Generic nest meaning phraseological unit. "family nest". Dictionary of the gold craft of the Russian Empire

Beekeeper's Dictionary

Nest

A, p. Some of the combs in the hive occupied by brood and feed.

Thesaurus of Russian business vocabulary

Nest

Syn: socket, socket, slot, slot

Fortification Dictionary

Glossary of hunting terms and expressions

Nest

for canine hunters: the place where the she-wolf throws her cubs (lair). Hence they have a "nest" - a male wolf and a "nest" - a she-wolf. In the summer, the entire family of wolves keeps in the "nest".

Phraseological dictionary of the Russian language

Nest

Make your own nest -

1) arrange a cozy home, start a family

2) transfer to assert itself, to take root in someone, something

Family nest - the place where previous generations of ancestors lived

Architectural vocabulary

Nest

1. A rectangular depression hollowed out with an indent from the edge - up to about half of a board (1), a bar (1) or a log.

2. Two peasant estates adjoining one another without a lane separating them.

3. A pair of jigs for one door panel.

4. (hen). A set of tea tables pushed into one another.

(Terms of Russian architectural heritage. Pluzhnikov V.I., 1995)

Dictionary of the gold craft of the Russian Empire

Nest

from, forge. Small, scattered irregularly-shaped accumulations of gold and other minerals.

* - Nests of gold. GZh, 1846, No. 6: 368; Quartz veins are not always parallel to each other, but sometimes they intersect at different angles and form nests. GZh, 1862, no. 11: 260; Sometimes the river bed represented irregularities, pits, in which large particles of carried earth remained, which is why nowadays in many mines there are places rich in gold, called nests, scattered between empty rocks of poor content. Um., 1888: 43. *

Phraseological Dictionary (Volkova)

Nest

Make your own nest transfer

1) arrange a place for yourself ( colloquial),

2) get started, settle down, breed somewhere.

The institution built a nest of embezzlers and bureaucrats.

Warm nest (colloquial) - transfer, home, family comfort.

They turned the old house into a warm nest.

Ushakov's Dictionary

Nest

nest, nests, pl. nests, wed

1. A room, a den, adapted by birds, animals for laying eggs, incubating chicks, raising young. The hole turned out to be a partridge's nest. Make a nest. I picked up a robin's nest on the road.

| transfer Hereditary, ancestral dwelling, dwelling ( books. outdated.). Noble Nest.

2. Secret, secluded hangout, refuge ( books.). Thieves' nest. The nest of the counter-revolution.

3. Brood, family of animals. Wolf's nests.

| Cluster, group *****

Efremova's Dictionary

Nest

  1. wed
    1. :
      1. A place arranged by birds for laying eggs and incubating chicks.
      2. The habitat of some animals, insects.
      3. transfer Brood of birds, animals.
    2. :
      1. transfer colloquial Housing, dwelling, home.
      2. Hereditary, generic housing.
      3. Family, household members (usually numerous).
    3. :
      1. transfer colloquial Dwelling place of smb.
      2. The source of focus or diffusion of smth.
      3. Secret haven, smb.'s refuge (usually with a tinge of disapproval).
    4. :
      1. transfer A group of plants, fruits, flowers growing together, close to each other.
      2. Several seeds or plants planted in the same place or close to each other.
    5. transfer Groove into which smth. nested, inserted, pushed in.
  2. wed A group of words with one root (in linguistics).

Encyclopedia "Biology"

Nest

The structure erected by animals for breeding and protecting offspring is less often used as a refuge. Nests are built by both invertebrates and vertebrates. Among invertebrates, the nests of insects are the most diverse, primarily social ones - termites, ants, wasps, bumblebees. Leafworms and some other species of butterflies arrange very unusual nests. Among vertebrates, some species of fish (three-spined stickleback), amphibians (frog-copepod), reptiles (turtles and crocodiles), the vast majority of birds and some mammals (baby mouse, beaver, squirrel) arrange nests. The nests of birds are the most diverse. The whole spectrum of possible options is presented here - from the most primitive nests, like some gulls, waders (an earthen hole lined with grass), to complex multi-apartment colonial dwellings, like the African social weaver. Nests can be located openly, or they can be hidden in shelters - hollows, burrows (in some species of birds and mammals).

Ozhegov Dictionary

NEST ABOUT, and, pl. nests, nests, wed

1. In birds, insects, reptiles, rodents and some other animals: place of dwelling, laying of eggs and breeding of cubs. Build nests. G. alligator. Vorovskoe (trans .: stash). Get yourself Mr. (also trans.: settle, settle where.). Dear Mr. (transfer: home).

