuity.

A characteristic feature of Perm local historians of the 19th and early 20th centuries was respect for the works of their predecessors. It is natural for all major local historians to realize themselves not just as a lone amateur, but as a successor to the work already begun on the study of their native land.

One of the specific examples of such continuity is the chronological chronicles of the city of Perm, covering almost the entire history of the city until 1917.

Continuity consisted not only in the desire to continue the work of predecessor local historians, but also in the awareness of one's responsibility for their works, preserved in manuscript form, scattered, unpublished, unknown to the reader. A huge number of such materials were found and published by D. D. Smyshlyaev, A. A. Dmitriev, V. N. Shishonko and others, often at their own expense.

Alexander Alekseevich Dmitriev

It is important to note that the publication was preceded, as a rule, by a serious preparation of the material. It was accompanied by a preface, contemporary notes and explanations.

Vasily Nikiforovich Shishonko

This work became more orderly with the formation of the Perm Provincial Scientific Archival Commission.

Not limited to publishing the works of local historians and the archival documents they found, our predecessors tried to somehow perpetuate their memory, searched for information about their lives and activities, published essays dedicated to them, detailed obituaries, compiled a bibliography of their works. There are a lot of examples here. The most striking are serious research essays by A. A. Dmitriev about F. A. Volegov, P. N. Slovtsov and others.

Continuity also consisted in the fact that all major local historians of the past consciously worked for the future, prepared the ground for future research, and tried to make the work of their followers easier.

2. Professionalism

Two hundred years ago, the first book was published in Perm. Now we have the richest local history fund. “Economic description of the Perm province” by N. S. Popov, multi-volume “Perm chronicle” by V. N. Shishonko, eight issues of “Perm antiquity” by A. A. Dmitriev, geographical dictionary by N. K. Chupin, “temporal” or continuing editions of D D. Smyshlyaeva "Perm Collection" and "Perm Territory" - no serious historian can do without these books. But almost all of them were not created by historians, just local historians. True, then they called themselves differently - connoisseurs or zealots of the Perm Territory, lovers of the Ural antiquity, etc.

There are many lovers of the Perm Territory even now, among modern local historians. But our predecessors, those whose names have remained in the history of local history, were distinguished by the professionalism of their local history activities. Almost all of them had some kind of special education, profession. D. D. Smyshlyaev was a merchant, V. N. Shishonko was a doctor, N. N. Novokreshchennykh was a mining engineer, A. E. and F. A. Teploukhov were foresters, Ya. V. Shestakov was a priest. V. S. Verkholantsev also had spiritual education, who wrote in his autobiography: “I consider local history to be my specialty.” At the same time, all these people were local historians-professionals.
In an effort to achieve the best result of their work, they mastered archeography and bibliography to perfection, became professional publishers, editors, journalists, museum workers, archivists, and archaeologists. The most striking example is D. D. Smyshlyaev.

Any novice local historian in our time can appreciate the importance of all these skills, recognize their necessity. How many mistakes happen because of the inability to work with an archival document, to understand the bibliography. How often a person follows a false trail or repeats a discovery already made by someone, not knowing the system of archival institutions and libraries, not being able to find the material he needs, although it happens to be on the surface.

The following should be noted here. It is no secret that in many works of our predecessors we sometimes find errors and inaccuracies. The last thing I would like to idealize these people. It should be emphasized once again that speaking about the professionalism of local historians of the 19th - early 20th centuries, we mean, first of all, their approach to the matter, their attitude to it, the requirements that they made of themselves as local historians and which they tried to meet.

One of these requirements is unconditional objectivity, honesty in research work. Without this, it is impossible to become a professional. Professionalism is incompatible with "ideological considerations".

3. Organization, coordination of local history activities

The desire to organize local history activities can be traced by referring to the documents related to the preparation for publication of the already mentioned "Perm Collection". D. D. Smyshlyaev and his assistant in the compilation work, teacher of the Perm gymnasium N. A. Firsov, in fact, not only formed a team of authors, but also laid the foundation for organizing and coordinating the already existing in the province, but disparate local history movement. Having identified in various ways people involved in the study of the history of the region, D. D. Smyshlyaev no longer lost contact with them. Among the authors of the collection are the arborist from Ilyinsky A.E. Teploukhov, the researcher of the life of the Komi-Permyaks N. Rogov, the folklorist and ethnographer A.N. Zyryanov and many others.

Alexander Efimovich Teploukhov

From this point of view, it is very interesting to look at the leaflets distributed then by the publishers of the collection: “Announcement about the undertaking publication of the Perm Collection”, “Announcement from the editors of the Perm Collection”, “Perm Collection Program for the Perm Collection”. In essence, these documents are a well-thought-out program of local history activities for many years to come. Moreover, this program may well be used by us, modern local historians. Awareness of his involvement in the common cause of studying and developing his native land helped to choose the right direction for his own searches. Apparently, thanks to this, the local history knowledge accumulated by our predecessors is a complex, an integral structure without particularly large white spots - areas untouched by researchers. We have at our disposal rich material in practically all branches of knowledge: history, economics, culture, everyday life and folk customs, folklore, etc.

It is very important to note that the high level of Perm local history has been achieved thanks to the combined efforts of state institutions, the public, and publishers. Everything is connected here. A huge amount of local history materials were published by the provincial statistical committee, the Zemstvo, and various "departmental" institutions. The activities of local history in general were characteristic of zemstvo institutions and should be the subject of a special study.

Newspapers, and especially Permskie Vedomosti, played an important role in the dissemination of local lore knowledge.

An important stage in the development of Perm local history was the opening of the Provincial Scientific Archival Commission, the Scientific and Industrial Museum. With their formation, the organization of the local lore movement in the province was completed. These institutions naturally headed all local history activities and carried out their coordination.

Gradually, a system of local lore associations, societies and circles was carved out. One of the largest - UOLE - was opened in Yekaterinburg in 1870. His commission worked in Perm.

Contributed to the development of local history and the church. This topic - church local history - is also waiting for its researchers. Many clergy began to study local history, left works, books, manuscripts. Here you can list many names: G. Sapozhnikov - the first Perm chronicle, E. A. Popov - the most serious work "The Great Perm Diocese (1379-1879)" and a number of other works; A. Lukanin - the most famous work "Church-historical and archaeological description of the city of Solikamsk" (1882) and other works; V. S. Verkholantsev - books about Perm; Ya. V. Shestakov generally stands on a person - a local historian, journalist, publisher, missionary.

E. A. Popov, mentioned above, was an ardent preacher of love for his land. Here is what he said, for example, in his sermon to the parishioners of the Resurrection Church on the day of the centenary of Perm on October 18, 1881. “Perm and the Perm province constitute for us the fatherland in the closest sense. From this follows a number of our obligations to this country. First of all, who should not love their homeland? In many, this love is unconscious, for example, it is expressed by "longing for a foreign side." But one must wish it to be conscious, reasonable.

Evgeny Alekseevich Popov

They do not humiliate us at all, on the contrary, they still elevate a simple village or a small town - our homeland, as well as our ancestry from simple parents. It is strange to hear how people sometimes complain about their new place of residence, who, due to service or other circumstances, must live after the capital or other glorious city in a small remote town. In a new place, these people do not like anything, everything is not for them, everything is low for them, everyone is unworthy of them. What pride! Is not the Lord's land and its fulfillment everywhere? And so, if the homeland is kind to each of us, then every feature in it, joyful or sad, should arouse sympathy in us.

