district[1] / municipal district[2] | |
Kimovsky district | |
Flag | Coat of arms |
- (9th place)
- (2.51%, 8th place)
Kimovsky district
- administrative-territorial unit (district) and municipal formation (municipal district) in the Tula region of Russia.
The administrative center is the city of Kimovsk.
History[ | ]
November 29, 1926 center of Karachevsky district
Tula province was moved to the village of Mikhailovka at the Epifan station, and the district was renamed
Mikhailovsky district
[5].
In 1929, as a result of the abolition of the provinces, the district became part of the Tula Okrug of the Moscow Region. The center of the region became the village at Epifan station. The district included the following village councils: Aparkovsky, Belomestny, Beloozersky, Berezovsky, Grankovsky, Gremyachevsky, Karachevsky, Kashinsky, Krasnopolsky, Kudashevsky, Luninsky, Olkhovetsky, Osanovsky, Petro-Izbishchensky, Pokrovsky, Pronsky, Pustashevsky, Renevsky, Rumyantsevsky, Savinsky, Spassky and Khitrovshchinsky.
On June 23, 1930, after the liquidation of the districts, the district came under direct subordination to the Moscow Region and on August 31 it was renamed the Kimovsky District
(in honor of KIM (Communist Youth International)), so as not to be confused with the Mikhailovsky district of the former Ryazan district. The center area was renamed the village of Kimovsky.
On September 26, 1937, the area became part of the newly formed Tula region.
On December 20, 1942, the Kimovsky district was returned to the Moscow region. At that time, it included 22 village councils: Aparkovsky, Belomestny, Beloozersky, Berezovsky, Grankovsky, Gremyachevsky, Karachevsky, Kashinsky, Krasnopolsky, Kudashevsky, Luninsky, Olkhovetsky, Osanovsky, Petro-Izbishchensky, Pokrovsky, Pronsky, Pustashevsky, Renevsky, Rumyantsevsky, Savinsky, Spassky and Khitrovshchinsky.
On May 30, 1946, Belomestny, Berezovsky, Gremyachevsky, Luninsky, Olkhovetsky, Osanovsky, Petro-Izbishchensky, Pustashevsky, Savinsky and Spassky s/s were transferred to the newly formed Gremyachevsky district.
On September 11, 1947, the working settlement of Kimovsk was formed in the region.
January 25, 1952 r.p. Kimovsk received the status of a city of regional subordination.
On April 17, 1954, a rural settlement was formed in the area. Novolvovsk. On June 14, Beloozersky and Renevsky s/s were merged into Kamensky s/s.
On March 27, 1957, the Kimovsky district was returned to the Tula region[6].
In 1958, part of the territory of the abolished Epifansky district became part of the district.
From 1963 to 1965, the district was abolished, its territory was divided between Bogoroditsky and Novomoskovsky districts.
In 2006, a municipal district was formed within the boundaries of the district.
History[edit]
Mikhailovka village
(Mikhailovka) has been known since the 17th century.
[ citation needed
] It arose during the Great Patriotic War in connection with the intensive exploitation of coal in the Moscow coal basin.
The Soviets built numerous mines on lands on a collective farm called Young Comintern
(
Communist
and
Youth
International , abbreviated as "KIM", or
KIM )
and a habitat for miners.
It was granted the status of a workers' settlement and received its modern name in 1948; It was granted city status in 1952[ edit
]
Population[ | ]
Population | ||||||||
1959[7] | 1970[8] | 1979[9] | 1989[10] | 2002[11] | 2009[12] | 2010[13] | 2011[14] | 2012[15] |
53 536 | ↘35 451 | ↘26 478 | ↘20 480 | ↘17 116 | ↗43 081 | ↘42 853 | ↘42 706 | ↘41 777 |
2013[16] | 2014[17] | 2015[18] | 2016[19] | 2017[20] | 2018[21] | 2019[22] | 2020[23] | 2021[4] |
↘41 001 | ↘40 321 | ↘39 446 | ↘38 825 | ↘38 270 | ↘37 824 | ↘37 332 | ↘37 001 | ↘36 401 |
Urbanization
The urban population (city of Kimovsk) makes up 69.07% of the total population of the region.