2. Brood of animals (special). Wolf's nests.

3. A group of closely growing young plants, berries, mushrooms. G. gruzdey.

4. Deepening, in a cut chton. inserted.

5. A sheltered place for a chagon. Machine gun nests.

6. In linguistics: a group of words with a common root. Word-formation G. words.

nests, pl. nests, cf. 1. Premises, den, adapted by birds, animals for laying eggs, incubating chicks, hatching young. The hole turned out to be a partridge's nest. Make a nest. I picked up a robin's nest on the road. || transfer Hereditary, ancestral dwelling, dwelling (book. Obsolete). Noble Nest. 2. A secret, secluded den, refuge (book). Thieves' nest. counter-revolution. 3. Brood, family of animals. Wolf's nests. || Cluster, group


Watch value Nest in other dictionaries

Nest - cf. various kinds of room or place where animals breed their young. Wolf's nest, snake, nightingale; hornet's nest, bumblebee's. The animal's nest is called ........
Dahl's Explanatory Dictionary

Nest - 1. About the place of residence of the family, family, hearth.
Home, dear, beloved, unforgettable, unforgettable, parental, dear, ancestral (outdated), family, warm, cozy. Dictionary of epithets

Nest - -and; nests; Wed
1. Place arranged or adapted by birds for laying eggs and incubating chicks. Crow, swallow, G. G. quail, wood grouse. Vit g. To destroy ........
Explanatory dictionary Kuznetsov

Nest - A common Slavic word that goes back to nizdos, which has an Indo-European nature and is formed by adding the stems ni - "below" and sed (the same stem as in,), modified ........
Etymological Dictionary of Krylov

Nest of the Wounded - a place for temporary concentration and shelter of the wounded on the battlefield until they are evacuated to a medical center.
Comprehensive Medical Dictionary

Vsevolod Iii the Big Nest (1154-1212) - Grand Duke of Vladimir (c1176), son of Yuri Dolgoruky. Fought successfully against the nobility; subdued Kiev, Chernigov, Ryazan, Novgorod. During his reign, Vladimir-Suzdal Rus reached ........
Big encyclopedic dictionary

Nest - a building arranged by an animal for breeding offspring, less often as a refuge. Of the invertebrates naib, G. in insects is diverse. From vertebrates G. build some fish ........
Biological encyclopedic dictionary

Vsevolod (in Baptism Dimitri) Yurievich (Georgievich) Big Nest - (1154 - 04/15/1212), the great Vladimir-Suzdal prince. The son led. Kiev Prince. Yuri Dolgoruky and the "Greek" (Byzantine princess?).
Around 1161 Vsevolod was deported by his consolidated ........
Historical Dictionary

Vsevolod Iii Yurievich Big Nest - From the clan of Vladimir-Suzdal led. book Son of Yuri Vladimirovich Dolgoruky and the Greek princess Olga. Rod. in 1154 led. book Kiev in 1173. Persiaslavsky in 1176-1177 .........
Historical Dictionary

Vsevolod the Big Nest, Dmitry - (1154-1212), Grand Duke of Kiev (1173), Grand Duke of Vladimir (from 1176), son of Yuri Dolgoruky. Participated in the struggle of Andrey Bogolyubsky for the Kiev land. He fought with Chernigov, ........
Historical Dictionary

Vsevolod Yurievich Big Nest - (1154 - 1212) - son of Yuri Dolgoruky, grandson of Vladimir Monomakh, grandfather of Alexander Nevsky, Grand Duke of Vladimir since 1176 received his nickname for a large family ........
Historical Dictionary

Vsevolod Yurievich Big Nest (1154 - 1212) - The son of Yuri Dolgoruky from his Greek wife. In 1161, his mother with the young Vsevolod and his older brothers Vasily and Mikhail left for Byzantium. But already in 1169 Vsevolod again ........
Historical Dictionary

Vsevolod-Dimitri Yurievich (Big Nest) - Vsevolod-Dimitry Yurievich, nicknamed the Big Nest (that is, the father of a large family), the son of Yuri Dolgoruky, was born in 1154. In 1162, expelled from Suzdal ........
Historical Dictionary

Vsevolod-dimitri Yurievich the Big Nest - (Big Nest, that is, the father of a large family) - the son of Yuri Dolgoruky; genus. in 1154 In 1162, expelled from the Suzdal land together with his elder brothers Andrey Bogolyubsky, ........
Big biographical encyclopedia

