P Shushenskoye, Krasnoyarsk region. The village of Shushenskoye on the Shusha River. A cataclysm that could not have happened

Part VIII. Shushenskoye.

This post will contain a lot of Lenin, photos of a rural bullpen and a tavern, a story about a peasant deputy of the first Russian State Duma, but mostly huts, huts, huts...

The word “Shush” is translated from Turkic languages ​​as “bone”; accordingly, “Shushenskoye” can be appropriately translated as “Bone”. Initially, Shushya was called the river, and the village took its name from the name of the river. Who was destined to become enormously famous and become known throughout the communist world.

1. Nowadays, the museum has painlessly transformed from a political institution into a scansen.

The first mentions of the village are known from 1744, from 1822 - the volost center of the Minusinsk district (district) Yenisei province. For a long time, by the way, it was called not “Shushenskoye” but “Shushskoye”, which is phonetically more correct. And the city website is still called Shushka.Ru :)

The village of Shushinskoye. 55 versts from Minusinsk to the south-east.. on the right bank of the Yenisei; it contains a stone Peter and Paul Church, up to 250 houses and up to 1900 residents of both sexes, a parish school with 40 students, a small almshouse, the volost administration of the Shushenskaya volost, the apartment of the judge of the 3rd section, a pier and weekly markets, and in general it is a trading village and one of the the most prosperous and wealthy in the district.

Latkin N. Yenisei Province. Past and Present 1892

There were traditionally many exiles (both the Decembrists, and even Butashevich-Petrashevsky himself), although it still cannot be compared with Minusinsk. Actually, one of the exiles brought world fame to a truly very distant village.

Well, for now let's get down to business and facts.

It’s easy to get to Shushenskoye from Abakan from the same bus station. Approximately every hour a bus leaves and after an hour and a half (passing the familiar Minusinsk, the very beautiful Tagarskoye Lake and a serious mountain pass with a rise above the cloud level) you disembark at a not at all rural, but on the contrary, a very solid bus station.

2. On this.

Despite the population of eighteen thousand, Shushenskoye is still a village. Since Soviet times, the authorities were going to make it a city, and residents constantly shied away from this honor. In the frenzy of democracy in the 90s, they even held a referendum, but they could not change the mood of the aborigines. Residents see some benefits in this particular status and do not want to be a city.

How to get to the museum?

You need to go out to the square in front of the bus station and find a path that leads diagonally to the left. This will take you to the central square. In general, Shushenskoye is a very lively and cheerful village - movement, people, market, bustle - it does not have the sleepiness of old Minusinsk at all.

For some reason, I imagined this legendary place in a completely different way - a solid private sector, part of which was fenced off for a museum, dirty unpaved streets and all that.

This is not at all true, in the center there are not scary five-story buildings, then cottages, and only on the outskirts are strong Siberian huts. Judging by the museum, where houses from one hundred and twenty years ago are collected, everything has changed a lot.

Central square - power, club, church, museum.

4. And this is the Peter and Paul Church.

The church was of course restored in Lately, since imagining the place of Lenin’s exile with the church was beyond the strength of orthodox party members. In Ulyanovsk, for example, everything was completely demolished. Here the only rural Peter and Paul Church was fucking demolished in 1938, although the beloved one got married in it.

5. The museum office is surprisingly dull and gray in appearance. They are not allowed into the territory one at a time, but despite everyday life, there are people and you don’t have to wait too long.

6. The place is fashionable, there were different guests.

7. And now - Huts!!!

Story:
Having kept Vladimir Ilyich in prison for 14 months after an attack of active Marxism, the authorities decided to send this insurgent to Krasnoyarsk (but not to a resort, but to exile:), writing in the accompanying papers local authorities- decide for yourself where to keep him in your huge Yenisei province, just so that he doesn’t appear either in the European part of Russia or abroad.

Having made acquaintance with doctors, Ilyich received a certificate of his frailty and illness and, therefore, went not to the north of the province (like many others), but to the south, to the fertile Minusinsk district. It would seem that this is harsh Siberia. But near Minusinsk, for example, beautiful watermelons ripen. And the local exiles no longer compared nature with “ice hell” (like Turukhansk), but for some reason with Switzerland and Italy.