Population
Population | ||||||||
1939[12] | 1959[13] | 1967[14] | 1970[15] | 1979[16] | 1989[17] | 1992[14] | 1996[14] | 1998[14] |
1993 | ↗39 490 | ↗42 000 | ↗44 490 | ↘42 057 | ↘38 294 | ↘37 800 | ↘36 700 | ↘36 100 |
2000[14] | 2001[14] | 2002[18] | 2003[14] | 2005[14] | 2006[14] | 2007[14] | 2008[14] | 2010[19] |
↘34 800 | ↘33 900 | ↘33 169 | ↗33 200 | ↘31 100 | ↘30 300 | ↘29 700 | ↘29 200 | ↘28 485 |
2011[14] | 2012[20] | 2013[21] | 2014[22] | 2015[23] | 2016[24] | 2017[25] | 2018[26] | 2019[27] |
↗28 500 | ↘27 972 | ↘27 511 | ↘27 107 | ↘26 591 | ↘26 236 | ↘26 093 | ↘25 951 | ↘25 727 |
2020[28] | 2021[2] | |||||||
↘25 563 | ↘25 142 |
As of January 1, 2022, in terms of population, the city was in 570th place out of 1,116[29]cities of the Russian Federation[30].
Municipal-territorial structure[ | ]
The municipal district, within the framework of the organization of local self-government, includes 3 municipalities, including one urban and two rural settlements[24]:
№ | Municipality | Administrative center | Number of settlements | Population | Area, km2 |
1e-06 | Urban settlement: | ||||
1 | city of Kimovsk | city of Kimovsk | 1 | ↘25 142[4] | 17,28[3] |
1.000002 | Rural settlements: | ||||
2 | Epifanskoe | Epifan village | 86 | ↘5898[4] | 641,82[3] |
3 | Novolvovskoe | Novolvovsk village | 64 | ↘5361[4] | 452,00[3] |
In 2006, 3 urban and 6 rural settlements were created in the municipal area. In 2011, the rural settlement of Korablinskoye and the urban settlement of the working settlement of Epifan were merged into a new rural settlement of Epifanskoye; the rural settlement of Lvovskoye and the urban settlement of the working settlement of Novolvovsk were also merged into the new rural settlement of Novolvovskoye[25]. In 2013, the rural settlements of Buchalskoye (included in Epifanskoye), as well as Kudashevskoye, Novolvovskoye and Pronskoye (included in Novolvovoskoye)[26].
External links [edit]
- Unofficial site of Kimovsk (in Russian)
- News portal Kimovsk (in Russia)
- Encyclopedia "My City". Entry into Kimovsk (in Russian)
vteAdministrative divisions in the Tula region | |||
Administrative center: Tula • Rural area. | |||
Administrative regions |
| ||
Cities and towns |
| ||
Urban settlements |
|
Settlements[ | ]
There are 151 settlements in the Kimovsky district.