Vsevolod the Big Nest - (1154-1212) - great. Prince Vladimir, son of Yuri Dolgoruky, got the nickname "Big Nest" for having many children (8 sons, 4 daughters). In 1162, together with his mother and brother, he was expelled ........
Soviet Historical Encyclopedia

The swallow nest - A product (or rather, a semi-finished product) belonging to the "mysterious", "mysterious", "exotic" products of Chinese cuisine. About the type, taste and application of "swallow ........
Culinary dictionary

The era of urbanization is passing - people are tired of living among dust, asphalt and exhaust gases. People want to break free, they want the real, pure and natural. And thanks to the high level of progress, life in the bosom of nature and modern level of comfort - now the concepts are quite compatible. Moving out of town, we remember how our ancestors lived and apply their experience in a new life.
Story russian estate is almost six centuries old. Even in the period of ancient Russia in any village there was a standout among others owner's house - prototype local estate... The word "estate" comes from the Russian verb "sit down", and, as a phenomenon, manor took root on Russian soil because, according to researchers, it has invariably remained for the owner a corner of the world, mastered and equipped for himself. In other words, the estate became a place where a person decided to settle down, live at home, put down roots.

Family estate - this is the land adjacent to it, but also a spiritual territory, where the most varied events in the life of your family are collected and captured. Everyday worries, happy holidays, family celebrations, work and leisure time - all this has been preserved and passed through the centuries, reminding you of the history of the family. The estate, in the original sense of the word, is a small homeland of a person, where several generations of his ancestors lived. In our time, this concept is practically lost. We live in city apartments, being city dwellers in the second or third generation, we leave the city for household plotwhich is most often difficult to name family estate.
If Europeans can proudly tell you about the history of their kind, the halls of the family estate, where the gala receptions were held, we can tell more about the pedigree of the pet than about our own. It just so happened in our country. But more and more often modern people come to understand what kind of history means to them. Building a "family nest" - the first step towards the restoration of the previous role family estate, preserving and respecting the history of their ancestors.

Today " ancestral nest»You can name enough large plot of land with various outbuildings, master's house, place to rest... Of course life in modern "family nest" different from what was available to our ancestors. Modern suburban settlements are built with a well-thought-out infrastructure, all the benefits of civilization are available to their inhabitants, but one thing remains unchanged - life in harmony with nature and with myself. Endless expanses, green or snow-covered fields, natural reservoirs, horseback riding and boating have not ceased to be in demand for almost 200 years.

January 25, 2012

NEST, -and , pl. nests, wed

1. A place established or adapted by birds for laying eggs and incubating chicks. Swallows, nesting under the roof of the barn, rustled merrily with their wings. Kazakevich, Star. || A place adapted for wintering by animals or insects. Wild wasp nest.[Grandma] pointed out squirrel holes to me, I climbed up a tree and devastated the animal's nest, taking out of it stocks of nuts for the winter. M. Gorky, In people. || transfer; with definition. Place of residence, home. - Do not drive us out of our nest, father! L. Tolstoy, Morning of the Landowner. In Barbara, he discovered a positive quality: the love of comfort, she tirelessly decorated her nest. M. Gorky, The Life of Klim Samgin. || transfer; with definition. Brothel, secret haven. Thieves' nest. Counter-revolutionary nest.

2. Family of birds, animals; brood. Wolf's Nest. || transfer Outdated. Family, clan (about people). - Olgerdov's nephew Bobrok is married to Dmitrieva's sister. They are all related. All from one nest. S. Borodin, Dmitry Donskoy.

3. Cluster, group of plants, fungi, etc., growing together. Soon my father and I found a nest of milk mushrooms. S. Aksakov, Childhood of Bagrov-grandson. She plucked a branch of a hawthorn with a lush nest of white flowers. Kuprin, Olesya. || A cluster of smth .; group of smb. homogeneous objects located together. Ore is everywhere, but it does not occur in thick layers, but in small nests. M. Pavlov, Memoirs of a Metallurgist. || Lingv. A group of words of the same root. So, here is the order, the structure of the dictionary, on which the compiler decided: to collect by families or nests all obviously related words, however, eliminating the prepositional and those derivatives in which the initial letters change. Dal, The Wayward Word (to the Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great Russian Language).

4. A recess, hole, etc., into which smth is inserted, inserted, pushed in. Sockets for cartridges.A decanter of water and a glass were in the nests, as on ships. Arsenyev, In the Sikhote-Alin mountains. Large, clumsy anti-tank rifles stood in rows in a special pyramid with sockets for butts. Pervensev, Tierra del Fuego.

