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Malakhovka, Moscow Oblast

Malakhovka, Moscow Oblast

FieldValue
en_nameMalakhovka
ru_nameМалаховка
coordinates
map_label_positionright
image_flagFlag of Malakhovka (Moscow oblast).png
flag_captionFlag of Malakhovka
image_coaCoat of Arms of Malakhovka (Moscow oblast).png
coa_captionCoat of arms of Malakhovka
anthemAnthem of Malakhovka
anthem_ref
federal_subjectMoscow Oblast
federal_subject_ref
adm_district_jurLyuberetsky District
adm_district_jur_ref
inhabloc_catUrban-type settlement
inhabloc_cat_ref
inhabloc_typeWork settlement
inhabloc_type_ref
mun_district_jurLyuberetsky Municipal District
mun_district_jur_ref
urban_settlement_jurMalakhovka Urban Settlement
urban_settlement_jur_ref
mun_admctr_ofMalakhovka Urban Settlement
mun_admctr_of_ref
leader_titleHead
leader_title_ref
leader_nameAlexander Avtayev
representative_bodyCouncil of Deputies
representative_body_ref
pop_2010census24004
pop_2010census_ref
established_date1328
established_titleFirst mentioned
current_cat_date1961
current_cat_date_ref
postal_codes140030
websitehttp://malahovka.net/

Malakhovka (), a Moscow suburb renowned for its historic dachas, is an urban locality (a work settlement) in Lyuberetsky District of Moscow Oblast, Russia. Population:

History

Under the name Malakhovskoye (Мала́ховское), Malakhovka was first mentioned in 1328 in Ivan Kalita's will as a place left to Ivan's older son Semyon.

A Pre-revolutionary Dacha in Malakhovka

With the completion of a railway station in 1884 Malakhovka was recognized as a dacha settlement. By the end of 19th century, the settlement was inhabited by such renowned representatives of Russian arts and literature as Anton Chekhov, Maxim Gorky, Ivan Bunin, and Feodor Chaliapin. Chaliapin performed in the Malakhovka's Summer Theater before 1914. The actress Faina Ranevskaya performed there from the following year, and also had a dacha there. At the time of the Revolution Malakhovka was a described as a "hamlet" of about three hundred dachas.

Urban-type settlement status was granted to Malakhovka in 1961.

Pearl of country theatres of Russia, Malakhovsky Summer Theatre. Designed by the architect Leon Dauksha in the characteristic modernist style of the era. Built in 1911 on the initiative of F. Chaliapin. Burned in 1999 as a result of arson.

Administrative and municipal status

Within the framework of administrative divisions, Malakhovka is incorporated within Lyuberetsky District of Moscow Oblast. Within the framework of municipal divisions, Malakhovka is a part of a larger Malakhovka Urban Settlement, which, in addition to Malakhovka proper, also includes the village of Pekhorka and adjacent territories.

Economy and infrastructure

The Malakhovka railway station is located 29 km southeast from Moscow. The settlement has minor industry: an ore mining equipment factory and a food processing plant. There are also two sanatoriums, a history museum, an Orthodox church, and a synagogue.

Media

Malakhovka has a local newspaper, Malakhovsky Vestnik (Малаховский Вестник, "Malakhovka Herald").

Notable people

Marc Chagall taught at a Jewish boys shelter (mainly for refugees from Ukrainian pogroms) here in 1921, did the illustrations for David Hofstein's long poem "Troyer" (Grief) and worked on his mural "Introduction to the Jewish Theater". The refuge was a center for many Yiddish writers including Der Nister, who lived with Chagall, David Hofstein, Moshe Lifshits and Itzik Feffer.

Chagal (front) and Der Nister (behind) at the Malakhovka boys shelter

The Soviet writer and USSR State Prize Laureate Nikolay Dobronravov (husband of Aleksandra Pakhmutova) went to school in Malakhovka during the war. The Olympic and World champion runner Irina Privalova was born in Malakhovka.

An early (1959) poem by Andrey Voznesensky is "Last Train to Malakhovka", regarding his regular trips to the settlement.

References

Notes

Sources

  • Toda, Yasushi and Nozdrina, Nadezhda N. (2008) The Cottages in Suburban Moscow: A New Lifestyle for the Wealthy, Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics, 24: 3, 444—455
  • Timothy J. Colton (1998) Moscow: Governing the Socialist Metropolis, Harvard University Press, 1998, page 127.

References

  1. Charter of Malakhovka, Article 1.4
  2. Charter of Malakhovka Urban Settlement, Article 13.1.2
  3. Charter of Malakhovka Urban Settlement, Article 13.1.1
  4. Toda, Yasushi and Nozdrina, Nadezhda N.(2008) ''The Cottages in Suburban Moscow: A New Lifestyle for the Wealthy'', Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics, 24: 3, 444—455
  5. Resolution #123-PG
  6. "Ivan Kalita's will".
  7. [[Timothy J. Colton]] (1998), ''Moscow: Governing the Socialist Metropolis,'' Harvard University Press, p. 127.
  8. Администрация Московской области. Организационно-контрольное управление. (1999). "Справочник по административно-территориальному устройству Московской области". ГУП ИПК "Ульяновский Дом печати".
  9. Law #81/2005-OZ, Article 1.4
  10. Harshav, Benjamin. 2004. ''Marc Chagall and His Times'', Stanford University Press. Pages 75, 294, 298.
  11. Dara Horn, ''The World to Come'', W.W. Norton, 2006, page 313.
  12. Persona.rin.ru. [http://persona.rin.ru/eng/view/f/0/20799/dobronravov-nikolai Nikolai Dobronravov]
  13. Andrey Voznesensky, ''Antiworlds and The Fifth Ace'', Basic Books, New York 1967, pp 84-87.
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