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Babruysk

City in Mogilev Region, Belarus

Babruysk

Summary

City in Mogilev Region, Belarus

FieldValue
official_nameBabruysk
native_nameБабруйск • Бобруйск
native_name_langby
other_nameBobruysk
settlement_typeCity
image_skyline{{multiple image
borderinfobox
total_width270
image_styleborder:1
perrow2/2/1
caption_aligncenter
image1Бабруйск, ліпень 2021 (93).jpgHistoric tenements at Sacyjalistyčnaja Street
image2Babrujsk-Maryja catholic church-1.JPGCatholic church of the Immaculate Conception
image3Дом адразу кідаецца ў вочы сваёй незвычайнасцю.jpgOld library building
image400-пределы-007-a.jpgSaint George Orthodox church
image528-ц-редюит-б-1-2-043a.jpgBabruysk fortress
caption1Sacyjalistyčnaja Street
caption2Immaculate Conception Church
caption3Old library building
caption4Saint George Orthodox church
caption5Babruysk fortress
image_flagFlag of Babruisk, Belarus.svg
image_shieldCoat of Arms of Babruisk, Belarus.svg
flag_size150
shield_size75
pushpin_mapBelarus
pushpin_label_positionleft
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameBelarus
subdivision_type1Region
subdivision_name1Mogilev Region
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameAleksandr Studnev
established_titleFirst mentioned
established_date1387
area_total_km283.86
population_as_of2025
population_footnotes
population_total205,502
population_density_km2auto
timezoneMSK
utc_offset+3
coordinates
elevation_m157
postal_code_typePostal code
postal_code213801-213830
area_code+375 0225(1)
registration_plate6
website

Babruysk or Bobruysk is a city in Mogilev Region, Belarus. It serves as the administrative center of Babruysk District, though it is administratively separated from the district. It is situated on the Berezina River. Babruysk occupies an area of 66 km2, and comprises over 450 streets whose combined length stretches for over 430 km. , it has a population of 205,502.Babruysk is located at the intersection of railroads to Asipovichy, Zhlobin, Aktsyabrski and roads to Minsk, Gomel, Mogilev, Kalinkavichy, Slutsk, and Rahachow. It has the largest timber mill in Belarus and is known for its chemical, machine building, and metal-working industries.

In 2021, there were 38 public schools in Babruysk with over 24,000 students. There are three schools specializing in music, dance and visual arts. In addition, there is a medical school and numerous professional technical schools.

Etymology

The name Babruysk (as well as that of the Babruyka River) may originate from the Belarusian word be (бабёр, ) for beavers that inhabited the Berezina. However, by the end of the 19th century, beavers were almost eliminated due to hunting and pollution.

History

Babruysk is one of the oldest cities in Belarus. It was first mentioned in writing in the middle of the 14th century. Investigations by archaeologists revealed that in the 5th and 6th centuries there existed Slavic settlements up the river Biarezina from where Babruysk is currently located; findings of stone tools and weapons suggest that people have lived in the area since the Stone Age.

During the reign of Vladimir I, Prince of Kiev, in place of modern-day Babruysk there was a village whose inhabitants were occupied with fishing and beaver trapping. This is where the name Babruysk originated. For many centuries Babruysk was part of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and was an important militarily fortified border post. In the 14th century a castle was built on one of the hills near the Berezina River.

Babruysk was not only a major military base, but also a prominent trade center. There is evidence of a market containing nearly one hundred stalls, which implies significant financial activity. In the first half of the 17th century Babruysk became a big trade outpost thanks to its strategic position at the intersection of major trade routes and the Berezina river. There was a flowering of skilled tradesmen, including carpenters, blacksmiths, goldsmiths, and bakers. The population in the first half of the 17th century was between 2,000 and 5,000 people.

[[Babruysk fortress]] in 1811

The town was surrounded by fortifications made from wood and earth, whose length stretched for over 3 km. These included a protective earth barrier, wooden walls, and almost a dozen two-story watchtowers. In the walls there were openings designed for the placement of firearms. After the Second Partition of Poland in 1793 it came into the hands of Imperial Russia. In 1810, the construction of a fortress began to mark the border between Russia and Austria and Prussia; in 1812 it was almost completed and was successful in repelling Napoleon's attack for four months. After the war the building was renewed on a large scale, and it was completed in 1820. That was one of the western Russian fortresses. The Babruysk fortress has served its purpose for many decades and today it is a major tourist attraction.

The 1861 census showed a population of 15,766. The ethnic groups living in Babruysk included Belarusians, Ukrainians, Poles, and Jews. As in other cities of Belarus, most of the buildings were constructed from wood. In 1866 there were 1498 houses, only 29 of which were made from brick.

There was a steady increase in the Jewish population of Babruysk following the Napoleonic Wars. By 1897, in the population of 34,336 citizens, 60%, or 20,760 were Jews. Most of them were employed in crafts, industry, and trade.

During the 1890s, the citizens of Babruysk witnessed pogroms after the assassination of the Russian emperor Alexander II. Many of the attacks were repelled by armed Jewish self-defense.