5. A sheltered place reserved for a fighter with a weapon. Machine gun nest. Sniper nest.

6. S.-kh. Place of sowing two or more seeds, planting two or more plants.

Vespiary cm. wasp. Make a nest - 1) arrange a comfortable home; start a family. But be that as it may, Arkady built a nest for himself, found himself some kind of happiness, and Bazarov remained homeless, an unwarmed wanderer. Pisarev, Bazarov; 2) transfer establish, take root in com, smth. - Evil thoughts wander in my head day and night, and in my soul they have built a nest of feelings that I did not know before. Chekhov, Boring story.

The era of urbanization is passing - people are tired of living among dusty asphalt and exhaust gases. People want to be free, they want the real, pure and natural. The achievements of modern civilization are improving and becoming more and more friendly not only to humans, but also to other inhabitants of the Earth. Therefore, life in the lap of nature and the modern level of comfort are now completely compatible concepts. Moving out of town, we remember how our ancestors lived and apply their experience in a new life.

Lost pastoral

The history of the Russian estate goes back almost six centuries. Even in the period of ancient Russia, in any village there was a house of the "owner" that stood out among others - a prototype of a local estate. The word "estate" comes from the Russian verb "to sit down", and as a phenomenon, the estate took root on Russian soil because, according to researchers, it invariably remained for the owner a corner of the world, mastered and equipped for himself. In other words, the manor became the place where a person decided to settle down, live at home, put down roots.

Until the reign of Peter I, the bulk of the estate complexes were concentrated near the capital. And only after Peter the Great began to actively distribute land to his associates, the "estate culture" began its victorious march across the province.

Historians attribute the flourishing of noble manor estates to the end of the 18th - first half of the 19th century. It was during these years that country residences (from rich palace complexes to modest estates of the provincial nobility) dotted the entire European part of Russia, with the exception of the northernmost territories. Many historians directly associate such a stormy arrangement of "noble nests" with the manifesto on the freedom of the nobility. The fact is that the complaints of a Russian nobleman, who lived in the middle of the 18th century, that he did not have enough time to study his estate, had an effect. The brewing conflict between the public and the personal was resolved by the decree of Peter III "On the release of the nobility from compulsory public service." Eyewitnesses claimed that after the decree was issued, all the roads from Moscow and St. Petersburg were crowded with carriages, carriages, carts, on which the nobles with their belongings left both capitals and went to live in the family estates, where everything was adapted for life and a comfortable existence: patrimonial offices , pastures, cheese dairies, linen production, sawmills. But if our ancestors in these paradises were engaged only in economic affairs and recreation, Russia would have lost a huge layer of national history, and no one would have remembered the Russian estate as a cultural phenomenon today.

Fortunately, ordinary landowners' houses over time turned into powerful family nests of famous noble families: Orlovs, Sheremetyevs, Pashkovs, Bestuzhev-Ryumin, Golitsyn ... Thanks to their owners, people, as a rule, educated and being the color of the Russian aristocracy, these estates became real centers of culture in the Russian province.

Even in the architecture of the noble houses, its own "wonderful Russian style" arose, which, however, not everyone liked. In 1914, the Stolitsa i Usadba magazine began to appear in Russia with the subtitle "The Journal of Beautiful Life", and a little earlier, in 1910, a special issue of the art criticism magazine "Old Years" dedicated to Russian estates was published. Among other materials, it printed a study "Landowners' Russia", in which Mr. Wrangel, a prominent art historian and brother of the notorious White Guard general, criticized the arrangement of Russian estates: "not grand-art", "ordinary in the artistic sense", "sometimes it is difficult to understand what is truly beautiful, eternal in this bygone life" ...

And after the revolution in 1926, the historian Ivanov published a study with a diametrically opposite view: “There are works of home-grown architecture, like a chest or a box, but often there are buildings built by serf architects, and very successfully ... even modest houses are quite harmonious, but the most remarkable thing is their correspondence to Russian nature, Russian landscape.It's a strange thing - no matter how many times they tried to approach the real Russian style from different sides - whether it was the Upper Trading Rows on Red Square, or Igumnov's house on Yakimanka, or Kazansky Railway Station - every time this the building of the Russian style was more or less annoying, intrusive, restless. And some modest house of Pushkin's time, painted with gray paint, with four white columns, looks unusually friendly and reassuring among the lilac bushes overgrown with it. "

The dot, or rather the ellipsis, in the "pastoral era" was set by the revolution for many decades. A significant part of the estates burned down or was destroyed, in some museums have been opened and still operate, others have occupied sanatoriums, rest homes, and neuropsychiatric dispensaries. Troubled times, the fragility of buildings or the indifference of Russians to their history can explain this loss, but the fact remains: in the same England, an incredible number of magnificent estates have survived, literally overflowing with the most valuable works of art. British art critics argue that if all the museums in the world were suddenly destroyed, then the contents of English castles and English estates would be enough to restore the history of art completely.

