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There are several villages called Kurgan'e (Курганье) in present-day Russia and Belarus.

OneYandex Maps has a settlement called Kurgan'e, a part of themVladimirovka village, in Klichev district, Mogilev oblast of Belarus, hasand a bus stop called Novoe Kurgan'e nearby. Wikimapia names that settlement Novoe Kurgan'e, and the description of Wikimapia object says that previously Novoe Kurgan'e was a village on its own.

Also there is a village Staroe Kurgan'e nearby (Staroe means Old and Novoe means New; Staroe X and Novoe X are a very common pattern in village names in Russia and neighbour countries).

I also found a site about a WWII partisan that says that she was born in 1923 in Novoe Kurgan'e of Klichev district, Mogilev oblast in Belarus, so probablywhich also confirms that at that time there was a separate village with that name.

Wikimapia has also Novoe Kurgan'e a part of Vladimirovka village in Minsk oblast in Belarus. The description of Wikimapia object says that previously Novoe Kurgan'e was a village on its own.

(Note that transition "g"->"h" is very common in slavic languages, especially for Belarussian or Ukrainian language speakers.)

There are several villages called Kurgan'e (Курганье) in present-day Russia and Belarus.

One of them, in Klichev district, Mogilev oblast of Belarus, has a bus stop called Novoe Kurgan'e nearby. I also found a site about a WWII partisan that says that she was born in 1923 in Novoe Kurgan'e of Klichev district, Mogilev oblast in Belarus, so probably at that time there was a separate village with that name.

Wikimapia has also Novoe Kurgan'e a part of Vladimirovka village in Minsk oblast in Belarus. The description of Wikimapia object says that previously Novoe Kurgan'e was a village on its own.

(Note that transition "g"->"h" is very common in slavic languages, especially for Belarussian or Ukrainian language speakers.)

There are several villages called Kurgan'e (Курганье) in present-day Russia and Belarus.

Yandex Maps has a settlement called Kurgan'e, a part of Vladimirovka village, in Klichev district, Mogilev oblast of Belarus, and a bus stop called Novoe Kurgan'e nearby. Wikimapia names that settlement Novoe Kurgan'e, and the description of Wikimapia object says that previously Novoe Kurgan'e was a village on its own.

Also there is a village Staroe Kurgan'e nearby (Staroe means Old and Novoe means New; Staroe X and Novoe X are a very common pattern in village names in Russia and neighbour countries).

I also found a site about a WWII partisan that says that she was born in 1923 in Novoe Kurgan'e of Klichev district, Mogilev oblast in Belarus, which also confirms that at that time there was a separate village with that name.

(Note that transition "g"->"h" is very common in slavic languages, especially for Belarussian or Ukrainian language speakers.)

Source Link
Petr
  • 151
  • 3

There are several villages called Kurgan'e (Курганье) in present-day Russia and Belarus.

One of them, in Klichev district, Mogilev oblast of Belarus, has a bus stop called Novoe Kurgan'e nearby. I also found a site about a WWII partisan that says that she was born in 1923 in Novoe Kurgan'e of Klichev district, Mogilev oblast in Belarus, so probably at that time there was a separate village with that name.

Wikimapia has also Novoe Kurgan'e a part of Vladimirovka village in Minsk oblast in Belarus. The description of Wikimapia object says that previously Novoe Kurgan'e was a village on its own.

(Note that transition "g"->"h" is very common in slavic languages, especially for Belarussian or Ukrainian language speakers.)