Vyshneve spans 64 hectares and is part of the Krymskorozyvska Rural Council [uk]. It is located 7 km west of Krymska Roza [uk; ru].[7] As of 2017, the village has three streets: Amet-Khan-Sultan, Lesnaya, and Tsentralnaya (Russian: Амет-Хан-Султана Улица, Лесная Улица, Центральная Улица).[9] Vyshneve is located in Bilohirsk Raion, on the eastern bank of the Zuya river, a tributary of the Salhyr. The village resides within the northern foothills of the Inner Ridge [ru] of the Crimean Mountains. The village is 292 m above sea level,[1] and neighbours the villages of Zuya, Balanove [ru], and Krasnohirske [ru]. The distance to the district centre is about 27 km.[10] The nearest railway station is Simferopol railway station, about 26 km away.[11]
History
The village, originally known as the farmstead Novo-Alekseevka (Russian: Ново-Алексеевка; Crimean Tatar: نو و آله که به فکا), likely emerged in the early 1900s. According to the 1915 Statistical Handbook of the Taurida Governorate, Part II, Statistical Sketch, issue six, the village of Novo-Alekseevka in the Zuya Volost (a former administrative subdivision) of Simferopol Uyezd (another former administrative subdivision) had 7 households with a population of 29 people, including 14 men and 15 women. The residents owned 30 desyatinas (about 32.7 acres) of arable land and 212 desyatinas (about 231.08 acres) of non-arable land. Their farms had 18 horses, 5 cows, and 10 head of small livestock,[3] although it was not marked on a later 1922 map.[12]
According to the List of Populated Areas of the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic According to the All-Union Census of 17 December 1926, the Novo-Alekseevka farmstead in the Neizats Village Council [ru] of Simferopol Raion had 7 households, all peasant, with a population of 35 people.[4]
A new Zuya Raion [uk; ru] was formed by a VTSIK decree on 10 June 1937,[15] and the village was included in it.[16] Novo-Alekseevka was still marked on the 1941 General Staff map of the Red Army.[17] After the Crimean offensive in 1944, a decree dated 12 August 1944 initiated the resettlement of collective farmers to Crimean districts.[18] In September 1944, the first new settlers (212 families) from the Rostov, Kyiv, and Tambov regions arrived in the district, followed by a second wave of settlers from various regions of Ukraine in the early 1950s.[19]
According to the 1989 Soviet census, the village had a population of 120 people.[5] Since 5 June 1990, Vyshneve has been part of the Krymskorozyvska Rural Council.[7] From 12 February 1991, the village was part of the restored Crimean ASSR, renamed the Autonomous Republic of Crimea on 26 February 1992.[26] Since 21 March 2014, Crimea, including the village, has been annexed by Russia.[27]
The exact date when Novo-Alekseevka was renamed Vyshneve is not established, but it likely occurred in the 1930s, during the establishment of Krymska Roza.[7]
^Саркизов-Серазини, И.М. (1925). НАСЕЛЕНИЕ И ПРОМЫШЛЕННОСТЬ (in Russian) (1 ed.). Crimea. pp. 55–88, 416. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Синельников, П. (1960). Справочник административно-территориального деления Крымской области на 15 июня 1960 года (in Russian). Simferopol: Крымиздат.