As a person under the care of the state, Lenin was paid 8 government rubles monthly. Is it a lot or a little? For the peasant, cash paper or copper money was generally a semi-fantastic thing. They appeared to him if he sold something (and not changed it in kind, as was, in general, customary). For exiles who did not have gardens or farms, these payments made it possible to lead a completely well-fed, but dull life. Therefore, the smarter people tried to get some other job (although almost all civil service, education and healthcare were closed to the exiles).

Nadezhda Krupskaya tells us:
“The cheapness in this Shushenskoye was amazing. For example, Vladimir Ilyich, for his “salary” - an eight-ruble allowance - had a clean room, food, washing and mending of linen - and it was considered that he paid dearly... True, lunch and dinner were simple - one week they killed a sheep for Vladimir Ilyich, which they fed him day after day until he had eaten everything; as soon as he ate it, they bought meat for a week, a worker in the yard, in a trough where feed was prepared for livestock, chopped the purchased meat into cutlets for Vladimir Ilyich, also for a whole week... In general, the exile went well.”

Only money was still needed - mainly for books (books were very expensive back then, especially those that Ilyich preferred to read). Where can a state criminal get funds?

At first he asked (and received in abundance) funds from his mother, and then, as his exile progressed, he himself began to receive good fees for his creations that were relevant and in tune with the times.

In general, despite the gigantic Leniniana, the figure of the mother, Maria Alexandrovna Ulyanova (Blank), remained very, very mysterious. In the family, the eldest son turned out to be a regicide, the middle son had the grip of a bulldog and, with a tiny group of like-minded people, not only political system in the world's largest country, but also established itself as its political leader. Moreover, Maria Alexandrova never doubted the correctness of her sons’ actions and always supported them. Including financially.

The “prisoner of tsarism” had a sad first impression upon arrival:
“The village is large, with several streets, quite dirty, dusty - everything is as it should be. It is located in the steppe - there are no gardens or vegetation at all. The village is surrounded... by manure, which is not taken out to the fields here, but thrown right behind the village, so that in order to leave the village, you almost always have to go through a certain amount of manure.”

8. At first, Lenin settled in the house of the peasant Zyryanov (1840s) and lived there in 1897-1898).

But then his bride came to him (immediately with her mother, i.e. potential mother-in-law :)). The bride, Nadezhda Krupskaya, was the same exiled Marxist (only she was assigned to settle in Ufa), and she was only casually acquainted with the groom. And he was bored in exile and she, in general, also had to improve her life, i.e. “Two solitudes met.” Well, the “cannibalistic” tsarist authorities allowed to change Ufa to Shushenskoye, in order to reunite with a potential spouse. Why not allow it? She’s not asking to go to Crimea or St. Petersburg.

9. The newlyweds looked like this. On average, I would say.

Volodya lost a lot of weight at state meals and was almost completely bald (by the age of 30), while Nadya was an ordinary girl from a good family “with ideals” and with a teaching license.

The authorities hounded the newlyweds for a long time about obtaining a marriage license (what can we expect from them?), but after inspired complaints to the authorities, everything was resolved. The mother of the bride insisted on a full wedding ceremony, but the story with copper wedding rings made from nickels is already known to everyone.

10. It was already crowded with the family in the old living space and therefore the exiled couple moved to Petrova’s house (1898-1900). Sometimes they write - the house of the landowner Petrova - but where are the landowners from in Siberia?

The owner has her own separate entrance, pictured on the right side.

During Soviet times, tour guides said through gritted teeth that those exiled and those offended by the tsarist power had personal servants. Now it’s no secret that a 14 (15) year old girl worked as a laborer for the crooked “urban” ones, running the entire main household. And she had her own room.

12. This one.

It’s a bit poor, but even now many people live worse.

13. And here is the main room of the exiles. I combined two photos so that everything fits.

A table (for Nadezhda Konstantinovna, she performed the work of a secretary), a desk with a traditional green lamp (for Vladimir Ilyich), a wardrobe, a gun, beds, a door to the master's side, a stove.