The activities of the Perm Diocesan Church-Archaeological Society, opened in 1912, were very productive and promised to be in the future. Unfortunately, he published only two issues of Izvestia - in 1915 and 1917.

All local history institutions and societies are characterized by the following areas of work: planning and reporting; support and encouragement of members of society; the direction of their search activities; publishing activity; educational activities - active speeches in the press, open meetings, organization of exhibitions, lectures, etc.

The activity of local historians of the late XIX - early XX century is characterized by the most active participation in public life. Many examples can be given here.

So, at the end of the 19th - beginning of the 20th century, such a phenomenon in the life of our region as the Perm local history traditions finally took shape. Why are we talking now not about the continuation, but about their revival?

The local lore movement has never stopped with us. Even in the difficult thirties it found some way out.

Today, local history occupies an increasingly prominent place in the public life of the country. It has become noticeably more active in our region. Serious research papers, review articles on the history of local history, methodological materials appear one after another.

And at the same time, even after a superficial analysis of the state of local history before and after 1917, we will come to the conclusion that the Perm traditions of local history with the establishment of Soviet power were discontinued and eventually lost completely. We emphasize once again that we are talking about traditions - experience, practice of local history work.

Indeed, how can we talk about continuity, if almost all Soviet local history began from scratch - the starting point was 1917. The works of our predecessors are now known only to a few for a number of reasons. Not only works - their names say nothing to the population.

You can't talk about professionalism either. What can we talk about if, until recently, archival funds were closed, literature was hidden in the special funds of libraries. To what was the skill of publishing, editorial activity.

However, this was not only about local history. Professionalism was generally not honored in the Soviet Union.

It is not worth talking about the coordination and organization of local history work for a long time, it is clear that it was carried out precisely in the Soviet sense.

Let us compare only the attitude in society towards local historians that existed at the beginning of the 20th century and has developed to this day. It is no secret that even now there is still an attitude towards these people as annoying eccentrics, although changes are finally noticeable.

Apparently, here it is necessary to dwell briefly on such a phenomenon as the surge in local history activity in the 1920s. S. O. Schmidt called these years the “golden decade” of Soviet local history. Judging by some publications of recent years, including Perm local history, many researchers agree with this definition. I think this is incorrect. If we agree with this definition, we must take 1917 as the date of birth of Soviet local history, then the rise in the 20s, the defeat in the 30s, and a gradual revival in the future. But it's not. In fact, the 1920s were a time when local history, including Permian, tried to adapt to new conditions.

During these years, local history societies and circles arose in Perm and other cities of the region. But these circles were led and worked in them for the most part by people who had already done a lot in this area before 1917. In essence, they simply continued their work after a break of several years (1918-1919-1920-1921). The break was explained by the fact that during these years there were practically no local historians in Perm. Together with the vast majority of the Permian intelligentsia in June 1919, they were evacuated to Siberia following the Kolchak troops.
Returning, trying to adapt to completely new living conditions, these people involuntarily reached out to each other, tried to unite and thereby preserve, at least to some extent, their familiar environment. S. O. Schmidt speaks well about this in his article: “The awareness of the need to preserve cultural monuments united everyone who understood their general cultural and historical value, even people of dissimilar socio-political views. Moreover, not accepting or frightened by everything that happened around, cut off from the usual business and the usual comforts of life, some educated intellectuals, active by nature, found the application of their knowledge and cultural skills in this area, without sacrificing, in essence, social political principles, as if they were moving away from active life (in its former forms) into local history and the sphere of protection of monuments.

Of course, one can come to the conclusion that this is how, involuntarily, local historians of the “pre-revolutionary hardening” ensured the “golden” Soviet decade. Unfortunately, until now there are practically no comprehensive, document-based studies of local history activities in these years. Meanwhile, enough documents have been preserved to clearly imagine the conditions in which this activity was carried out.

Let us turn, for example, to the documents of only one archival file in the fund of the Perm District Administrative Department of the SAPO (f. R-115: “The Case of the Circle for the Study of the Northern Territory at Perm University”).

Much has been written about the activities of the circle, we will not dwell on this here.

Why was the file on the work of the circle opened and preserved in the fund of the administrative department? Starting with the formation of the circle, officially authorized by the GPU, all its activities were carried out under the vigilant control of the GPU and the administrative department. The agenda of each meeting, without exception, was sent in advance to the administrative department, then forwarded to the GPU, returned with a resolution, and only then approved. Each minutes of the meeting, and the most detailed, also came here and was preserved in the file. Information about the members of the circle is also stored here - lists were regularly compiled, questionnaires were filled out, reports were written - how many non-party people were in the circle, how many Komsomol members, etc. The chairman of the circle P. S. Bogoslovsky and secretary V. Serebrennikov compiled, apparently, hundreds of such documents. The act of checking the activities of the circle by the inspector of the department is also kept in the file, which states, in particular, that “the procedure for recruiting members is carried out in strict accordance with paragraph 5 of the Charter ...”, etc.


Pavel Stepanovich Bogoslovsky

Unfortunately, it is impossible to list all the documents here, but now everyone can get acquainted with them.

Of course, even under such conditions, local historians managed to achieve really significant results in the 1920s. But it is impossible to take into account the results of their activities, which could be achieved under normal working conditions.

This state of affairs existed, of course, not only in our region. That is why the term "golden decade" is not appropriate, not true. Let us cite here the statement of another famous local historian in the 1920s, V.P. Semenov-Tyan-Shansky: “I call the local history movement great because it was a truly selfless general movement of the provincial intelligentsia to save all the numerous monuments from countless accidents at that time culture in both cities and rural areas.

How can one call a “golden” decade, when devastation and devastation reigned in the country, and local historians united, trying to save the fragments?

Maybe this is a controversial issue, but one thing is clear: this period of the history of Perm local history has yet to be studied.

During these years, a new Soviet local history was really born, rose to its feet, took shape. A completely new phenomenon in the sense in which Soviet literature, Soviet art, etc. was absolutely new. It had its own characteristics, completely different from pre-revolutionary local history. It cannot be unequivocally said that it was better or worse - it was different. We will not consider its features here - this is a topic for another conversation. Let us only note that the local history literature of the 1920s is now of undoubted interest for historians, local historians, and teachers. The methodology for studying small towns, the methodology of local history research, advice to local historians - all this can be safely adopted from the publications of the 1920s.

Concluding the conversation about the loss of local history traditions in the Soviet period, it should be noted that there were exceptions here as well. Such an exception was, for example, the activity of B. N. Nazarovsky, who worked precisely in accordance with the principles of local history activities listed earlier and that is why he managed to do so much. (See: Citizen of Perm: Collection of memory of B. N. Nazarovsky, journalist and local historian. - Perm, 1993).

Boris Nikandrovich Nazarovsky

Ways of revival of Perm local lore traditions.

What are the specific ways of reviving local history traditions? What needs to be done in order to raise our local history to a higher quality level, so that it again becomes a phenomenon, a factor in our life?

There must be continuity in our local history work. It is necessary to restore the interrupted "connection of times". For this, it is necessary first of all to bring to the attention of the general reader the local history knowledge that was developed by our predecessors. They remain inaccessible even now: the circulation of literature is small, it is difficult to get into the archives. And most importantly, people do not know that this knowledge exists, so there is no demand for it, no interest.

It is important to note that here we are talking not only about pre-revolutionary local history. There are interesting studies of our contemporaries or recently departed local historians - we need to identify and promote them.

