Oktyabrskoje (North Ossetia-Alania, Prigorodny)
Village
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List of large settlements in Russia |
Oktjabrskoje ( Russian Октя́брьское , Ossetian Октябрыхъӕу ) is a village (selo) in the Republic of North Ossetia-Alania in Russia with 10,436 inhabitants (as of October 14, 2010).
geography
The place is located on the northern edge of the Greater Caucasus about 6 km as the crow flies east of the center of the republic capital Vladikavkaz . It is located on the left bank of the Kambilejewka, a right tributary of the Terek .
Oktjabrskoje is the administrative center of the Rajons Prigorodny and seat and only town in the rural community Oktjabrskoje selskoje posselenije.
history
In the area east of the Terek, which has been inhabited by Ingush for at least a few hundred years, the Ingush Aul Scholchi ( Ingush Шолхи ) was located in the place of the current place . After the area was annexed to the Russian Empire , the Cossack hamlet (chutor) Tarski was built there in the 19th century , opposite the Stanitsa Kambilejewskaja (today the village of Kambilejewskoje) and not to be confused with the Stanitsa Tarskaya (today Tarskoye ) further upstream, about 10 km to the south ).
After the Russian Civil War , most of the Cossacks who had been on the side of the “ whites ” there were resettled in the early 1920s , and as a result, the place, now predominantly inhabited by Ingush, belonged to the Checheno-Ingushetan ASSR . As part of the deportation of the Ingush population in 1944, the area was settled with Ossetians and the village was given the name Karza , which still bears the name of a settlement immediately to the west belonging to the city of Vladikavkaz.
In 1963 the Prigorodny rajon ("Vorstadtrajon") surrounding the republic's capital was created and Karza became its administrative seat, which also received its current name, from Russian oktjabr for October , here as a reference to the October Revolution . The return of Ingush to the area originally inhabited by them increased ethnic tensions with the Ossetians from the beginning of the 1980s, which culminated in 1991/1992 in civil war-like clashes with several hundred dead. Oktyabrskoye was one of the focal points.
Population development
year | Residents |
---|---|
1970 | 6,031 |
1979 | 7,832 |
1989 | 10.171 |
2002 | 10,575 |
2010 | 10,436 |
Note: census data
traffic
The village is on the regional road 90K-006, which leads from Vladikavkaz (where the nearest train station is) coming from Oktyabrskoye in an easterly direction via Sunsha to the village of Komgaron . From Oktjabrskoje the left bank of the Kambilejewka runs up to Tarskoye the 90K-057.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b 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)