List of settlements in the region | ||||
№ | Locality | Type | Population | Municipality |
1 | Ajamki | village | 5[13] | Novolvovskoe |
2 | Alexandrovka | village | 10[13] | Epifanskoe |
3 | Alexandrovka | village | 77[13] | Novolvovskoe |
4 | Alekseevka | village | 10[13] | Epifanskoe |
5 | Alekseevka | village | 133[13] | Novolvovskoe |
6 | Aleshino | village | 48[13] | Epifanskoe |
7 | Andreevka | village | 29[13] | Novolvovskoe |
8 | Parks | village | 16[13] | Novolvovskoe |
9 | Parks | village | 212[13] | Novolvovskoe |
10 | Baranovka | village | 123[13] | Epifanskoe |
11 | Baranovskie Vyselki | village | 2[13] | Epifanskoe |
12 | Barma | village | 4[13] | Novolvovskoe |
13 | Bakhtino-Fomino | village | 13[13] | Epifanskoe |
14 | Begichevo | village | 5[13] | Epifanskoe |
15 | Beloozero | village | 71[13] | Novolvovskoe |
16 | Berezovka | village | 27[13] | Novolvovskoe |
17 | Blagoveshchensky | village | 13[13] | Novolvovskoe |
18 | Bogdanovka | village | 0[13] | Epifanskoe |
19 | Bugrovka-Klyuchevaya | village | 7[13] | Epifanskoe |
20 | Butyrovka | village | 25[13] | Epifanskoe |
21 | Buchalki | village | 26[13] | Epifanskoe |
22 | Buchalki | village | 292[13] | Epifanskoe |
23 | Merry Meadow | village | 11[13] | Novolvovskoe |
24 | Cherry | village | 284[13] | Epifanskoe |
25 | Vladimirovka | village | 0[13] | Epifanskoe |
26 | Renaissance | village | 4[13] | Novolvovskoe |
27 | Sunrise | village | 15[13] | Epifanskoe |
28 | Vyvydovka | village | 12[13] | Epifanskoe |
29 | Galitsky | village | 12[13] | Novolvovskoe |
30 | Gorki | village | 9[13] | Epifanskoe |
31 | Gorki | village | 0[13] | Novolvovskoe |
32 | Galleys | village | 168[13] | Novolvovskoe |
33 | Donskoy | village | 17[13] | Epifanskoe |
34 | Friendship | village | 0[13] | Novolvovskoe |
35 | Friendly | village | 5[13] | Novolvovskoe |
36 | Dudkino | village | 74[13] | Novolvovskoe |
37 | Durasovo | village | 28[13] | Novolvovskoe |
38 | Epifan | village | ↗2237[13] | Epifanskoe |
39 | Zhurishki | village | 19[13] | Epifanskoe |
40 | Factory | village | 37[13] | Epifanskoe |
41 | Zadonshchino | village | 8[13] | Epifanskoe |
42 | Zadonshchino | village | 62[13] | Epifanskoe |
43 | Zinovka | village | 21[13] | Novolvovskoe |
44 | Banner | village | 19[13] | Epifanskoe |
45 | Zubovka | village | 243[13] | Novolvovskoe |
46 | Ivanovka | village | 24[13] | Epifanskoe |
47 | Ivanovka | village | 2[13] | Novolvovskoe |
48 | Ivanovka-Seleznevka | village | 6[13] | Epifanskoe |
49 | Ivanovskoe | village | 23[13] | Novolvovskoe |
50 | Ivankovo | village | 212[13] | Novolvovskoe |
51 | Isakovka | village | 64[13] | Epifanskoe |
52 | Isakovskie Vyselki | village | 10[13] | Epifanskoe |
53 | Kazanovka | village | 24[13] | Epifanskoe |
54 | Kazanovka | village | ↘643[13] | Epifanskoe |
55 | Kalinovka | village | 6[13] | Novolvovskoe |
56 | Kamenka | village | 31[13] | Novolvovskoe |
57 | Karachevo | village | 155[13] | Novolvovskoe |
58 | Karkadinovo | village | 1[13] | Novolvovskoe |
59 | Kashino | village | 142[13] | Novolvovskoe |
60 | Kimovsk | city | ↘25 142[4] | city of Kimovsk |
61 | Kovalevka | village | 77[13] | Novolvovskoe |
62 | Kolesovka | village | 2[13] | Epifanskoe |
63 | Kolychevka | village | 19[13] | Epifanskoe |
64 | Komissarovka | village | 2[13] | Epifanskoe |
65 | Korablino | village | 128[13] | Epifanskoe |
66 | Red | village | 30[13] | Epifanskoe |
67 | Krasnopolye | village | 340[13] | Novolvovskoe |
68 | Red Sturgeon | village | 10[13] | Epifanskoe |
69 | Krivozerye | village | 17[13] | Novolvovskoe |
70 | Crooked Bush | village | 5[13] | Novolvovskoe |
71 | Kropotovo | village | 270[13] | Novolvovskoe |