Restoring the continuity of local history activities, it is necessary to think over a program for educating future local historians or to take part in the implementation of a program already developed by someone, for example, by educational authorities.

In order to revive professionalism in local history activities, it is necessary to provide information, bibliographic and methodological assistance to local historians, to establish a system for providing this assistance.

You can list more specific, primary tasks facing Perm local historians:

- to organize the work of the regional society "Kama region local history specialist" created in March 1990;
- to organize and hold a methodological meeting of all organizations and institutions of the local history profile and solve the problem of coordination of local history work at it;
- to think over the possibilities of material and other assistance and support for publishing houses that publish local history literature.

The solution of these problems will help us, finally, come close to the revival of Perm local lore traditions.

A. Zelenin Perm and Perm region

entertaining local history

Name, patronymic, surname

When a person is born, he is given name. In order not to turn later on the street: “Hey, you!” After all, who is this - "Hey, you!" - unclear!

Ancient people gave themselves names that were different from modern ones. These names were long and explained a lot. For example, one of them could sound like this: "A man who caught a bear and killed him to feed his family."

Our ancestors - the Slavs - often named themselves in honor of the gods, which they invented for themselves. For example, the sun god is Yarilo. If a person was born in the morning, he could well be named after the sun god.

Modern names that we get from our parents came to us from different countries - from different languages. For example, from Greek, Old Arabic, Old Germanic, Hebrew, Old Norse, Celtic, Latin, Old Slavonic.

A person's patronymic is always given in honor of the father. Since ancient times, it has become so customary: a man is the main one in the family: a breadwinner and a protector. Bearing a patronymic is always an honor. Previously, it was not given to everyone. Either those who belonged to a rich family, or those who distinguished themselves in some way before their homeland.

Surname is a Latin word. It came to us from ancient Rome. Many hundreds of years ago, they denoted belonging to a family.

In Russia, the first surnames denoted the occupation of a person, his profession. For example, he was driving through the village of voivode 1 - he himself was on horseback, on horseback, but take the road, and the children run across. "Whose kid? "- the governor was angry. And they tell him: “Yes, the Kuznetsovs are kids!” - that is, a local blacksmith. So the children of the blacksmith received not only punishment from the governor, but also a nickname - a future surname.

1 Governor - the head of any territory in Russia, as well as the troops,

Given a surname and a first name. The trees were small. Sometimes only two or three households. An important man was driving, he was interested in the guys that they were running around the huts: whose they were. They answered: "Vanka, son of Petrov." Or like this: "Yeryomka, son of Danilov." So the names Petrov, Danilov and the like appeared on earth.

Names are not only for people. Rivers and lakes, villages and cities have their names. People settled near the river - gave it a name. They built a house, another and a third - they called the village so that they knew where they lived.

The main city of the Perm Territory has a name - Permian.

By the way, in ancient times, Perm was not called a city, but a large territory - lands where different peoples lived.

Scientists have not been able to determine exactly where it came from and when the name "Perm" appeared. This happened because the people who named our lands did not know letters, could not write, did not think about the future. They did not preserve and did not pass on history to their descendants.

Russian scientist Dmitry 2 Vladimirovich Bub-rikh believed, and many scientists agreed with him, that the word "Perm" came from the Vepsian word "perama" ("feather maa", "feather maa") - "far" or "distant land" .

2 Dmitry is a Greek word, translated into Russian means "belonging to Demeter." In ancient Greek mythology, Demeter is the goddess of fertility and agriculture.

RepresentativeVeps peoples



Veps are a people who now live in the western part of Russia. This is the European part of our country.

Veps are descendants of the ancient Finnish tribe "all". A long time ago, this tribe lived on the current lands of Russia, entering the Urals.

A very unusual version of the origin of the word "Perm" was proposed by the Russian geographer Nikolai 3 Ivanovich Shishkin. Most of our scientists disagreed with him. However, I think it will be interesting for you to know that, according to Nikolai Ivanovich, two ancient tribes once lived on our lands. One was called "per", the other - "eat". These tribes gave the name to our land.

Komi-Permyaks



In the languages ​​​​of the peoples of the Kama region, which after the Veps became indigenous to our land (Komi-Permyaks, Komi-Zyryans and Komi-Yaz-Vintsy), the word "Perm" sounded like "Perem", "Perim" and "Perim".

When Russian people came to the Urals, they called this area "Perem". Over time, one letter "e" from the word disappeared, and "Perm" was obtained.

3 Nikolai is a Greek word, translated into Russian means "victor of peoples."

City Permian

Every person has a birthday. This is the day, month and year he was born.

Settlements also have birthdays - in big cities and small villages.

The year of birth of Perm is the year1723rd. The city's birthday is celebrated annually on June 12. And it is celebrated together with the Day of Russia.

Why, 1723?

Because this year on the Yegoshikha 4 river, a tributary of the Kama, the construction of a copper smelter began. This factory gave rise to a factory settlement - the future city of Perm.

4 Once Egoshikha was called like this: Yagoshikha. From the Komi-Permyak "yag" ("eg") - a log, and "osh" - a bear, together: a bear log. Egoshikha is a river that flowed along a ravine where many bears lived.

city ​​founderPerm is Vasyaley 5 Nikitich Tatishchev.

And the name of the future city - Perm - gave the RussianEmpress Catherineon the II 6 . On November 16, 1780, by her Decree, she ordered: “... Appoint a provincial city for the Perm viceroy in this place, name this city Permian..."

5 Basil - a Greek word, translated into Russian means "royal *.

6 Catherine II - Russian Empress. Years of life: 1729 - 1796. Years of government of the Russian Empire: 1762-1796.

Catherine is a Greek word, translated into Russian means "pure, immaculate."

The first inhabitants on the site of the future city of Perm appeared in 1647. Then a census of the people living on them was carried out on the Permian lands. They also copied all the Kama villages: towns, villages and pochinki 7 .

7 Pochinok - a small new village, often originally in one house.

In the census book of the governor Procopius 8 Elizarov for 1647 it is written: “... repairs on the river. Kama and on the river Yagoshikha, and in it there are peasants' yards: Sergeyko Pavlov, the son of Bryukhanov, he has children of Klimko and Ivashko ... "

8 Procopius is a Greek word, translated into Russian means "a naked sword."

In 1678, in the census books of Prince 9 Fedor 10 Velsky on the Kama and Yagoshikha rivers, everything is in the same repair "yards: Ivashka Verkho-Lantsev, Dyomka and Yaranko Bryukhanovs, Stall Bryukhanov and Ivashko Bryukhanov ..."

9 Prince - the ruler of any territory in the Russian state, as well as a title of nobility.

10 Fedor is a Greek word, translated into Russian means "God's gift."

At the turn of the XVII-XVIII (seventeenth - eighteenth) centuries, the Russian Tsar Peter I 11 needed a large number of guns to expand the borders of the state, as well as to protect them. They also needed money. Iron and copper were needed to make cannons and coins. The Urals has long been the richest part of the lands of the Russian state. Here, in the Urals, Peter I was sent captain-lieutenant of artillery V.N. Tatishchev. He "had to find places rich in forests and ores, next to large waters, in order to set up new factories that produce tools in the sovereign's arsenal" 12.

11 Peter I - Russian tsar, later emperor. Years of life: 1672-1725. Years of government of the Russian state: 1682-1725.

Peter is a Greek word, translated into Russian means "stone".