In 1902, the Great Fire of Babruysk left 2,500 families homeless and destroyed over 250 business, 15 schools and the market. There were more than 7 million rubles in property damage. However, the city was quickly rebuilt, this time with brick and stone.

In 1904 the 40th Infantry Division of the Imperial Russian Army had its headquarters here.

Between February 2 and March 11, 1918, was a Battle of Bobrujsk, between units of the Polish I Corps in Russia, commanded by General Jozef Dowbor-Musnicki, fought with the Red Army over the control of the city and region of Babruysk.

In 1918–1920, town was captured by Polish forces.

Babruysk City Hall and Lenin statue
[[T-34]] tank on a podium in downtown Babruysk
Babruysk railway station
Bobruisk Drama and Comedy Theatre

World War II

On 28 June 1941, troops of the German Army Group Centre captured Babruysk. General Gotthard Heinrici considered the largely-evacuated city "a dump consisting mainly of wooden houses" and was appalled by the "extremely primitive" surrounding area. Dulag 131, one of the largest camps for Soviet prisoners of war, was located in the "citadel". An estimated 30,000 to 40,000 Red Army soldiers died there.

Believing that German troops would not target civilians, many Jews stayed behind. Consequently, 20,000 Babruysk Jews were shot and buried in mass graves. Ghetto and labor camps were established in the southwest part of town. The conditions inside the camps were horrible and involved lack of food, lack of sanitation and perpetual abuse by the Nazi guards. Soon the Nazis began executing the Jews in the ghetto in groups of about 30. By 1943 all labor camps had been liquidated and the remaining Jews killed. The few Jews who escaped joined partisan forces in the surrounding forest and went about attacking enemy railroad lines. There is a small memorial dedicated to the memory of Babruysk Jews killed in the Holocaust, located in the Nahalat Yitzhak cemetery, Giv'atayim, Israel, as part of the Babi Yar memorial.

On June 29, 1944, the Red Army liberated Babruysk. The city lay in ruins; while the population had been 84,107 in 1939, it was down to 28,352 following the war. The difficult process of rebuilding was conducted by thousands of workers and war prisoners who labored to clear factories and streets of rubble and filled in craters made by the bombardment. The machine building plant had been almost completely destroyed, but was restored to working order by the end of 1944. Many other factories and facilities were also rebuilt.

Postwar era

Between 1944 and 1954, Babruysk served as an administrative center of Babruysk Voblast.

The population recovered swiftly as well. In 1959 it was 96,000, in 1965 – 116,000, in 1968 – 122,500, in 1970 – 136,000 and by 1989, 232,000 people were living in Babruysk. This was mostly due to urbanization, where people moved into the city from the surrounding rural areas.

Lenin Square

Climate

This climatic region is typified by large seasonal temperature differences, with warm to hot (and often humid) summers and cold (sometimes severely cold) winters. According to the Köppen Climate Classification system, Babruysk has a humid continental climate, abbreviated "Dfb" on climate maps.

| Jan record high C = 10.3 | Feb record high C = 14.9 | Mar record high C = 25.7 | Apr record high C = 28.6 | May record high C = 31.7 | Jun record high C = 35.3 | Jul record high C = 35.3 | Aug record high C = 38.0 | Sep record high C = 33.1 | Oct record high C = 26.1 | Nov record high C = 17.5 | Dec record high C = 12.0 |year record high C = 38.0 | Jan record low C = −37.4 | Feb record low C = −36.0 | Mar record low C = −29.3 | Apr record low C = −9.7 | May record low C = −4.0 | Jun record low C = −1.3 | Jul record low C = 3.3 | Aug record low C = 1.0 | Sep record low C = −4.7 | Oct record low C = −12.5 | Nov record low C = −23.8 | Dec record low C = −30.6 |year record low C = −37.4 | Jan snow depth cm = 9 | Feb snow depth cm = 12 | Mar snow depth cm = 9 | Apr snow depth cm = 0 | May snow depth cm = 0 | Jun snow depth cm = 0 | Jul snow depth cm = 0 | Aug snow depth cm = 0 | Sep snow depth cm = 0 | Oct snow depth cm = 0 | Nov snow depth cm = 2 | Dec snow depth cm = 6 | year snow depth cm = 12 | access-date = 8 November 2021