In France, Germany, Austria, Italy, to this day, there are many castles that have survived in full splendor. But not a single Russian estate of the 12th century has survived! And many of the later historical manor complexes, left without the master's supervision, are empty and destroyed. Such, according to experts, in the regions of Central Russia alone today there are more than two hundred and fifty.

There is, however, the likelihood that soon the estates will be saved thanks to the emergence of a new real estate market - the market for monumental houses, which, provided that a good investor is found, can bring good commercial income in the future. But it is not only profit that prompts investors to fight for the right to own exclusive properties. Indeed, in their ranks there are public organizations and patriots, descendants of the nobility and almost patrons of the arts, there are just corporations that need pompous residences ...

While the transfer of monuments to private hands is opposed by the state. But despite the obstacles, deals are already being made in this market. Where this will lead, time will tell.

Country tradition

The word dacha is derived from the verb "give" and, therefore, is native to Russia. Initially, Tsar Peter "gave" the land, as already mentioned. Therefore, the word "dacha" was actually synonymous with the words "estate" or "estate" and served as a place where people went to take a break from the bustle of the city.

The fashion for country life in Russia took root quickly. Departure to the dacha was considered a sign of good form and made it possible to maintain the necessary social contacts during the summer holidays. In the XIX century. in the summer, all strata of the population, including shopkeepers and clerks, rushed out of the city. The season began in early May and lasted until the first cold weather. "Moscow is completely empty in the summer," writes Karamzin in 1803.

The first dachas near Moscow were Sokolniki, Ostankino, Kuntsevo, Petrovsko-Razumovskoye, Lianozovo, Perovo, which are now in the city limits and so beloved by Muscovites ... After the appearance of railways in Russia, summer residents began to actively explore places farther from the capital. This is how the famous villages appeared in Kryukovo, Perlovka, Tarasovka, Pushkino, Malakhovka, Tomilino.

The Soviet government carried out an almost total expropriation of these paradise corners, but, realizing their value, did not destroy, but only radically changed the composition of summer residents. The proletariat rested, as expected, collectively: one noble dacha could simultaneously accommodate 50-70 representatives of the new masters of life.

A modest dacha could be rented. The 1926 guide to the Moscow region says that in the village of Zvyagino (Klyazma platform) "... the number of summer cottages and peasant huts rented out in summer reaches 800. Two or three rooms are priced from 150 rubles and more per season."

At the very beginning of the Stalinist era, only the highest Soviet leadership was entitled to private dachas. Exceptions were made for famous scientists, writers, composers, famous milkmaids and miners. But the most important thing was that, unlike city apartments, summer cottages could be bought and sold, and when the "enemies of the people" were arrested in the troubled 1930s, they were often left to orphaned families, even if the apartment was taken away. During the war, land plots made it possible to feed.

In the era of Khrushchev, everyone could have a plot. True, fearing the appearance of new landowners, the party allowed only tiny land plots of 6 acres to be owned. It was strictly forbidden to build housing on them. "Temporary" summer houses were strictly measured. Officially, Brezhnev allowed the construction, although the regulations did not cancel: the living area of \u200b\u200bthe house, having increased, however, could not exceed 25 sq. M. These huts were assembled, like everything else, according to a "rational" technology: two layers of plywood were sewn onto the plank frame, and sawdust or dry peat served as the insides of this strange "sandwich".

In those distant times, the owner of a country house (even a plywood one), a car (even a "Zaporozhets"), and an apartment (even a "Khrushchev") was considered a wealthy person. Many did not have this either, but there were also those who did not pursue dachas, linking their existence with constant manure, beds and agricultural labor from dawn to dusk. The hungry 1980s made them regret the lack of garden plots for such Soviet citizens, when dachas became a real salvation for the majority of the country's population. The total shortage again returned the status of a wet nurse to the land, and only thanks to her, in those years, products appeared on the tables, of which there was nothing to dream of, looking at the empty counters of Soviet grocery stores.