12 From the book “The Tale of Motovilikha: Years. Events. People* (1974).

In 1723, the first copper was smelted at the Yegoshikha plant.

In 1724, the foundation was laid in the village, and in 1726 the first church, Peter and Paul Church, was consecrated. At first, the church was wooden, later a stone one was built next to it (1757-1764). The Peter and Paul Church is still located in Perm. This is the Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul on Sovetskaya street, 1.

In the 1730s, Yegoshikha became the center of the vast territory of the Perm province as part of the Kazan province.

Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul

In 1781, the Perm province was created, Perm became its main city.

In 1923, after regions and districts appeared in Russia instead of provinces, Perm became the center of the Perm District.

Since 1938 Perm has been the main city of the Perm region.

In 1971, for great services to the motherland, Perm was awarded the highest order of the country of the USSR 13 - the Order of Lenin.

13 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

Now Perm is a very big city. Along the main river of the Kama region - Kama - it stretches for almost 70 kilometers, its width is about 40 kilometers, and its area is almost 800 square kilometers!

Approximately lives in Permmillion inhabitants! They work in large and small enterprises, go to shops and markets, to theaters and libraries, visit parks and stadiums. For kids In Perm open over 200 kindergartens, over200 schools- general education, special, musical, artistic and sports. And in Perm there are colleges, lyceums, institutes and universities.

Districts Permand

Perm the edges

Our country, the Russian Federation, is a single entity. But it is made up of many parts. These parts are republics, territories and regions.

Perm Territory - part of the Russian Federationderations. It also consists of parts, but they are smaller than the republics.

The Perm Territory includes the Perm Region and the Komi-Perm Autonomous Okrug. In turn, the region and the district are divided into districts in which there are cities, villages, villages and towns.

There are 7 districts in Perm: Dzerzhinsky, Industrialny, Kirovsky, Leninsky, Motovilikhinsky, Ordzhonikidzevsky and Sverdlovsky.

Kirovsky district is located entirely on the right bank of the Kama. Dzerzhinsky and Ordzhonikidzevsky districts are located on two banks of the main Permian river. The smallest district - Leninsky, considered the main (central), and Motovilikhinsky (one of the largest) fit on the left bank of the Kama. There are also some of the youngest districts of Perm - - Industrial and Sverdlovsky.

The Perm Territory consists of 37 municipalitiesdistricts and 14 city districts(without the city of Perm).

Districts of the Perm Territory: Bardymsky, Berezovsky, Bolshesosnovsky, Vereshchaginsky, Gainsky, Gornozavodsky, Dobryansky, Elovsky, Ilyinsky, Karagaysky, Kishertsky, Kosinsky, Kochevsky, Krasnovishersky, Kudymkarsky, Kuedinsky, Kungursky, Lysvensky, Nytvensky, Oktyabrsky, Ordinsky, Osinsky, Okhansky, Ochersky, Permsky, Sivinsky, Solikamsky, Suksunsky, Uinsky, Usolsky, Tchaikovsky, Chastinsky, Cherdynsky, Chernushinsky, Chusovsky, Yurlinsky, Yusvinsky.

Urban districts of the Perm Territory (cityYes): Aleksandrovsk, Berezniki, Gremyachinsk, Gubakha, Dobryanka, Kizel, Krasnokamsk, Kudymkar, Kungur, Lysva, Solikamsk, Tchaikovsky, Chusovoy and ZATO 14 Zvezdny.

14 ZATO is a closed administrative-territorial formation, access to which is carried out only with a special pass.

Komi-Permyatsky District consists of the city of Kudymkar and 6 districts: Gainsky, Kosinsky, Kochevsky, Kudymkarsky, Yurlinsky and Yusvinsky.

CITY...


In the colored cells of the chainword- on thethe title of the city of the Perm region.

Note. In a chainword, the last letter of eachth word is the first letter of the word followingbehind him. Letters in a chainword grid- hint.

Questions:

1. "Ringing" flower. 2. Fairy Humpbacked. 3. Water flower. 4. Break in the performance. 5. Smoke comes out of it. 6. Summer month. 7, "Road" for pedestrians. 8. Mom and dad. 9. Football. 10. They make roads out of it. 11. Electricity.



1

L

b

O

w

3

n

2

11

to

4

BUT

5

7

with

6

B

L

about

8

O

And

with

10

9

L

Streets Perm

In the dictionary of the Russian language call the streetthere are two rows of houses and the space between themmi, designed for passage and passage.

A long time ago, when Perm was Yegoshikha, there were no cars in it - they rode horses harnessed to carts, carriages and sleighs. There were no streets. Yes, the streets! There were few houses: first - one, then - three, then - five ...

When in 1781 the industrial settlement of Yegoshikha became the provincial city of Perm, a census was conducted in it to find out: how much, what and where. And it turned out: there are five streets in Perm, and there is one more lane. And on these streets and in the lane there are about 400 private and state-owned houses.

What is the main street in Perm? And here you may be surprised, because some residents of the present and past Perm considered the main street of the city ... Kama!

And in fact, the description of the street is very suitable for our beautiful river: on the right and left banks there are houses, and between them they walk Plan of the city of Perm, 1998

ships, tugs, barges, boats.

However, the real streets, they are on the ground, on dry land.

The first streets of Perm were built along the Kama. The closest to the river was called Beregovoy. Then people changed its name: Coastal became the embankment. In the 19th (nineteenth) century, the Embankment was renamed

to the monastery. The renaming took place in honor of the Spaso-Preobrazhensky Monastery complex under construction on the street, in one of the parts of which the Perm Art Gallery is now located. On the street there were houses that belonged to the rich people of Perm: breeders and merchants. Factories, marinas and warehouses were located closer to the water - probably, therefore, in 1920 Monastyrskaya Street changed its name again: it became Trudovaya. From 1937 to the present, the street bears the name of Grigory 15 (Sergo) Konstantinovich Ordzhonikidze. During the years of Soviet power, Sergo Ordzhonikidze led the country's heavy industry and visited the city of Perm.

15 Gregory is a Greek word, translated into Russian means "peppy."

One of the first streets of Perm - Siberian. In the 20th (twentieth) century, it bore the name of Karl 16 Marx, and then its historical name was returned to it. Initially, Sibirskaya Street was part of the main road to Siberia. The road was called: Siberian tract. Where the street turned into a highway, there was the border of the city of Perm. Here was located Siberiasky outpost.

16 Karl - an ancient German word, translated into Russian means "brave".


Monastyrskaya street (Ordzhonikidze). Photo from the beginning of the 20th century.
In 1824, pillars were installed at the outpost, interconnected by a cast-iron chain. On them were images of bears, and these pillars were crowned with figures of eagles.

The outpost was built in honor of the arrival of the Russian Emperor Alexander 17 1 in the provincial city of Perm. Now there is a memorial stele at this place.

17 Alexander is a Greek word, translated into Russian means "protector of people."

A large number of ancient buildings have survived to the present on Sibirskaya Street: the house of the Perm governor (at the intersection of Sibirskaya and Bolshevikskaya streets), the building of the Noble Assembly (at the intersection of Sibirskaya and Lunacharsky), the building

Perm Treasury Chamber 18 (at the intersection of Siberian and Lenin) and others.