72 | Cool | village | 50[13] | Epifanskoe |
73 | Cool | village | 37[13] | Novolvovskoe |
74 | Kryukovo | village | 1[13] | Epifanskoe |
75 | Kudashevo | village | 274[13] | Novolvovskoe |
76 | Kulikovka | village | 106[13] | Epifanskoe |
77 | Kurilovka | village | 7[13] | Epifanskoe |
78 | Lipovka | village | 34[13] | Epifanskoe |
79 | Lopukhinovka | village | 27[13] | Novolvovskoe |
80 | Lugovoe | village | 160[13] | Epifanskoe |
81 | Lupishki | village | 20[13] | Epifanskoe |
82 | Lvovo | village | 519[13] | Novolvovskoe |
83 | Lvovsky | village | 54[13] | Novolvovskoe |
84 | Marchugi | village | 0[13] | Novolvovskoe |
85 | Marinka | village | 24[13] | Epifanskoe |
86 | Mashkovo | village | 57[13] | Novolvovskoe |
87 | Metenevka | village | 14[13] | Epifanskoe |
88 | Miloslavschino | village | 107[13] | Epifanskoe |
89 | Mikhailovka | village | 15[13] | Epifanskoe |
90 | Mikhailovskie Vyselki | village | 5[13] | Novolvovskoe |
91 | Mikhailovsky | village | 22[13] | Novolvovskoe |
92 | Young girls | village | 126[13] | Epifanskoe |
93 | Molchanovo | village | 187[13] | Epifanskoe |
94 | Monastyrshchino | village | ↗199[13] | Epifanskoe |
95 | Muravlyanka | village | 290[13] | Epifanskoe |
96 | Muravlyanka | village | 187[13] | Epifanskoe |
97 | Myzovka | village | 29[13] | Epifanskoe |
98 | Nikolaevka | village | 13[13] | Epifanskoe |
99 | New life | village | 18[13] | Novolvovskoe |
100 | Novolvovsk | village | ↗1731[13] | Novolvovskoe |
101 | Novoselki | village | 73[13] | Novolvovskoe |
102 | Novospasskoe | village | 39[13] | Novolvovskoe |
103 | Ovcharovka | village | 5[13] | Epifanskoe |
104 | Ogarevo | village | 22[13] | Epifanskoe |
105 | Olkhovets | village | 29[13] | Epifanskoe |
106 | Ostapovo | village | 6[13] | Epifanskoe |
107 | Rumyantsevo branch | village | 0[13] | Novolvovskoe |
108 | Otrada | village | 99[13] | Epifanskoe |
109 | Pavlovka | village | 58[13] | Epifanskoe |
110 | Petrovskoe | village | 6[13] | Novolvovskoe |
111 | Pisarevo | village | 3[13] | Novolvovskoe |
112 | Pokrovka | village | 117[13] | Epifanskoe |
113 | Pokrovskoye | village | 19[13] | Novolvovskoe |
114 | Field | village | 9[13] | Novolvovskoe |
115 | Polunino | village | 9[13] | Epifanskoe |
116 | Adhesives | village | 23[13] | Epifanskoe |
117 | Lakeside | village | 27[13] | Epifanskoe |
118 | Pron | village | 815[13] | Novolvovskoe |
119 | Forgiven | village | 14[13] | Epifanskoe |
120 | Forgiven | village | 25[13] | Novolvovskoe |
121 | Rassekino | village | 18[13] | Epifanskoe |
122 | Renevo | village | 23[13] | Novolvovskoe |
123 | Rogozinki | village | 1[13] | Epifanskoe |
124 | Rozhdestveno | village | 150[13] | Epifanskoe |
125 | Rumyantsevo | village | 35[13] | Novolvovskoe |
126 | Salomatovka | village | 19[13] | Epifanskoe |
127 | Samochevka | village | 71[13] | Novolvovskoe |
128 | Sebino | village | 41[13] | Epifanskoe |
129 | State Farm | village | 75[13] | Epifanskoe |
130 | Sokolovka | village | 8[13] | Novolvovskoe |
131 | Sofyinka | village | 50[13] | Epifanskoe |
132 | Lvovo station | village | 2[13] | Novolvovskoe |
133 | Old Gat | village | 40[13] | Epifanskoe |
134 | Sudakovo | village | 0[13] | Epifanskoe |
135 | Sukhanovo | village | 196[13] | Epifanskoe |
136 | Tabolo | village | 225[13] | Novolvovskoe |
137 | Tatinki | village | 7[13] | Epifanskoe |
138 | Urusovo | village | 151[13] | Novolvovskoe |
139 | Estuary | village | 48[13] | Epifanskoe |
140 | Fedorovka | village | 0[13] | Epifanskoe |
141 | Fedosovka | village | 104[13] | Epifanskoe |
142 | Horsetail | village | 2[13] | Epifanskoe |
143 | Khitrovshchina | village | 342[13] | Novolvovskoe |
144 | Khovanshchina | village | 48[13] | Epifanskoe |