This is just the beginning

"Dachas and summer residents - it's so vulgar, I'm sorry," - used to say, the main character of "The Cherry Orchard". But, as you know, Mrs. Ranevskaya had her own reasons. Our contemporaries, after so many years again turned their eyes to nature and laid the foundation for the "era of cottage construction", every year return the country life to its former prestige.

The most affluent residents of megalopolises, who were the first to rush to organized cottage settlements, have already got used to suburban life in the conditions of a developed infrastructure of service and entertainment. The real estate boom, which is driving up housing prices in the city by about 30% a year, has spawned a second tier of summer residents moving away from dusty cities. They are the burgeoning middle class looking for more affordable housing in a cleaner environment.

For meditation on a sun lounger, horseback riding or walking in the fresh air somewhere in a pine forest or by the lake, people exhausted by life in a big city are ready not only to stand in traffic jams for hours, but also pay in full. Detached single-family houses outside Moscow cost from $ 500 thousand to tens of millions in exclusive villages.

Life outside the city is undergoing dramatic changes. Modern owners of suburban real estate do not look like the owners of the estates of Pushkin's times, but they are terribly far from the psychology of summer residents of the Soviet period. The "sandwich" houses were replaced by multi-storey mansions, and carrot beds were replaced by English lawns.

Glossy lifestyle publications publish materials about the life of the landowners of the XXI century. and interviews with celebrities against the backdrop of their country homes and landmarks of impeccable landscaping. And specialized magazines give advice on the practice of arranging alpine slides, planting hedges and breeding rare flowers.

Those who always strive for something unusual prefer summer cottages on the water. At the Salon of Yachts and Boats - 2006 held at Crocus-Expo at the end of September last year, not only imported, but also domestic projects of houseboats were presented. Opinions about the prospects for the development of the houseboat movement in Russia are very different, sometimes polar opposite.

Vladimir Yakhontov, Deputy Director of the Suburban Real Estate Department of the Miel-Real Estate company, believes that theoretically the Moscow suburban market is ready for the appearance of floating dachas: "... only in our case, this concept should most likely mean landing stages that are put on near the coast. They could be placed on the reservoirs of the Moscow region. At present, there is nothing like this in the Moscow region. "

Ivan Vorobyov, an analyst of the Inkom-Real Estate corporation, calls the floating dachas just an interesting fun or "oddity" for some water lovers: "In the Moscow region climate, life on a houseboat is possible no more than 6 months a year, so you can spend from $ 300 thousand to $ 1 million for such a project so far, very few are ready. Add to this the costs of buying a boathouse, club membership, obtaining rights and licenses, and it becomes clear that it is premature to talk about houseboats as a real competitor to suburban real estate in the Moscow region. "

Whatever it was, on land or on water, but summer residents as a class or as the most massive social movement in Russia, will always exist. After all, de facto they have become a separate "electoral" group, whose interests even politicians have to take into account - they are constantly deciding which privileges should be given to dacha owners and which ones should be taken back. And there can be no talk of scheduling elections for the spring-summer period - a breakdown is guaranteed.

Return of the cherry orchard

Since suburban life exists, it means that someone needs it. And while endless traffic jams are lining up every morning towards the capital from the region of those who want to live in nature, but have to work in Moscow, ideas of a new social order are already in full swing in the polluted air. They have been concluded at the moment within the framework of the draft law "On family estates and settlements", the text of which, if desired, can be easily found on the Internet. Its essence, briefly, boils down to a proposal to the federal and municipal authorities, on the basis of the land legislation of the Russian Federation, to voluntarily and free of charge grant land plots to all interested citizens of Russia for the creation of family homesteads. The minimum area of \u200b\u200ba family estate, according to the project initiators, should be 1 hectare.

In addition, "the land plot provided for the creation of a family estate, as well as all the products grown on it and the funds from its sale, are not taxed." If, over time, other clan estates are created around this site, "their owners have the right to form a clan settlement and receive for use the land plots necessary to create the appropriate infrastructure."

The future will show how quickly this initiative will be implemented. Its creators argue that the idea of \u200b\u200bcreating ancestral nests is not only being successfully implemented in some Russian regions, but also triumphantly marching across the expanses of the neighboring states of our restless CIS.

20th century events left their dark mark on our history - Russian estates of the past have been devastated and not all of them will be restored. It is sad that these material evidences of the life of our ancestors are quietly fading away, merging with the picturesque landscapes. But the main thing is that we remembered who we are, felt the taste of normal human life and will do everything in our power to ensure that our descendants have ancestral nests.

gastroguru 2017