18 Officials who dealt with financial and judicial affairs of the Perm province served in the Treasury.


Sibirskaya street, Old Siberian outpost, 1914
And children are always welcome on Sibirskaya, because on this street there are: the main children's library of the Perm Territory (house number 11), the Perm Palace of Youth Creativity (house number 29), the Perm State Puppet Theater (house number 65), three schools and the Palace sports "Eaglet" (house number 47).

Now there are about 1500 streets in the city of Perm. Street is the main one. Lenin.

Streets are named by people. As a rule, in honor of someone or something. For example, some streets in Perm are named after cities. This is - Abakan, Brest, VolGogradskaya... Other streets are named after people who once ruled our country or another country, for example, Kuibyshev,Sverdlov, Bogdan Khmelnitsky. Other streets bear the names of the military, writers, artists: Frunze, Pushkin, Shishkin. There are also streets associated with professions:

Vodnikov, Metallurgists,Signalers. I wonder why streets appeared in Perm Cheerful and QuietSpring and Snow?


Boulevard Gagarin
The streets are straight and wide, small and narrow, long and decorated with avenues of bushes and flowers. Straight and wide streets these are brochures. Small and narrow lanes. Long streets can be called like a road, - highway. And the street with alleys is boulevard.

The most important thing is that there are houses on every street and avenue, in the alley and on the boulevard. And every home has a story. As, for example, in house number 11 on Ordzhonikidze street. This old house houses the Perm Regional Museum. Having visited it, you will be able to learn the whole history of the Perm region: from prehistoric times to Perm the Great, from the Perm province to the present day.

Streets old Perm


Having solved the puzzles, you will find out how the streets of the city of Perm were called in the old days - Sovetskaya and Kirov.




Permian period

The phrase "Permian period" - according tounderstanding is geological.

Geology is a complex of sciences about the Earth: about itsstructure, composition and history. Also in the concept"geology" includes methods for finding usefulfossils.

Period is the period of time duringwhich something is happening.

In the history of planet Earth, there have been manydifferent periods, and all of them are calleddifferently.


R.I. Murchison
Perm can be proud that its namean entire geologic period has been namedbegan... 285 million years ago! And lastedXia... 55 million years!

The Permian system was discovered in1841 year.In that year, the Permian land was visited by Englandsky scientist-geologist Roderick Impey Murchison.What was his surprise when on the berehe discoverednot yet exploredwhom deposits - a lotancient rocks!

So for the first time in the world howling history in the geological appeared on the calendar name of the Russian region - "Perm".

And with misternym, by the way, in the Permprovince a little troublechilas. He traveled around the countyladies, got acquainted with the placesfactories and...


Fossil vertebrate of the Permian period
On the Silver Rivertributary of the Chusovaya, lodka in which Rode sailedrick murchison, flipsank ... drowned geologistin the river and clocks and pipesku, and a bag. Saved headsnoe - notebookwith my observationsdiscoveries. Here's howwow!

Introduction

Geography of the Perm Region

Vishera Reserve

Conclusion

Bibliography

Introduction

In order to preserve the most significant natural complexes in the Perm Region, 2 reserves of the federal level, 31 regional reserves, including 5 landscape, 1 ornithological, 18 biological (hunting) and 7 biological micro-reserves have been created, 189 natural monuments have been taken under protection.

The list of protected natural territories and objects of the Perm Region includes natural parks, dendrological parks, botanical gardens, natural reserves, historical and natural and cultural and natural areas and sites, ethno-cultural territories, protected landscapes, suburban and green areas, forests, parks and other green areas. plantations of settlements, natural healing resources, health-improving areas and resorts, rare and endangered species of animals, plants, fungi and lichens included in the Red Book of the Russian Federation, the Red Book of the Middle Urals (within the Perm Region).

In total, there are 387 specially protected natural areas in the Perm region, their total area exceeds 1.1 million hectares, which is about 9 percent of the region's territory. The distribution of specially protected territories in the Perm Region is extremely uneven: there are 25 of them in the Krasnovishersky District, 26 in the Solikamsky District, 57 in the Cherdynsky District, and one each in the Permsky, Vereshchaginsky, Elovsky and Chastinsky Districts.

The legal regime of specially protected natural territories and objects of regional and local significance is regulated by the legislation of the Perm Region: the Law of the Perm Region "On the Protection of the Environment of the Perm Region" dated June 20, 1996 and the Law of the Perm Region "On the Historical, Cultural and Natural Heritage of the Perm Region" dated February 20, 1997.

Geography of the Perm Region

The Perm Region occupies an area of ​​160,236.5 square kilometers on the eastern outskirts of the Russian Plain and the western slope of the Middle and Northern Urals, at the junction of two parts of the world - Europe and Asia. It covers approximately 1/5 of the territory of the Ural economic region and is, as it were, the eastern "outpost" of Europe, 99.8% of which belongs to this part of the world and only 0.2% to Asia. The territory of the region is almost completely located in the basin of the Kama River - the largest tributary of the Volga River. Kama, through a system of canals, provides access by water to five seas (Caspian, Azov, Black, Baltic and White). The maximum length of the region from north to south is 645 km, from west to east - 417.5 km. The northernmost point of the Kama region - Mount Pura-Munit (1094 m) on the watershed Ural Range in the upper reaches of the Khozya, Vishera and Purma rivers - has coordinates 61o 39 "N. "s. w). The extreme point in the west is a kilometer northeast of height 236, on the watershed of the rivers Lepyu, Peles, Kazhim at 51o47 "E, in the east - the highest point of the Khoza-Tump ridge, Mount Rakht-Sori-Syakhl (1007 m) under 59o29" in. e. The borders are very winding, their length is more than 2, 2 thousand km. The region borders on two regions and three republics of the Russian Federation: in the north with the Komi Republic, in the west - with the Kirovka region and Udmurtia, in the south with Bashkiria, in the east - with the Sverdlovsk region.

The Perm region was formed on October 3, 1938 by separation from the Sverdlovsk region. As of the beginning of 1995, there were 36 administrative districts, 25 cities (including 13 regional subordination), 56 urban-type settlements and 516 rural councils in the region.

Specially protected natural territories of the Perm region

As of 2007, there are 375 specially protected natural areas in the Perm region, which occupy about 10% of the region's territory. Of these, 325 are at the regional (regional) level, 48 are local and 2 are federal.

In 2004, work was almost completed to improve the regulatory framework for existing, specially protected, natural areas (PAs) of regional (regional) significance and outlined ways to develop the system of protected areas in the region.

Decree of the Governor of the Perm Region No. 163 dated June 26, 2001 “On Clarification of the Status, Category, Boundaries and Protection Regime of Specially Protected Natural Territories” amended the characteristics and protection regime of more than 70% of protected areas. Including: the protection regime 228 was established or changed, the boundaries 220 were approved or changed, the categories 130 were changed, the status was removed from 123, the status of 25 protected areas was changed. The purpose of the changes is to improve the quality of protection and expand the possibility of using protected areas in environmental education activities. As part of the implementation of the decree, 212 protected area passports were issued and approved. Taking into account the Decree of the Governor of the region dated June 26, 2001 No. 163 “On clarifying the status, category, boundaries and regime of protection of specially protected natural areas”, we can talk about a radical update of the regulatory framework for specially protected natural areas in the Perm Region.

The need to make additions and changes to the existing regulatory legal acts (decisions of the regional administration dated April 28, 1981 No. 81 “On measures to ensure the safety of wild plants and botanical monuments of nature”, dated June 7, 1988 No. 139 “On measures to ensure the safety of monuments nature of the Perm Region”, dated 12.12.91 No. 285 “On granting the status of protected natural areas to objects and landscapes of the Perm Region”) is caused by a number of reasons: the discrepancy between the above decisions with the current environmental legislation of the Russian Federation and the Perm Region, the lack of approved borders and protection regime in 60% of protected areas.