145 | Khomutovka | village | 33[13] | Novolvovskoe |
146 | Chebyshi | village | 34[13] | Epifanskoe |
147 | Cheremukhovo | village | 206[13] | Epifanskoe |
148 | Shatalovka | village | 10[13] | Epifanskoe |
149 | Shakhtarsky | village | 0[13] | Novolvovskoe |
150 | Shevyrevo | village | 42[13] | Epifanskoe |
151 | Shchepino | village | 0[13] | Epifanskoe |
Social and cultural sphere
The city operates: Central District Hospital (Kimovskaya Central District Hospital), a children's clinic, a dental clinic, a day hospital, a rehabilitation therapy center, an ambulance station, and a social service center. The city has 6 secondary schools, 1 secondary gymnasium, boarding school, polytechnic college; There are 11 preschool institutions, a children's art school, and 3 teenage clubs. There is a city house of culture (DC) with a 3D cinema hall, an inter-settlement central regional library, a children's library, a city local history museum named after. V. A. Yudina. There are 2 sports and recreation centers in the city, one of which has a swimming pool. 1 newspaper is published - “District Weekdays”.
Attractions[ | ]
The Kulikovo Field museum-reserve is located on the territory of the district. The branches of the museum are located: in the village of Monastyrshchina - the Museum of the Battle of Kulikovo and in the working village of Epifan - the historical and ethnographic museum.
In the working village of Epifan there is St. Nicholas Cathedral, which is a smaller copy of St. Isaac's Cathedral in St. Petersburg.
On May 2, 2014, a branch of the Kimovsky Museum of History and Local Lore was opened in the village of Sebino, in the homeland of the Blessed Elder Matrona, the Museum of Matrona Sebinskaya of Moscow[28]. The museum complex includes, in addition to the museum, an equipped courtyard of the Nikonovs with a white stone monument and a monument to Matrona, another bronze sculpture of the saint on the territory of the complex, a marble slab at the entrance to the parish cemetery, where Matrona’s father and relatives are buried, closed fonts and a spring with a chapel on bank of the Mokraya Tabola River[29]. In the small Church of the Assumption of the Mother of God, where the holy blessed Matrona of Moscow was baptized and spent a lot of time, a shrine is kept - an icon with a particle of her relics, donated by His Holiness Patriarch Alexy II, and services are held. The village of Sebino is a place of pilgrimage for Orthodox Christians not only from different parts of Russia, but also from other countries[30].
Economy
The following enterprises operate in the city:
- JSC "KREMZ" (Kimovsky radio-electromechanical plant (Kimovsky machine-building plant (Kimovsky metal products plant)
- Kimovsky milk
- Garment factory "OMIZH"
- Liquor and vodka, Pron village) and others.
Trade
The city has stores of large Russian food and non-food chains: Pyaterochka, Magnit, Dixie, Verny, Svetofor, FixPrice, Krasnoe&Beloe, DNS, Elex, etc. There are several shopping centers, and a city market operates.
Notes[ | ]
- from the point of view of the administrative-territorial structure
- municipal structure
- ↑ 1234
Tula region. Total land area of the municipality - ↑ 123456
The permanent population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2022 (Russian). Retrieved April 27, 2022. Archived May 2, 2022. - Administrative-territorial division of the Tula region for 1917-1989 (undefined)
. Archived from the original on August 24, 2011. - Handbook on the administrative-territorial division of the Moscow region 1929-2004. - M.: Kuchkovo pole, 2011. - 896 p. — 1500 copies. — ISBN 978-5-9950-0105-8.