The gun, like skates and many other things atypical for exile, were sent by Maria Alexandrovna. It was a bit boring to sit back and write all sorts of dregs, so we practiced visiting guests, going to Minusinsk, hunting and skating on German (!) ice skates on the ice of Shushi.

On February 11, 1900, a family of already seasoned political exiles left this hospitable village, and the museum was organized only on the eve of the centenary of his birth, in 1969.

And now about the usual architectural and historical hypostasis.

14. House of exiled settler Karevich (2nd half of the 19th century).

15. But migrant peasants lived in such houses (1860s). Many people know about Stolypin’s program for the resettlement of farmers to Siberia and Far East, but peasants fled from landlessness to Siberia before. And at first they lived in modest houses.

It is indicated that the owner is a migrant from the southern Russian province.

16. Those who lived for more than three years (and they were already considered old-timers) had better houses - for example, the Ermolaev house (2nd half of the 19th century). We will talk about the peasant Simon Ermolaev further; this is not his only house here.

17. Zheltovsky House (1880) There is a whole estate of a peasant cooper.

18. This is a garage with all sorts of things.

19. In general, the percentage of safety of houses is very high, the figure is said to be 87%.

20. Metal is dear to the peasant.

21. It was a discovery for me that wealthy peasants tried not to even enter the clean half of the house, so as not to stain their wealth. Therefore, they lived in the everyday half of the house, and came here only on holidays or with guests.

22. Cherkashin’s house (1860) with luxurious shutters.

A beekeeper lived here.

23. And here is a fisherman. House of the middle peasant Potylitsyn ( late XIX century).

In general, this is apparently a standard design of local houses, divided into two parts.

24. Backsides i.e. vegetable gardens. Employees still seed them to achieve authenticity).

25. Well with mechanization. An illiquid horse was walking around in circles (no one would put a good one for such a job).

26. River Shush in person. It’s the beginning of June, and it’s so muddy!

27. This is what Shushenskogo Street looked like a hundred years ago. Only the road was dirtier.

In the foreground is Alikin's house (late 19th century).

28. I really like these gates. House of unknown owner, 1870s.

29. Here is this nondescript-looking house...

30. ... has a gigantic courtyard and many accompanying premises.

This is the house of Simon Ermolaev, a strong peasant who in 1906 became a member of not just anything, but the First State Duma. This story is funny, like all Russian parliamentarism.

Having gone through many administrative slingshots (only two people were elected from the Yenisei province), he was given the confidence of the people, but did not have time to arrive at the opening of the work. But he managed to disperse and even signed the famous “Vyborg Appeal”. It was a very powerful manifesto, which led to the persecution and arrest of all its signatories.

The peasant Ermolaev was offered, for example, to serve three months in prison. Moreover, when it is convenient for him. It was convenient for him in the winter - in the winter he served his time. Here is a story about the people's choice.

31. Classic cellar.

In that Russia, where they frantically crunch French rolls to the waltzes of Schubert, there was, of course, no crime, but in real life there was.

32. This is a village bullpen of that time. Do you see the stakes? This is a volost government and a prison with three cells.

33. Everything was decided here, in the volost government. Simple offenses were dealt with on the spot and the outrageous man served his sentence on the spot. What’s funny is that the clerk received 10 times more money than the volost foreman, chosen from among the peasants.

34. Wooden regime dungeon.

35. Camera inside.

In total there are two men's and one women's cells, where they were imprisoned for minor offenses. “Sutochnikov,” as they would say now. Food for prisoners was often brought to them by wives/husbands/children who had them. They fed completely undocumented tramps at state expense.

36. Many houses have a variety of workshops. Here is a potter at work.

This is magic, of course, when a THING turns out from disgusting sticky clay.

37. Country store. Urban's house with shop (1880s)

38. The approximate assortment has been tested for decades. On the one hand there is metal...

39. ...and on the other - fabrics and shoes.

Very little metal reached the villages and it was extremely valuable. Cast iron pots, needles, samovars, agricultural implements - everything was expensive. There were no problems with fabrics in the village, only ordinary linen ones were very boring and, therefore, unfashionable. Therefore, the temple of consumerism offered beautiful printed chintz, silk, lace and other delights.