The purpose of these changes is to improve the quality of protection and the possibility of using protected areas in environmental education activities. The current state of the PAs in the region is shown in Tables 11.1 and 11.2

The Governor of the Perm Region signed Decree No. 188 dated 01.08.2001 “On the reservation of lands for the organization of specially protected natural areas for 2001-2015”, according to which lands were reserved for 20 protected areas with an area of ​​234.2 thousand hectares. According to this decree, a project was prepared for the organization of the Oslyansky landscape reserve.

In 2001, work began on the restoration of the unique historical and natural complex "Kuzminka" in the village. Ilinskoe. The park has tree plantations more than a century old.

In 2002, it is planned to develop projects for the organization of new PAs on the Chusovaya and Berezovaya rivers, as well as to continue work on the arrangement of PAs of recreational importance, including the Kuzminki complex.

Table 1

Specially protected natural territories of the Perm region

Specially protected natural

territories

Square

from the area of ​​protected areas

from area area

Federal level: 2 279157, 0 22, 5 2, 19
reserves 2 279157, 0 22, 5 2, 19
Regional (regional) level: 325 954698, 45 76, 8 7, 5
Preserves: 32 569729, 9 45, 8 4, 5
- landscape 6 129715, 0 10, 4 1, 02
- ornithological 7 122, 9 0, 01 0, 001
- biological, hunting 19 439912, 0 35, 39 3, 45
Monuments of nature: 166 11621, 85 0, 9 0, 1
- complex and landscape 75 5463, 5 0, 44 0, 04
- botanical 36 4436, 5 0, 36 0, 03
- geological 47 608, 95 0, 049 0, 005
- hydrological 7 1112, 9 0, 7 0, 009
- zoological 1 Not defined. - -
33 6161, 7 0, 49 0, 05
Protected natural landscapes 81 364720, 2 29, 3 2, 9
Natural reserves: 12 3900, 9 0, 3 0, 03
- landscape 7 611, 2 0, 049 0, 005
- botanical 5 3289, 7 0, 26 0, 03
botanical gardens 1 27, 5 0, 002 0, 0002
Local (district, city) level 48 9339, 49 0, 75 0, 07
Monuments of nature 11 6, 58 0, 0005 0, 0001
- landscape 1 0, 28 0, 00002 0, 000002
- geological 10 6, 3 0, 001 0, 0001
nature reserves 9 3170, 95 0, 26 0, 02
- landscape 3 2363, 4 0, 19 0, 02
- botanical 5 802, 55 0, 06 0, 006
- zoological 1 5, 0 0, 0004 0, 00004
History - natural guarded complexes: 3 7, 8 0, 001 0, 0001
-Protected natural landscapes 20 4467, 0 0, 36 0, 04
-settlement park 4 833, 16 0, 07 0, 007
-Protection zone of local importance 1 854, 0 0, 07 0, 007
Total 1243194, 94 100 9, 8

table 2

Distribution of protected areas by administrative territories of the region

District, city

Number of protected areas,

PA area

% of area

administrative unit

Aleksandrovsk 5513 16 38137, 8 6, 9
Bardymsky district 2382 7 11758, 4 4, 9
Berezniki 401, 7 3 3471, 0 8, 6
Berezovsky district 1977 3 283, 6 0, 1
Bolshesosnovsky district 2220 19 22520, 0 10, 1
Vereshchaginsky district 1621 1 215, 0 0, 1
Gornozavodsky district 7057 16 50871, 3 7, 2
Gremyachinsk 1114, 7 3 17778, 5 15, 9
Gubakha 1009 12 11152, 5 11, 1
Dobryansky district 5192 17 52459, 9 10, 1
Elovsky district 1449 1 689, 0 0, 5
Ilyinsky district 3069 6 5913, 95 1, 9
Karagay district 2394 6 30609, 1 12, 8
Kizel 1390 2 8, 1 0, 006
Kishertsky district 1412 21 20301, 4 14, 4
Krasnovishersky district 15375 23 388641, 0 25, 3
Krasnokamsk 958 6 2001, 4 2, 1
Kuedinsky district 2616 4 45128, 2 17, 3
Kungursky district 4416 19 27542, 9 6, 2
Lysvensky district 3695, 9 18 3113, 7 0, 8
Nytvensky district 1656 4 2768, 6 1, 7
Oktyabrsky district 3444 2 12001, 5 3, 5
Ordinsky district 1418 2 3, 0 0, 002
Osinsky district 2057 5 12493, 6 6, 1
Okhansky district 1516 5 32430, 2 21, 4
Ochersky district 1330 13 19262, 5 14, 5
Perm 798 8 4251, 86 5, 3
Perm region 3900 1 20, 0 0, 005
Sivinsky district 2517 2 129, 5 0, 05
Solikamsk district 5421 25 51817, 7 9, 6
Suksunsky district 1677 9 8451, 07 5, 04
Uinsky district 1555 8 38738, 0 24, 9
Usolsky district 4666 11 40867, 2 8, 8
Chaikovsky district 2124 3 29594, 0 13, 9
Chastinsky district 1632 1 There is no data -
Cherdynsky district 20872 55 254111, 88 12, 2
Chernushinsky district 1676 4 1065, 0 0, 6
Chusovsky district 3504, 8 19 2592, 58 0, 7
Total 127336, 5 380 1243194, 94 9, 8

Vishera Reserve

Vishera State Nature Reserve was established in February 1991. and is located in the extreme north-east of the Perm region. The area of ​​the reserve is 241,200 hectares, which is 15.6% of the area of ​​the Krasnovishersky district and 1.5% of the region.

The reserve includes the catchment area of ​​the upper reaches of the river. Vishera with tributaries - rivers: Vels, Capelin, Lypya, Niols, Lopya, Khalsoriya.

In structural and tectonic terms, the territory of the reserve belongs to the Central Ural uplift, which is represented by the Riphean metamorphosed sedimentary complexes, saturated with intrusive formations and the West Ural folding zone, formed by Paleozoic carbonate complexes.

The processes of karst formation are intensively manifested here: karst funnels, dry valleys, diving rivers. There are also caves, quite extended, studied very poorly.

The contrast of rocks in terms of stability and the ongoing processes of mountain building have led to the formation of a sharply dissected mountainous country with elevation changes of 800-1200 m. The maximum height above sea level is 1469.8 m (Mount Tulym).

The climate of the reserve is continental boreal type, characterized by moderately warm summers and long cold winters. The average annual air temperature is 2.00С, the average temperature in January is -19.00С, in July +15.00С. The duration of the warm season is 160-170 days. The average soil temperature is +5, 00С. The average annual pressure is about 710.3 mmHg. The annual rainfall is 1000 mm. Of the special atmospheric phenomena, fogs (190-200 days a year), thunderstorms, and snowstorms stand out.

The mountain flora of the Vishera Urals occupies an intermediate position between the Arctic and boreal floras, similar to the flora of the Polar Urals and the Bolshezemelskaya tundra. About 528 species of higher vascular plants are found on the territory of the reserve, of which about two dozen are listed in the Red Book of the Middle Urals: Helma minuartia, Shiverekia Podolskaya, Perm anemone, Alpine aster, Venus slipper spotted, two-leafed lyubka, night violet, pink Rhodiola, evading peony other. The list of mosses includes about 100 species, the list of lichens - 286, of which 2 are rare.

