Kornilyevo

Kornilyevo (Russian: Корнильево) is a rural locality (a village) in Rostilovskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 99 as of 2002.[2]

Kornilyevo
Корнильево
Village
Old monastery ruins
Kornilyevo
Kornilyevo
Kornilyevo
Coordinates: 58°49′N 40°14′E[1]
CountryRussia
RegionVologda Oblast
DistrictGryazovetsky District
Time zoneUTC+3:00

Geography

Kornilyevo is located 6 km south of Gryazovets (the district's administrative centre) by road. Talitsa is the nearest rural locality.[3]

History

During World War II, the former monastery was the location of a Soviet prisoner-of-war camp for Polish, Finnish and German POWs. Initially, it housed over 3,000 Poles from the German-Soviet invasion of Poland until November 1939, then nearly 700 Finns from the Soviet invasion of Finland until April 1940, and then again 395 Polish POWs from June 1940.[4] Both Poles and Finns were exposed to poor conditions, including cold, shortages of food and medicines, overcrowding, mistreatment by Russian guards and attempts at communist indoctrination.[5] They often suffered from depression and illnesses, and some died.[5] They were also deprived of the possibility of corresponding with relatives.[5] Some Polish POWs were deported to camps in Starobilsk and Ostashkov, and eventually murdered in the Katyn massacre.[6] Following the German invasion of the Soviet Union, in August 1941, Polish General Władysław Anders visited the camp, and the Poles were released to join the Anders' Army.[7] From 1942 to 1948, the camp housed several thousand German POWs.[8]

After 1948, the former camp housed a prison and later a psychiatric hospital.[9]

References

  1. Местечко Корнильево на карте
  2. Данные переписи 2002 года: таблица 2С. М.: Федеральная служба государственной статистики, 2004.
  3. Расстояние от Корнильева до Грязовеца
  4. Janczak, Bartosz (2016). "Obozy jenieckie w Griazowcu w latach 1939–1948". Łambinowicki rocznik muzealny (in Polish). Opole. 39: 27–30. ISSN 0137-5199.
  5. Janczak, pp. 28, 30
  6. Janczak, pp. 28–29
  7. Janczak, p. 37
  8. Janczak, p. 38
  9. Janczak, p. 41
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