- All-Union Population Census of 1959. The actual population of cities and other settlements, districts, regional centers and large rural settlements as of January 15, 1959 by republics, territories and regions of the RSFSR (unspecified)
. Retrieved October 10, 2013. Archived October 10, 2013. - All-Union population census of 1970. The actual population of cities, urban-type settlements, districts and regional centers of the USSR according to census data as of January 15, 1970 by republic, territory and region (unspecified)
. Retrieved October 14, 2013. Archived October 14, 2013. - All-Union Population Census of 1979. The current population of the RSFSR, autonomous republics, autonomous regions and districts, territories, regions, districts, urban settlements, village-district centers and rural settlements with a population of over 5,000 people (unspecified)
. - All-Union population census of 1989. Population of the USSR, RSFSR and its territorial units by gender (undefined)
. Archived from the original on August 23, 2011. - All-Russian population census 2002. Volume. 1, table 4. Population of Russia, federal districts, constituent entities of the Russian Federation, districts, urban settlements, rural settlements - regional centers and rural settlements with a population of 3 thousand or more (unspecified)
. Archived from the original on February 3, 2012. - The size of the permanent population of the Russian Federation by cities, urban-type settlements and regions as of January 1, 2009 (unspecified)
. Retrieved January 2, 2014. Archived January 2, 2014. - ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151
All-Russian population census 2010.
Number and distribution of the population of the Tula region (unspecified)
. Access date: May 18, 2014. Archived May 18, 2014. - Tula region. Estimated resident population as of January 1, 2009-2013
- Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities. Table 35. Estimated resident population as of January 1, 2012 (unspecified)
. Retrieved May 31, 2014. Archived May 31, 2014. - Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2013. - M.: Federal State Statistics Service Rosstat, 2013. - 528 p. (Table 33. Population of urban districts, municipal districts, urban and rural settlements, urban settlements, rural settlements) (undefined)
. Retrieved November 16, 2013. Archived November 16, 2013. - Table 33. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2014 (unspecified)
. Access date: August 2, 2014. Archived August 2, 2014. - Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2015 (unspecified)
. Access date: August 6, 2015. Archived August 6, 2015. - Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2016 (Russian) (October 5, 2018). Retrieved May 15, 2022. Archived May 8, 2022.
- Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2022 (Russian) (July 31, 2017). Retrieved July 31, 2022. Archived July 31, 2022.
- Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2022 (Russian). Retrieved July 25, 2018. Archived July 26, 2022.
- Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2022 (Russian). Retrieved July 31, 2019. Archived May 2, 2022.
- Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2022 (Russian). Date accessed: October 17, 2022. Archived October 17, 2022.
- Law of the Tula region of March 11, 2005 No. 547-ZTO “On the renaming of the municipal entity - the city of Kimovsk and the Kimovsky district of the Tula region, establishing boundaries, conferring status and determining the administrative centers of municipal entities in the territory of the Kimovsky district of the Tula region”
- Law of the Tula region dated July 20, 2011 No. 1595-ZTO “On the transformation of municipalities in the territory of the Kimovsky district of the Tula region and on amendments to the Law of the Tula region “On the renaming of the municipal formation - the city of Kimovsk and the Kimovsky district of the Tula region, establishing boundaries, conferring status and determining the administrative centers of municipalities on the territory of the Kimovsky district of the Tula region""
- Law of the Tula region dated 01.04.2013 No. 1898-ZTO “On the transformation of municipalities in the territory of the Kimovsky district of the Tula region and on amendments to the Law of the Tula region “On the renaming of the municipal formation - the city of Kimovsk and the Kimovsky district of the Tula region, establishing boundaries, conferring status and determining the administrative centers of municipalities on the territory of the Kimovsky district of the Tula region""
- Coat of arms of the Kimovsky municipal district
- Museum of Matrona Sebinskaya of Moscow (unspecified)
(inaccessible link). Retrieved November 26, 2022. Archived May 21, 2022. - Museum of Matrona Sebinskaya of Moscow (unspecified)
. Internet portal "Culture.RF". - Believers from all over Russia are coming to the new pilgrimage complex in the region (unspecified)
. Website of the newspaper “Komsomolskaya Pravda. Tula" (08/14/2016). - Gonyany M.I.