The fauna of invertebrates is practically not studied. According to estimates for the north-east of the European part, the number of insect species in the reserve is about 8200.

The fauna of vertebrate animals of the reserve has a typical taiga appearance with common habitats in the same area of ​​typical European (pine marten, European mink) and Siberian (Siberian salamander, nutcracker, red-backed vole, sable) species. In some areas, there are inhabitants of open steppe (field harrier, kestrel, common mole) and near-water (great merganser, carrier) spaces; amphibious species (grass and moor frogs, beaver, muskrat, otter) and species characteristic of the tundra zone (white and tundra partridge, arctic fox, reindeer).

The fauna of the reserve is characterized by 3 species of amphibians and reptiles, 6 species of fish, 143 species of birds and 35 species of mammals.

The fish recorded on the territory of the reserve belong to three faunal complexes - Arctic, Ponto-Caspian and boreal-plain. Most species are cold-loving, there are glacial relics. The most numerous and widespread are: river minnow, grayling, less often - taimen, sculpin.

The avifauna of the reserve is unique; this was the reason for the allocation of this area to a special ornithological district - Repeisky. A number of nesting, vagrant and migratory birds (golden plover, merlin, chrustan, garnish, waxwing, bluetail, yellow-winged warbler, scurry, etc.) are characteristic only for the territory of the reserve and are extremely rare in other areas of the Perm region.

On the territory of the reserve there are bird species listed in the Red Book of the Middle Urals: black-throated auk, lesser white-fronted eagle, whooper swan, osprey, greater spotted eagle, white-tailed eagle, peregrine falcon, merlin, eagle owl, pygmy owl, hawk owl, gray owl.

During 2001, the reserve carried out work on the protection of the territory, scientific research, environmental propaganda and education.

During 2001, the department of protection of the reserve detained 8 violators of the reserve regime. Three new cordons began to function (on the Lypya farm, at the mouth of the Listvennichny stream and Toshemka). Compared to previous years, the number of violations of the reserve regime has decreased.

In the past year, the scientific department carried out winter counts of commercial mammals; work was carried out on the account of birds; for the study of lichens and mosses; works on hydrobiology; phenological and meteorological observations were made.

In the past year, entomological research was continued at the scientific apiary (the study of the Vishera superrace of bees with the aim of creating an apidological reserve as an integral part of the protected area).

Basegi State Nature Reserve

The Basegi State Nature Reserve was organized in 1982 with the aim of preserving and studying the natural complexes of the native mid-taiga spruce-fir forests located on the slopes of the Basegi ridge (Western spurs of the Ural Range).

The reserve is located on the territory of the Gornozavodsky and Gremyachinsky districts of the Perm region. Geographic coordinates - 58050`s. sh. and 58030`v. e. The area of ​​the reserve is 37,957 hectares, the area of ​​the protected zone is 21,345 hectares.

The territory of the Basegi reserve is located within the western macroslope of the Main Ural Range. The central line of the reserve stretches from north to south along the Basegi ridge, which looks like well-isolated mountain peaks of the Northern Basega (952 m above sea level), the Middle Basega (994 m) and the Southern Basega (851 m).

The ridge itself is a watershed of the Usva and Vilva rivers (tributaries of the Chusovaya River) and has a well-defined altitudinal zonality, which determines the species composition and characteristics of flora and fauna. There are mountain-forest, subalpine, mountain-tundra altitudinal belts. The latter, represented by a unique mountain tundra, is the most valuable and most vulnerable natural complex. The reserve includes valuable primary fir-spruce forests, in general, their area is up to 30% of the forest area of ​​the reserve. This is one of the preserved natural taiga massifs in the Middle Urals.

Features of the low-mountain relief, continental climate and other environmental factors formed the typical flora and fauna characteristic of this type of middle taiga landscapes.

1214 species of higher and lower plants are described on the territory of the reserve, among them: flowering - 440 species, gymnosperms - 6 species, ferns - 23, club mosses - 4, horsetails - 6, moss - 230, lichens - 98, fungi - 186, algae - 302 species. Among all this diversity of plants, more than 50 species are rare, including endemics and relics, and 27 species are listed in the red books of various ranks. The animal world is no less diverse. To date, 47 species of mammals, 182 species of birds, 1 species of reptiles, 3 species of amphibians, 16 species of fish, and more than a thousand species of invertebrates are known.

Over the years of the existence of the reserve, a system for monitoring the natural environment has been developed, which is carried out according to the standard program for maintaining the Chronicle of Nature. The observation system includes components of the natural environment: relief, weather, water, soil, flora and vegetation, fauna and fauna, the calendar of nature, the state of the reserve regime and the influence of anthropogenic factors, and others.

The year 2001 was characterized by warm and comparatively dry climatic indicators. No large anomalous deviations in the state of the abiotic environment were observed. The state of living biota, according to the criteria of abundance and the nature of manifestations of vital activity, can be characterized as close to average long-term norms with small deviations that do not go beyond the average statistical deviations.

There are 10 inspectors in the reserve's security service. In 2001, the Forest Protection Inspectorate carried out a series of forest management and protected regime activities, and participated in general accounting work. Employees of the department detained 5 violators of the reserved regime, seized one smooth-bore weapon.

In the reporting year, poaching and trapping of large ungulates and predatory animals, rare species of fauna, as well as fires in the protected area and adjacent to its borders, were not registered.

The scientific department employs 3 permanent researchers and 3 laboratory assistants. During 2001, the research staff spent 384 people on field work. day.

Works on the creation of cadastral information on rare species of animals and plants of the Gornozavodsky district of the Perm region were completed; preparation of a poster and a brochure for the protected areas of the Gornozavodsky district.

Conclusion

Comprehensive protection of cultural heritage in Russia was for the first time included in the sphere of state regulation only after new political forces came to power in October 1917, proclaiming other principles of state structure, radically changing the entire state apparatus. In the Perm region, the first effective body - the Perm provincial section for the protection of monuments of art and antiquity - was formed in June 1920. The number of employees then included only 3 instructors. At present, the Regional Research and Production Center for the Protection and Use of Historical and Cultural Monuments (OTsOP) exercises control over the protection and use of historical and cultural monuments.

There are 2331 monuments (2507 objects) in the state register in the Perm region. Restoration of a number of cultural heritage sites was organized in the Solikamsk and Cherdyn districts of the region, Perm, Osa, Usolye, etc.

Among them are landscape (for example, the White Moss rocks in the Cherdyn region, Vetlan and the Talking Stone in the Krasnovishersky region, Stone Town in the Gremyachinsky region), geological (Gubakhinskaya and Ordinskaya caves) and hydrological natural monuments (Ermakov spring in Cherdyn). As well as protected landscapes (Kapkan-gora in Chernushka, Kvarkush and Polyudov stone in Krasnovishersk, Adovo Lake in Gainy), zoological (Guselnikovsky in the Kishertsky district) and botanical nature reserves (PSU Botanical Garden), botanical natural monuments (Zyukay cliff in Karagaysky district , Veslyansky pine forest in Gainy), historical and natural complexes (Grafsky pine forest in Kishertsky district, Kuvinsky pine forest in Kudymkarsky district, Kungur ice cave and Ice Mountain).