40. There are approximate prices, you can compare.

41. Tavern or, as stated in the guidebooks, “Drinking establishment.”

42. Counter, faucet, dishes. Only the surroundings have changed :)

In general, peasants rarely came here, and not at all because they did not like to drink. There was simply no money for “state grain wine,” so they tried to make something alcoholic themselves.

43. Well, this is the estate of a large merchant, i.e. merchant Lauer's house.

Well, the former Lenin Memorial now offers a completely authentic immersion into the world of not a Central Russian, but a Siberian village a hundred years ago.

With this, we will say goodbye to the Krasnoyarsk Territory and the next story will be about the Sayano-Shushenskaya Hydroelectric Power Station named after. Neporozhny, the largest in the country.

44. And for connoisseurs of provincial buses - the top-end route units of the Shushenskoye ATP.

A country
Subject of the federation
Municipal district
urban settlement

Shushenskoye village

Coordinates
Based
Population
Timezone
Telephone code
Postcode
Vehicle code
OKATO code

Geography

Located in the south of the region, near the confluence of the Bolshaya Shush River with the Yenisei, 60 km southeast of the Minusinsk railway station (on the Abakan - Taishet line).

Name

Name settlement comes from the Bolshaya Shush River (Shush in translation from Turkic languages ​​means bone).

Story

Organized since 1995 national park“Shushensky Bor”, consisting of the Perovsky forestry (located in the vicinity of the village) and the Mountain forestry (area of ​​the Borus ridge, Western Sayan, next to the Sayano-Shushenskaya hydroelectric power station). On the territory of the reserve there is a site of primitive man.

On December 24, 2010, next to the entrance of Shushenskaya Marka LLC, a monument to Emperor Nicholas II was unveiled, which is a bronze bust on a high granite pedestal (sculptor K. M. Zinich).

Notes

Links

  • Alexander Panov. The village of Shushenskoye on the Shusha River. // Around the World, No. 9 (2768), September 2004. Archived from the original source on May 26, 2012. Retrieved March 15, 2012.
Coordinates

Name

Story

Shushenskoye (Shush) was founded in 1744 by Russian Cossacks. For the first time, permanent settlers in Shusha are noted by the border map of Krasnoyarsk and Kuznetsk counties, compiled in 1745-1746, which shows a village of four households, the inhabitants of which “came here by themselves,” that is, they settled without permission. These came from service Yenisei Cossack families - Ivan Kropivin, Vasily Plishkin, as well as Dmitry Konev and the peasant Savva Butakov.

The founding of the village on the Shush River was caused by the very advantageous position of this place, where the road ran from Abakan to Sayan fort, which also connected the mines with the Lugazsky plant (now the area of ​​​​the village of Znamenka).

In the second half of the 18th century, Shush had already grown into a large settlement with about 250-300 inhabitants.

In 1791, with the help of peasants from the surrounding villages, the Peter and Paul Church was built of stone and, accordingly, Shushenskoye acquired the status of a village.

After the reform of 1822, Shushenskoye became a volost village, where there was a transit prison, the residence of the caretaker of state-owned settlements, grain “shops” (storages), trading shops, and a drinking establishment.

The Decembrists, colonel-engineer Pyotr Ivanovich Falenberg and lieutenant Alexander Filippovich Frolov were serving exile in Shushenskoye. In 1860, M. V. Petrashevsky, whose “circle” included F. M. Dostoevsky, was serving exile in Shushenskoye.

The village is famous for the fact that V.I. Lenin was exiled there in 1897 and remained in exile for three years.

Population

Population
1970 1979 1989 2002 2007 2009 2010 2012
14 309 ↗ 16 868 ↗ 19 049 ↗ 19 067 ↘ 18 568 ↘ 18 564 ↘ 17 513 ↘ 17 336
2013 2014 2015 2016
↘ 17 040 ↘ 16 985 ↘ 16 943 ↘ 16 846

Economy

There is a poultry farm in the village. Tourist infrastructure is developing.

Culture

The Historical and Ethnographic Museum-Reserve “Shushenskoye” (formerly “V.I. Lenin’s Siberian Exile”) operates in Shushenskoye. There is a regional cultural center (RCC), equipped with modern lighting and sound equipment. Since 1970, the Shushenskaya People's Art Gallery has been operating, created on the basis of the collection of I.V. Rekhlov. On December 24, 2010, next to the entrance of Shushenskaya Marka LLC, a monument to Emperor Nicholas II was unveiled, which is a bronze bust on a high granite pedestal (sculptor K. M. Zinich).

