German National Rajon Azovo

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Rajon
Deutscher Nationalrajon
Azowo Азовский немецкий национальный район
flag coat of arms
flag
coat of arms
Federal district Siberia
Oblast Omsk
Administrative center Azovo
(village)
surface 1,399.79  km²
population 22,925 inhabitants
(as of Oct. 14, 2010)
Population density 16 inhabitants / km²
Boroughs 0
Cities / SsT 0/0
Rural communities / villages 8/28
Head of the Rajons Viktor Sabelfeld
Rajon founded 1992
Time zone UTC + 6
Telephone code (+7) 38141
Postcodes 646880-646899
License Plate 55
OKATO 52 201
OKTMO 52 601
Geographical location of the administrative center
Coordinates 54 ° 42 ′  N , 73 ° 2 ′  E Coordinates: 54 ° 42 ′  N , 73 ° 2 ′  E
Azovo (Omsk Oblast)
Azovo
Azovo
Deutscher Nationalrajon Azowo: Location in the Omsk Oblast
Location within Russia
Omsk Oblast within Russia

The German Nationalrajon Azov ( Russian Азовский немецкий национальный район , Asowski nemezki nazionalny rayon ; German and German National Rayon Asowo or German National District Asowo ) is a Rajon the West Siberian Omsk Oblast in Russia , which, among other things well 4500 Germans inhabited.

geography

The administrative center of the Rajon, Azowo , is a good 40 kilometers southwest of Omsk . The population was 22,925 on October 14, 2010, including 61.5% Russians , 19.8% Germans, 7.9% Kazakhs and 5.1% Ukrainians .

At 1400 km², the Rajon is about the same size as the island of Rügen . The population density is thus around 16 inhabitants / km².

The Rajon comprises 28 villages (one of which has no permanent residents), which are grouped into eight rural communities (selskoje posselenije) . The largest towns next to the Azovo district administrative center are Beryosovka, Tsvetnopolje , Sosnovka, Alexandrowka, Swonarew Kut and Gauf.

History and present

Starting in 1893, Russian-German resettlers from the European part of the Russian Empire founded several villages in this area, in which the German language and culture was passed on until the 1990s and was thus preserved.

On October 13, 1991, a referendum was held in the villages that make up the Nationalrajon today (Germans made up the majority of the population in 16 of the villages at this time). With a participation of 71%, 82.7% voted for the establishment, which was then decided on December 18, 1991 by the Council of People's Deputies (corresponding to parliament) of Omsk Oblast. The actual founding date is February 17, 1992, when the Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Federation, Ruslan Khasbulatov, ratified this decision. As a result of the collapse of the Soviet Union , people of ethnic origin from the former Soviet republics of Kazakhstan ( Kazakhstani Germans ), Kyrgyzstan ( Kyrgyzstan Germans ) and Tajikistan , but also from other parts of Siberia , initially moved to this area.

In order to give the Germans in Russia a perspective, the German federal government supported the Azovo national rally in a variety of ways. Teachers helped with German lessons in schools; Young journalists wrote their newspaper for the Rajon newspaper , roads were paved, businesses were built or modernized. Not all funds, however, actually benefited the ordinary local population, such as B. the new "villa district" on the outskirts of Azovo. With the deterioration of the overall economic situation in Russia in the 1990s, the willingness of Germans to leave the country grew rapidly. Many of the Germans have now left the Nationalrajon for Germany , so that the proportion of Germans in the population has meanwhile halved.

Many of those who remained no longer speak German as their main language; most come from ethnically mixed families or live in such families. However, the administration of the Rajons attaches great importance to maintaining German culture.

Wiktor Sabelfeld has been the head of the district administration (comparable to a district administrator in Germany) since 2010. From the founding of the Rajon in 1992 to 2010, it was Bruno Reiter who was re-elected in 1996, 2000 and 2005.

Places in the Azovo National Park

Rural communities
and associated localities
Cyrillic spelling German names
(unofficial / colloquial)
Status
(type)
Population
(2010)
location
Alexandrovskoye Александровское     2177  
Alexandrowka * Александровка Koschkel S. 1284  
Barsukovka Барсуковка   D. 64  
Ruslanowka Руслановка   D. 129  
Trubetskoye Трубецкое   D. 700  
Azovskoye Азовское     8158  
Azovo * Азово   S. 5997  
Berdyanka Бердянка   D. 259  
Jagodnoye Ягодное   D. 254  
Yuzhnoye Южное   D. 247  
Pachomovka Пахомовка   D. 538  
Priwalnoye Привальное Warenburg S. 863  
Beryosovskoye Берёзовское     2550  
Beryosovka * Берёзовка   S. 2200  
Segisbai Сегизбай   A. 350  
Gaufskoje Гауфское     1212  
Gauf * Гауф Hauwakudr D. 1212  
Prishibskoye Пришибское     1755  
Kuduk chilik Кудук-Чилик   D. 354  
Kutumbet Кутумбет   A. 23  
Prishib * Пришиб   S. 729  
Serebropolje Сереброполье Silberfeld D. 649  
Sosnovskoye Сосновское     2859  
Mirnaya Dolina Мирная долина   D. 305  
Nowinka Новинка   D. 167  
Popovka Поповка Jost D. 532
Sosnovka * Сосновка Shilling S. 1778  
Tulumbai Тулумбай   A. 77  
Zvonarevokutskoye Звонаревокутское     1923  
Koshkarjowo Кошкарёво Hofental, Hovental, Rosa D. 330  
Krutsch Круч Krutsch, Krutschkudr D. 320
Swonarev Kut * Звонарев Кут Sharmantai S. 1273  
Zwetnopolskoye Цветнопольское     2291  
Bakse Бакзе   A. -  
Rosa Dolina Роза-Dolina Rosental, Rosenthal D. 415  
Zwetnopolje * Цветнополье Field of flowers S. 1876  

Remarks

  1. Names of the rural communities ( selskoje posselenije; comparable with (district) communities in Germany) in bold letters; including the respective associated locations; Main town / administrative center of each rural municipality marked with *
  2. ^ S - selo, (rather large) village; D - derevnja, (rather small) village; A - Aul
  3. a b c Russian name is the literal translation of the German name
  4. Rosa refers to the name of the Rosa Luxemburg collective farm

See also

literature

  • Ann-Christin Doms, Cornelia Riedel: Asowo - memories of golden times . In: Eurasisches Magazin, June 30, 2007

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Itogi Vserossijskoj perepisi naselenija 2010 goda. Tom 1. Čislennostʹ i razmeščenie naselenija (Results of the All-Russian Census 2010. Volume 1. Number and distribution of the population). Tables 5 , pp. 12-209; 11 , pp. 312–979 (download from the website of the Federal Service for State Statistics of the Russian Federation)
  2. Results of the 2010 census for Omsk Oblast on the Omskstat website , Volume 4, Table 4