Finds of the Vyatichi circle of antiquities of the late XII-XIII centuries. on rural archaeological sites of the Upper Don basin // Slavs and other languages... To the anniversary of Natalya Germanovna Nedoshivina. Tr. State Historical Museum Vol. 198. M.: 2014. P. 65-91
Coat of arms
The coat of arms was approved by the decision of the Assembly of Deputies of the municipal formation of the city of Kimovsk, Kimovsky district, dated September 28, 2007 No. 32-127 and entered into the State Heraldic Register of the Russian Federation under No. 3601.
Rationale for the symbolism of the coat of arms of the municipality of the city of Kimovsk, Kimovsky district:
City coat of arms, used until 2007
• The dove is a symbol of peace and tranquility and symbolizes one of the favorite leisure activities of local residents - pigeon breeding.
• The name of the city - Kimovsk (since December 31, 1930) - is associated with the Communist Youth International (KIM), which is reflected in the coat of arms in red, making the coat of arms “semi-vocal”.
• Red color is a symbol of courage, strength, labor, beauty and life.
• Black Mountain shows the hilly terrain of the area and the fact that the development of the city in the 20th century is largely associated with coal mining. When Donbass was captured and put out of action in the first year of the war, they relied on Mosbass. Since 1943, active coal mining began, the Kimovsky coal mine with a processing plant came into operation.
• Black color in heraldry symbolizes wisdom, modesty, honesty and the eternity of existence.
• Gold is a symbol of wealth, stability, respect and warmth of life.
• Silver is a symbol of purity, perfection, peace and understanding.
Literature
- Brief description of the administrative-territorial division of the Tula region for 1917-1989. // Center for Contemporary History of the Tula Region. Guide / G. V. Makarenko, L. M. Dubrovina, V. I. Kamakhina. - Tula: Grif and K, 2006. - 456 p. — ISBN 5-8125-0747-3. - P. 220-260.
- Ovchinnikov D.
Battle of Kim (newspaper “Young Communard” 09/24/2010) - Ovchinnikov D.
The road through the Karachevsky forest (newspaper “Young Communard” 11/25/2014) - Ovchinnikov D.
Epifan rebellion (newspaper “Young Communard” 08/04/2015) - Ovchinnikov D.
The man who arrested Himmler (newspaper “Young Communard” 01/15/2016) - Ovchinnikov D.
Epifan rebellion (Rodina magazine No. 2, 2016, pp. 117-118) - Ovchinnikov D.
Kimovsky miner told how he caught Himmler (Sloboda newspaper dated 05/04/2016) - Ovchinnikov D. Gubarev against Himmler (Rodina magazine No. 6, 2016, pp. 52-55)
- Ovchinnikov D.
From that village and from Karachev... (newspaper “Young Communard” 10/05/2018) - Ovchinnikov D.
From the life of Tula landowners (newspaper “Young Communard” 11/13/2018) - Pospelov E. M.
Geographical names of the world. Toponymic dictionary / resp. ed. R. A. Ageeva. — 2nd ed., stereotype. - M.: Russian dictionaries, Astrel, AST, 2002. - 512 p. — 3000 copies. — ISBN 5-17-001389-2. - Yudin V. A.
Kimovsk: (to the 50th anniversary of the city) / General. ed. T. K. Pisareva; Ed. S. D. Oshevsky; Artist N.V. Akinshin. - Tula: Peresvet, 2002. - 96 p. - (Tula region). - Yudin V. A.
Kimovsk: History and modernity / Art. V. N. Solomatin. — 2nd ed. - Tula: Peresvet, 2007. - 122 p.
Notable natives
Igor Vladimirovich Zyuzin - Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Mechel Holding (in 2011, according to Forbes magazine, he was 16th in the list of the richest businessmen in Russia)
Roman Andreevich Yunusov - actor, comedian, resident of Comedy Club
Artel (art project) - organized by natives of the city.
Nikolai Viktorovich Kordyukov - military pilot, guard lieutenant colonel, pilot of the Russian Knights group (tragically died in a plane crash in 1995)
11 natives of the Kimovsky district were awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union, 5 - the title of Hero of Socialist Labor.