In the village you can visit Lenin's Shalash (one of the most popular tourist spots).

Since 2003 (with the exception of 2006), the annual international festival of ethnic music “Sayan Ring” has been held in Shushenskoye. Since 1995, the national park “Shushensky Bor” has been organized, consisting of the Perovsky forestry (located in the vicinity of the village) and the Mountain forestry (area of ​​the Borus ridge, Western Sayan, next to the Sayano-Shushenskaya hydroelectric power station). On the territory of the reserve there is a site of primitive man.

Born in Shushenskoye

  • In 1859, I. I. Kraft, the governor of the Yakut region and the Yenisei province, was born in Shushenskoye.
  • Simon Ermolaev - peasant, deputy of the First State Duma Russian Empire from the Yenisei province.

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Notes

Links

  • Alexander Panov.. // Around the World, No. 9 (2768), September 2004. Retrieved March 15, 2012. .

Literature

  • Bukshpan P. Ya. Shushenskoye. Memorial Museum-Reserve “V.I. Lenin’s Siberian Exile.” - M., 1976.
  • Bykonya G. F. From the history of the settlement of the Minusinsk Basin and the emergence of Shushenskoye // Essays on the socio-economic life of Siberia. - Novosibirsk, 1972. - Part 2.

Excerpt characterizing Shushenskoye

– How is your health now? - said Princess Marya, herself surprised at what she was saying.
“This, my friend, is something you need to ask the doctor,” he said, and, apparently making another effort to be affectionate, he said with just his mouth (it was clear that he did not mean what he was saying): “Merci, chere amie.” , d'etre venue. [Thank you, dear friend, for coming.]
Princess Marya shook his hand. He winced slightly when she shook her hand. He was silent and she didn't know what to say. She understood what happened to him in two days. In his words, in his tone, especially in this look - a cold, almost hostile look - one could feel the alienation from everything worldly, terrible for a living person. He apparently now had difficulty understanding all living things; but at the same time it was felt that he did not understand the living, not because he was deprived of the power of understanding, but because he understood something else, something that the living did not and could not understand and that absorbed him completely.
- Yes, that’s how strange fate brought us together! – he said, breaking the silence and pointing at Natasha. - She keeps following me.
Princess Marya listened and did not understand what he was saying. He, the sensitive, gentle Prince Andrei, how could he say this in front of the one he loved and who loved him! If he had thought about living, he would not have said this in such a coldly insulting tone. If he didn’t know that he would die, then how could he not feel sorry for her, how could he say this in front of her! There was only one explanation for this, and that was that he didn’t care, and it didn’t matter because something else, something more important, was revealed to him.
The conversation was cold, incoherent and interrupted constantly.
“Marie passed through Ryazan,” said Natasha. Prince Andrei did not notice that she called his sister Marie. And Natasha, calling her that in front of him, noticed it herself for the first time.
- Well, what? - he said.
“They told her that Moscow was completely burned down, as if...
Natasha stopped: she couldn’t speak. He obviously made an effort to listen, but still could not.
“Yes, it burned down, they say,” he said. “This is very pathetic,” and he began to look forward, absentmindedly straightening his mustache with his fingers.
– Have you met Count Nikolai, Marie? - Prince Andrei suddenly said, apparently wanting to please them. “He wrote here that he really liked you,” he continued simply, calmly, apparently unable to understand all the complex meaning that his words had for living people. “If you fell in love with him too, it would be very good... for you to get married,” he added somewhat more quickly, as if delighted by the words that he had been looking for for a long time and finally found. Princess Marya heard his words, but they had no other meaning for her, except that they proved how terribly far he was now from all living things.
- What to say about me! – she said calmly and looked at Natasha. Natasha, feeling her gaze on her, did not look at her. Again everyone was silent.
“Andre, do you want...” Princess Marya suddenly said in a shuddering voice, “do you want to see Nikolushka?” He thought about you all the time.
Prince Andrei smiled faintly for the first time, but Princess Marya, who knew his face so well, realized with horror that it was not a smile of joy, not tenderness for her son, but of quiet, gentle mockery of what Princess Marya used, in her opinion. , the last resort to bring him to his senses.
– Yes, I’m very happy about Nikolushka. He is healthy?