A regime of special protection will be established on the territory of these natural monuments. For example, construction, logging (with the exception of sanitary), disposal of industrial and domestic waste, geological exploration, which can lead to violation of the soil and vegetation cover, and animal habitats, will be prohibited here. At the same time, visiting these territories for recreational and educational purposes will not be prohibited. For most objects, the boundaries of specially protected territories are defined. For all natural monuments, the regional ministry of urban planning and infrastructure development during the current year must issue security obligations and passports.

Bibliography

1. Animitsa E.G. Cities of the Middle Urals. Past present Future. - Sverdlovsk, 2008.

2. Dmitriev A. Essays on the history of the provincial city of Perm from the foundation of the settlement until 1845. - Perm, 1889.

3. Dmitriev A. Perm antiquity: Sat. history and stat. mat. mainly about the Perm region. Issue 2: Great Perm in the 17th century. - Perm, 1890.

4. Zalkind I.E. and Nechaev Yu.A. Limestone, dolomite and gypsum in the Perm region. - Perm, 2008.

5. Permyak E. My land. - M., 2004.

"Love and know your native land" - who does not know this covenant of life?! You can love your land only when you know its secrets and riches, you discover the unknown in it.
On the pages of Andrey Sergeevich Zelenin's book, readers will learn about the main historical events, outstanding people, cultural monuments and geographical features of Perm and the Perm Territory.
The publication is complemented by entertaining creative tasks, on the one hand, fixing the material, on the other hand, broadening one's horizons.
The book is intended primarily for children aged 6-11, as well as students, teachers for the preparation and conduct of local history lessons, can be used as a textbook on local history.

NAME, PATRONYMID, SURNAME.
When a person is born, he is given a name. In order not to turn later on the street: “Hey, you!” After all, who is this - "Hey, you!" - unclear!

Ancient people gave themselves names that were different from modern ones. These names were long and explained a lot. For example, one of them could sound like this: "A man who caught a bear and killed him to feed his family."

Our ancestors - the Slavs - often named themselves in honor of the gods, which they invented for themselves. For example, the sun god is Yarilo. If a person was born in the morning, he could well be named after the sun god.

The modern names that we get from our parents came to us from different countries - different languages. For example, from Greek, Old Arabic, Old Germanic, Hebrew, Old Norse, Celtic, Latin, Old Slavonic.

Content
Author's word
Motherland and what is connected with it
Task number 1
First name, patronymic, last name
Task number 2
City of Perm
Task number 3
Districts of Perm and the Perm Territory, cities
Task number 4
Streets of Perm
Task number 5
Permian period
Task number 6
Perm the Great
Task number 7
Perm province
Task number 8
Perm region
Task number 9
Komi-Perm National (Autonomous) Okrug
Task number 10
Perm region
Task number 11
Nationalities (peoples)
Perm Territory
Task number 12
Permian rivers
Task number 13
Flora of the Perm Territory
Task number 14
Fauna of the Perm Territory
Task number 15
Minerals
Perm Territory
Task number 16
Names in history
Perm Territory
Task number 17
Heroes of Perm
Task number 18
Monuments of Perm
Task #19
Perm theaters, libraries, museums
Task number 20
First. For the first time. The most
Task number 21
Books that are useful to flip through, read and remember
Answers to the tasks of the book.


Free download e-book in a convenient format, watch and read:
Download the book Perm and the Perm region, Entertaining local history, Zelenin A.S., 2013 - fileskachat.com, fast and free download.

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The collection includes publications published on the territory of the Vyatka province - Kirov region in the 19th - 20th centuries. It contains more than 30 thousand documents. Combines books, periodicals and continuing publications, geographical maps, postcards, and other illustrative materials.

Cultural heritage of the Kama region is an Internet project dedicated to the problems of preserving the historical and cultural heritage of the Perm Territory, and not only. In addition to information about the monuments, you will soon find biographies of famous Permians here, get acquainted with the latest local history literature, learn a lot of interesting things about the activities of regional cultural institutions - theaters, museums, libraries, creative teams and individual authors.

Literary travels around Perm. The site is dedicated to the places of the city of Perm, which are associated with literature.

"Ural Land..." is an encyclopedia in miniature. Here you will find information about the nature, geology, geography, culture and art of the Kama region from ancient times to the present day.

"OUR URAL"- this local history project is dedicated to the Urals: its wonderful nature, rich history, exciting mysteries and mysteries, great countrymen and much, much more.

Perm State Art Gallery- Regional Art Museum of Russia. The collections comprise about 50,000 works of fine art from ancient times to the present, representing various types of art.

Perm Chronicle- a site dedicated to the most interesting and practically unknown history of the Perm region.

Perm Electronic Library - a project of the Perm Regional Library named after A.M. Gorky launched in May 2015. The resource offers to get acquainted with digital copies of book publications stored in the funds of both the library and other book collections of various institutions, including those from the personal collections of Perm collectors.

Perm State Archive of Contemporary History- the archive contains documents that reflect all periods in the history of the Kama region of the 20th and early 21st centuries: from documents of party, Komsomol and trade union building to documents related to political repressions. The archive also contains more than a hundred personal funds and collections of documents of personal origin.

Perm animal style- the resource is entirely devoted to the Perm animal style (PZS). Despite a hundred-year history of study, the Permian animal style still remains one of the most mysterious cultural phenomena of Eurasia. This is due to the lack of written language in the civilization of its creators and the lack of historical evidence about the Kama region during the heyday of the animal style.

Perm Museum of Local Lore- the oldest and largest museum of the Perm region. It has 600,000 storage units and includes more than 50 collections of regional, Russian and world significance, among the objects of the museum there are 22 monuments of history and culture, of which 16 are monuments of federal significance and 6 of local significance.

Perm Krai: History on the screen is a film chronicle of Perm half a century long. The video archive makes it possible to plunge into the atmosphere of the cultural life of past decades and restore the sensations of beloved, but now forgotten, concerts and performances, to replenish knowledge about the historical and national cultural heritage of the region.

Perm Museum of Modern Art is the State Museum of Modern Art, established in Perm in 2009.

Perm regional server. Server sections cover almost all aspects of the life of the region: history, culture and education, religion, business, politics, tourism, sports, media. Materials of the press service of the governor, reference books, etc.

Writers of the Ural land- a project of the Centralized System of Children's and School Libraries in the city of Ozerskaya and the Chelyabinsk Regional Children's Library for schoolchildren in grades 1-9.

Nature of the Perm Territory- the official website contains information about the environmental situation in the Perm region. Specially protected natural territories of the Perm Territory of regional and local significance. Red Book of the Perm Territory.

Uraloved- news and author's articles about the most important and interesting; many directions: sightseeing guide, history, archival documents, old photographs, living world and ecology of the Urals, outstanding Urals people, works of Ural writers, etc.; the territory under consideration - the entire Urals (Sverdlovsk, Chelyabinsk, Orenburg, Kurgan, Tyumen regions, Perm Territory, the Republic of Bashkortostan, and also partially Komi, Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug and YNAO);

Ural Library: Best articles and books about the Urals- site you can read a lot of articles and books about our amazing places and people.

Encyclopedia "Perm Territory". In terms of the volume of materials collected about the Perm Territory, the encyclopedia has no analogues and is of interest to everyone who is interested in the richest historical and cultural heritage of the region. The encyclopedia includes articles about the regions and settlements of the region, materials on history, art, culture and nature. Particular attention is paid to the biographies of famous Permians who have contributed to the development of our region, its economy, science, and culture.