Tarutino, Russia

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Tarutino
Тару́тино
Monument to the Battle of Tarutino (1812)
Interactive map of Tarutino
Tarutino is located in Russia
Tarutino
Tarutino
Location of Tarutino
Coordinates: 55°7′20″N 36°56′26″E / 55.12222°N 36.94056°E / 55.12222; 36.94056
CountryRussia
Federal subjectKaluga Oblast
Population
  Total
496
Time zoneUTC+3 (MSK Edit this on Wikidata[2])
Postal code[3]
249165Edit this on Wikidata
OKTMO ID29613436101

Tarutino (Russian: Тару́тино) is a rural locality (a selo) in Zhukovsky District of Kaluga Oblast, Russia, located on the Nara River 35 kilometers (22 mi) from Maloyaroslavets. It has an altitude of 262 meters (860 ft). It has a population of 733.[4]

The 1812 Battle of Tarutino in Napoleon's invasion of Russia took place eight kilometers from the village.

The village of Tarutino was part of Zayachkov volost, which Prince Simeon the Proud, in a treaty with his brothers dated 1348, referred to as having been received from his aunt Princess Anna. The village is mentioned as part of the volost in 1486, under the spiritual jurisdiction of Prince Mikhail Andreyevich.[5]

Since the end of the 17th century, the village of Tarutino was under the feudal ownership of the House of Naryshkin. The last owner from this noble family was Alexander Alexandrovich Naryshkin. Upon his passing, the village was inherited by his wife Anna Nikitichna Naryshkina, who bequeathed the land to her nephew Nikolai Rumyantsev, and later his younger brother Sergei Rumyantsev, who would be the last of the Rumyantsev line.

Prince Mikhail Kutuzov and Ambassador Jacques Lauriston in Tarutino.

Following the retreat of the Imperial Russian Army from Moscow, the village was the site of the Battle of Tarutino in Napoleon's invasion of Russia.[6][7][8] On 18 October 1812, Russian troops of Prince Mikhail Kutuzov's army, under the command of Graf von Bennigsen, launched a surprise attach on French troops under the command of Joachim Murat. French forces were forced to retreat under attack from Cossack troops of Count Orlov-Denisov, suffering heavily casualties, while Russian losses were light, with a notable exception being the death of Karl Gustav von Baggehufwudt to French cannon fire. The battle boosted Russian morale in the wake of the French occupation of Moscow, and marked the beginning of a strategic counteroffensive that would eventually drive Napoleon out of Russia.[9]

In 1829, landowner Count Sergey Petrovich Rumyantsev stated in his will that 745 peasants under his ownership be freed from serfdom, on the condition that a monument to the battle be built.[10]

A school was opened in Tarutino in 1846. The school is still operational, and has been located in the village Palace of Culture since 1992.[11]

In the document List of Settlements of the Kaluga Province, published by the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the village is described as having 119 households, 948 inhabitants, a fair and weekly markets, as well as a school and orthodox church.[12]

Tarutino was occupied by Nazi forces from October to December 1941, with an anti-aircraft battery being stationed close to the monument. Upon retreating from the area, the area was heavily mined.[10]

On 17 May 2023, a Ukrainian Air Force Tupolev Tu-141 Strizh unmanned reconnaissance aircraft was shot down over Tarutino, with the wreckage landing in the forested area between the settlement and the Moscow Big Ring Road.[13][14][15][16]

In 2025, the Russian Minister of Culture Olga Lyubimova announced plans for the further development of the settlement, including a new museum building, historical trails and hotel.[17]

Notable landmarks

See also

References

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