When they brought Nikolushka to Prince Andrei, who was looking at his father in fear, but was not crying, because no one was crying, Prince Andrei kissed him and, obviously, did not know what to say to him.
When Nikolushka was taken away, Princess Marya went up to her brother again, kissed him and, unable to resist any longer, began to cry.
He looked at her intently.
-Are you talking about Nikolushka? - he said.
Princess Marya, crying, bowed her head affirmatively.
“Marie, you know Evan...” but he suddenly fell silent.
- What are you saying?
- Nothing. There’s no need to cry here,” he said, looking at her with the same cold gaze.

When Princess Marya began to cry, he realized that she was crying that Nikolushka would be left without a father. With great effort he tried to return to life and was transported to their point of view.
“Yes, they must find it pathetic! - he thought. - How simple it is!
“The birds of the air neither sow nor reap, but your father feeds them,” he said to himself and wanted to say the same to the princess. “But no, they will understand it in their own way, they will not understand! What they cannot understand is that all these feelings that they value are all ours, all these thoughts that seem so important to us are that they are not needed. We can't understand each other." - And he fell silent.

Prince Andrei's little son was seven years old. He could barely read, he didn't know anything. He experienced a lot after this day, acquiring knowledge, observation, and experience; but if he had then possessed all these later acquired abilities, he could not have understood better, more deeply the full meaning of that scene that he saw between his father, Princess Marya and Natasha than he understood it now. He understood everything and, without crying, left the room, silently approached Natasha, who followed him out, and shyly looked at her with thoughtful, beautiful eyes; his raised, rosy upper lip trembled, he leaned his head against it and began to cry.
From that day on, he avoided Desalles, avoided the countess who was caressing him, and either sat alone or timidly approached Princess Marya and Natasha, whom he seemed to love even more than his aunt, and quietly and shyly caressed them.
Princess Marya, leaving Prince Andrei, fully understood everything that Natasha’s face told her. She no longer spoke to Natasha about the hope of saving his life. She alternated with her at his sofa and did not cry anymore, but prayed incessantly, turning her soul to that eternal, incomprehensible, whose presence was now so palpable over the dying man.

Shushenskoye (Shush) was founded in 1744 by Russian Cossacks. For the first time, permanent settlers in Shusha are noted by the border map of Krasnoyarsk and Kuznetsk counties, compiled in 1745–1746, which shows a village of four households, the inhabitants of which “came here by themselves,” that is, they settled without permission. These came from service Yenisei Cossack families - Ivan Kropivin, Vasily Plishkin, as well as Dmitry Konev and the peasant Savva Butakov.

In the second half of the 18th century, Shush had already grown into a large settlement with about 250-300 inhabitants.

After the reform of 1822, Shushenskoye became a volost village, where there was a transit prison, the residence of the caretaker of state-owned settlements, grain “shops” (storages), trading shops, and a drinking establishment.

Map of the Siberian Province of 1821

The Decembrists, colonel-engineer Pyotr Ivanovich Falenberg and lieutenant Alexander Filippovich Frolov were serving exile in Shushenskoye. In 1860, M. V. Petrashevsky, whose “circle” included F. M. Dostoevsky, was serving his exile in Shushenskoye.

The village is famous for the fact that V.I. Lenin was exiled there in 1897 and spent 3 years in exile. After the death of V.I. Lenin in 1924, the united mourning meeting of Shusheno peasants decided to buy P.O.’s house with public money. Petrova, in which V.I. lived. Lenin, and open a model house in it with a hut-reading room and a library.

The first one opened in 1927 kindergarten, in 1933 an agricultural technical school was created. In 1944, Shushenskoye became a regional center, and in the same year a regional hospital was opened.

In connection with events to perpetuate the memory of V.I. Lenin, Shushenskoye became one of the most comfortable regional centers in the region. A developed infrastructure has been created here: a museum-reserve, tourist centers, an extensive network of institutions and enterprises of communications, trade, and culture.