Notable people

  • Abba Ahimeir (November 2, 1897 – June 6, 1962), Jewish journalist, historian, maximalist ideologue and activist of Zionist Revisionist Movement
  • Andrei Arlovski (born 1979), former UFC heavyweight champion.
  • Bi-2 rock band (Russia): both founders are from Babruysk.
  • (born 1981), Ukrainian film director and screenwriter
  • Cheev (born 1993), Belarusian-Ukrainian singer and songwriter
  • Eliyahu Dobkin (December 31, 1898 – October 26, 1976), Labor Zionist leader, signatory of Israeli declaration of independence, a founder of the Israel Museum, active in the Jewish Agency and the Zionist Organization.
  • Celia Dropkin (1887–1956), American Yiddish poet
  • Arkadi Duchin (born 1963), Israeli singer-songwriter and musical producer
  • Baruch Epstein (1860–1941), Lithuanian rabbi, son of Rabbi Yechiel Michel Epstein. Best known for Temimah commentary on the Torah.
  • Yechiel Michel Epstein (January 24, 1829 – February 24, 1908), rabbi and authority in Jewish law in Lithuania, known for his book Aruch HaShulchan.
  • Joshua Louis Goldberg (1896–1994), American rabbi, first rabbi commissioned as U.S. Navy chaplain in WWII, third to serve in the Navy, first to reach the rank of Navy Captain, first to retire after full active-duty career
  • Zalman Gorelik (1908–1987), geologist (tectonics specialist)
  • Avraham Katznelson (1888–1956), Zionist politician in Mandate Palestine, signatory of the Israeli declaration of independence
  • Berl Katznelson (1887–1944), chief figure in Labor Zionism, instrumental to the establishment of the modern state of Israel
  • Rachel Katznelson-Shazar (1885–1975), Zionist activist, wife of Zalman Shazar, the third President of Israel
  • Ruslan Kogan (born 1982), Australian entrepreneur and self-made millionaire
  • Michaš Kukabaka (1936), Soviet Belarusian dissident described as „the last Soviet political prisoner in the USSR“
  • Aaron Lebedeff (1873–1960), Yiddish theater star, singer
  • Kadish Luz (1895–1972), Israeli Minister of Agriculture (1955–1959), Speaker of the Knesset (1959–1969), acting president for one month in 1963
  • Alexander Mikhailovich Orlov (born Leiba L. Feldbin; 1895-1973), Soviet secret police colonel, NKVD Rezident in Second Spanish Republic, avoided execution in 1938 by fleeing to the USA.
  • Grigory Nemtsov (1948–2010), Latvian journalist and politician
  • Yelena Piskun (born 1978), two-time world champion in artistic gymnastics
  • Dovid Raskin (1927–2011), rabbi associated with the Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic movement
  • Ilia Rodov, Israeli art historian
  • Efraim Sevela (1928–2010), Soviet writer, screenwriter, director, and producer. Emigrated from the Soviet Union to Israel, then to the United States and Russia.
  • Shmaryahu Noah Schneersohn, chassidic rabbi
  • David Shimoni (1891–1956), Israeli poet, writer and translator
  • Eliyahu Simpson (1889–1976), rabbi
  • Yitzhak Tabenkin (1888–1971), Zionist activist and politician, co-founder of the Kibbutz Movement
  • Yosef Tunkel (1881–1949), Jewish–Belarusian–American writer of poetry and humorous prose in Yiddish
  • Gary Vaynerchuk (born 1975), serial entrepreneur, CEO, investor, author, public speaker American football team
  • Avraam Zak (1829–1893), Russian-Jewish banker and philanthropist

International relations

Babruysk is twinned with:

  • Anenii Noi, Comrat - Moldova
  • Batumi, Kobuleti - Georgia
  • Daugavpils, Gulbene - Latvia
  • Grozny, Ishim, Kolpino, Kostroma, Luga, Murom, Naro-Fominsky District, Novomoskovsk, Petrogradsky (Saint Petersburg), Sokolniki (Moscow), Vladimir - Russia
  • Hengyang, Shaoxing, Wuxi - China
  • Iglesias, Italy
  • Morogoro, Tanzania
  • Odense, Denmark
  • Öskemen, Kazakhstan
  • Púchov, Slovakia
  • Samarkand, Uzbekistan
  • Sevlievo, Bulgaria
  • Talin, Armenia
  • Warsaw West County, Poland

Places of interest

The recently (2006–2009) rebuilt Orthodox St. Nicholas Cathedral
  • Church of the Immaculate Conception of Saint Virgin Mary, a Catholic church built between 1901 and 1903;
  • The Babruysk fortress, 1810–1836;
  • , 1912;
  • The , 1892–1894;
  • The , 1905–1907.

Notes

References

References

  1. "Численность населения на 1 января 2025 г. и среднегодовая численность населения за 2024 год по Республике Беларусь в разрезе областей, районов, городов, поселков городского типа".
  2. (2024-04-15). "Cities & Towns of Belarus".
  3. "Численность населения на 1 января 2024 г. и среднегодовая численность населения за 2023 год по Республике Беларусь в разрезе областей, районов, городов, поселков городского типа".
  4. Joshua D. Zimmerman, ''Poles, Jews, and the politics of nationality'', Univ of Wisconsin Press, 2004, {{ISBN
  5. "40th Infantry Division". Romanov K S.
  6. A German general on the Eastern Front: the letters and diaries of Gotthard Heinrici, 1941-1942, p.74.
  7. (2012). "Die Herrschaft der Wehrmacht: Deutsche Militärbesatzung und einheimische Bevölkerung in der Sowjetunion 1941-1944". Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag.
  8. "Jewish Heritage Research Group in Belarus". jhrgbelarus.org.
  9. "Babruysk, Belarus Köppen Climate Classification (Weatherbase)". weatherbase.com.
  10. "Внешнеэкономическое сотрудничество". Babruysk.
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