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Maloe Krutoe ((ロシア語:Малое Крутое)) is a village in Shakhovskoy District of Moscow Oblast, Russia, located in the far West of the Oblast, South-West of the district center Shahovskaya, to the West of Moscow and to the North-East of Smolensk, headwater Ruza and Inoch. The population is 208 people (according to the population census of 2010). ==History== The village arose in the early 20th century on the site where were situated outbuildings residents Krutoe (later – Bolshoe Krutoe, burned by the German invaders in 1942 and not revived). There was a brick factory in Maloe Krutoe before the Second World War. During the period of collectivization in 1930, there was build a kolkhoz (collective farm) named after Lenin. October 13, 1941 Maloe Krutoe was occupied by German and Finnish troops. It was released during the Battle of Moscow on January 24, 1942. The invaders burned the village during the retreat, like most of the neighboring villages. Maloe Krutoe was rebuilt after the Second World War. In 1954 a farm named Novo-Aleksandrovsky was founded as a result of consolidation of collective farms. At the end of the 1960s people made an asphalt road in the village and bus service to Shakhovskaya, and then to Moscow. However the bus stop in Maloe Krutoe was named Novo-Aleksandrovka - the name of the village, which had existed in 5 km to the North (destroyed in 1942; it was rebuilt several houses after the war, but they were settled by the mid-1950s). Until the mid-1990s in Maloe Krutoe had existed a cattle farm where people had grown young cattle. It was closed due to economic problems in Russia. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Maloe Krutoe」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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