The land of Shushenka has raised many talented and original people. These are musicians, excellent students and cultural veterans S. Shchukin - Honorary Citizen of the village, Y. Noskov, V. Ovcharov, composers - Y. Naumov, A. Paramonov, S. Romanenko, poets - V. Kulesh, L. Kolesova, N. Nyudikova , F. Lipai, artists - A. Chekhlov, V. Zuev, D. Pavlov and V. Sofrygin.

Shushenskoye has been the capital of the event many times International festival ethnic music "Sayan Ring". And the prize - the branded bronze figurine “Golden Iria” - became a real “Oscar” for its participants.

The shooting of the All-Russian television program “Play, Harmony!” took place twice in Shushenskoye.

The life of a village, its prosperity, amenities, comfortable microclimate, and the prosperity of its residents are made up of large and small matters, the daily painstaking work of each of us.

Shushenskoye occupies a worthy place among the settlements of the Krasnoyarsk Territory.

In the second quarter of the 19th century. The first political exiles appear in Shushenskoye: the Decembrists P. I. Falenberg and A. F. Frolov. In February 1860, the organizer and leader of political anti-government circles, M. V. Butashevich-Petrashevsky, was brought to Shushenskoye. Since the mid-1860s. A group of participants in the Polish uprising served exile, and in 1881 participants in the assassination attempt on Emperor Alexander II were exiled here. In the 1880-90s. Narodnaya Volya members A.V. Orochko and P.A. Argunov were serving exile in the village. For preparing an assassination attempt Alexandra III Narodnaya Volya members A. A. Voevodin and S. A. Nikonov are exiled to Shushenskoye. V. I. Ulyanov (Lenin), N. K. Krupskaya, and Putilov plant worker O. A. Enberg were sent to the village. In the period from 1918 to 1919. An underground organization was organized in Shushenskoye, which included local Bolsheviks. Subsequently, they took part in the November uprising against the Kolchakites in 1918, and in the establishment Soviet power in 1919

After the revolutionary events and Civil War noticeable transformations in Shushenskoye began with the arrival of the Orsha regiment in March 1920. By this time, the revolutionary committee of the Bolshevik party was already operating here under the leadership of Prokopiy Zakharovich Sukharnikov. On July 31, 1920, a meeting of communists and activists sympathizing with them from among the former partisans took place in Shushenskoye. In the spring of 1920, local communists carried out explanatory work in the villages before the elections of village and volost councils.

In 1920-1921 The first land cultivation partnerships “Bednyak” and “Fevralskoe” were organized. On August 16, 1921, the “Shushenskoye Society of Consumers” in memory of Lenin opens. The agricultural department of the company organized a butter factory, opened a rental point for agricultural machinery, and provided the peasants with a seed loan.

In Shushenskoye medical institutions were absent until 1920. As early as 1924, the local population turned to Kaptyryovo for medical help. For the tenth anniversary October revolution A hospital opened in Shushenskoye. In 1928, doctor S.I. Sharopov arrived to work at the hospital and opened a surgical department.

After the death of V.I. Lenin in 1924, a decision was made to buy the house of P.O. Petrova, in which Lenin lived, with public money, and open a model house in it with a hut-reading room and a library. In 1927, the first Soviet kindergarten opened. In 1933, an agricultural technical school was organized in the village. In 1944, Shushenskoye became a regional center. In 1946, construction of the first two-story brick houses began. A hydroelectric power station was put into operation, a telephone exchange was being equipped, two kindergartens and two playgrounds were opened, the House of Soviets and the House of Culture were built, the main educational building of the agricultural technical school was being built, high school for 600 seats.

In 1961, Shushenskoye was transformed into an urban-type working settlement. Music and art schools are opening. In the 1960-70s. a museum-reserve, hotels, tourist centers, river and automobile stations, a network of institutions and enterprises of communications, trade, catering, consumer services and culture are opening. The Iskra cinema and the House of Pioneers were built.

The film “Time Travel” from the series of programs “Unlost Paradise”, 2014 Authors: Sergey Gerasimov, Denis Shtepa. Video provided by State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company Krasnoyarsk