In the 18th century, the remains of the Mesolithic Dnieper–Donets culture were found on the territory of the Mykilska Slobidka.[1] In 1508, the territory belonged to the Pustyno-Mykilskyi Monastery, from which the settlement received its name.[2][3]
In the 18th century, the settlement was inhabited by the Kyiv Arsenal workers.[3] From 1802 to 1902, the settlement was part of the BrovaryVolost. In 1858, the settlement consisted of 76 residences, 350 residents, and the St. Nicholas Church.[1] Famed Russian poets Anna Akhmatova and Nikolay Gumilev were married in this church in 1910.[2] The settlement had a small lake named Sviatysche located to its north, and a small settlement exclave named Buhry to the lake's north.[1]
From 1903 to 1923, the settlement was the administrative center of the Mykilsko-Slobidska Volost, in the OsterPovit of the Chernihiv Governorate.[4] In the early 1910s, the settlement was home to the city's tram depot,[4] located in between three tram routes which ran through the settlement.[5] It is particularly notable since the city's two banks were then administratively part of other governorates (Kyiv and Chernihiv, respectively).[4]
When Kiev's city limits were expanded to the left bank in 1923, the settlement became a part of the city.[3] In the 1930s, Soviet authorities closed the functioning church and monastery down, and repressed the local archimandrite. In 1935, the monastery and belltower were demolished, and a new park and street were built in its place.[6] During the 1960s to 1970s, the territory of the Mykilska Slobidka was demolished to make way for the Livoberezhnyi neighborhood;[7][8] nothing remains of the original settlement except for one pre-revolutionary building.[9]