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Mozdok

Town in the Republic of North Ossetia-Alania, Russia


Town in the Republic of North Ossetia-Alania, Russia

FieldValue
en_nameMozdok
ru_nameМоздок
loc_name1Мæздæг
loc_lang1Ossetic
image_skylineВокзал ст. Моздок.jpg
image_captionMozdok railway station
coordinates
map_label_positionleft
image_flagFlag of Mozdok (North Ossetia).png
image_coaCoat of Arms of Mozdok (North Ossetia).png
federal_subjectRepublic of North Ossetia–Alania
federal_subject_ref
adm_district_jurMozdoksky District
adm_district_jur_ref
adm_selsoviet_jurMozdok
adm_selsoviet_typeTown Under District Jurisdiction
adm_selsoviet_jur_ref
adm_ctr_of1Mozdoksky District
adm_ctr_of1_ref
adm_ctr_of2Mozdok Town Under District Jurisdiction
adm_ctr_of2_ref
inhabloc_catTown
inhabloc_cat_ref
mun_district_jurMozdoksky Municipal District
mun_district_jur_ref
urban_settlement_jurMozdokskoye Urban Settlement
urban_settlement_jur_ref
mun_admctr_of1Mozdoksky Municipal District
mun_admctr_of1_ref
mun_admctr_of2Mozdokskoye Urban Settlement
mun_admctr_of2_ref
pop_2010census35,500-46,900
pop_2010census_ref
established_date1700s (as the Circassian village of Mezdegu)
1763 (as Mozdok Russian fort after the local population was massacred)
established_date_ref
postal_codes362028, 363750–363760
dialing_codes86736

1763 (as Mozdok Russian fort after the local population was massacred)

Etymology

The town's name comes from мэз дэгу (mez degu), a Kabardian word meaning "the deaf forest".

History

During the reign of Catherine II the Russian army started entering Circassian soil and Russia started building forts in an attempt to quickly annex Circassia. In 1763, Russian forces occupied the village of Mezdeug in Eastern Circassia, and established Mozdok as a Russian fort, settling the families of the Volga Cossacks in stanitsas around it. Thus, the Russo-Circassian War began.

In 1764, one of the first Ossetian schools was opened in Mozdok.

In 1764, the Kabardian leaders' request to the Russian government that the fortress be destroyed went unanswered. In the years that followed, the Kabardians tried to besiege the town, but they were eventually compelled to retreat. The earliest data on the population of Mozdok dates back to 1764, when it was predominantly inhabited by Christianized Ossetians and Kabardians. With the foundation of Mozdok, Russian authorities encouraged Ossetians, Georgians, Armenians, Spiritual Christians and other Christians to populate the town. It soon emerged as a key Russian military outpost linked to Kizlyar with a fortified line as well as the center of local trade, ethnic diversity, and Russian-Caucasian interchange. In 1789, 55.6% of its population was Armenian and Georgian. Ossetian settlement particularly increased in the 1820s when the Russian commander Yermolov began removing Kabardians from the area of the Georgian Military Road and settling Ossetians there.

Moving south from Mozdok, Russia established contact with eastern Georgia through the Darial Gorge. Mozdok remained the northern terminal of the Georgian Military Road leading to Tbilisi until being succeeded by Vladikavkaz, founded in 1784 midway between Mozdok and the Darial Pass. During the Russian Empire, the town was the administrative capital of the Mozdoksky Otdel of the Terek Oblast. In the beginning of the 19th century, some Muslim Ossetian families from Digoria settled in Mozdok establishing a Muslim Digor community there which still exists today.

The Brothers Dubinin created the world's first oil refining apparatus in Mozdok in 1823.

On August 23, 1942, it was conquered by German troops during Case Blue. It was recaptured by the Red Army on January 3, 1943.

In June 2003, a suicide bomber struck a bus full of Russian air force personnel with their car. On August 1, 2003, a military hospital in the city was targeted by a suicide bomber driving a large truck bomb. The building was substantially damaged and over fifty people were killed in the blast. These attacks are just two of a string of attacks on Russian facilities in Mozdok since the start of the Second Chechen War.

Administrative and municipal status

Within the framework of administrative divisions, Mozdok serves as the administrative center of Mozdoksky District. As an administrative division, it is incorporated within Mozdoksky District as Mozdok Town Under District Jurisdiction. As a municipal division, Mozdok Town Under District Jurisdiction is incorporated within Mozdoksky Municipal District as Mozdokskoye Urban Settlement.

Culture

The Museum of Regional Studies in Mozdok holds an assortment of displays and artifacts related to Mozdok's history.

Demographics

According to the census of September 12, 1777, the following residents (excluding the near stanitsas) were living in Mozdok; 674 Georgians, 565 Armenians, 180 Kabardians, 95 Ossetians and 21 Greeks.

As of 2002, the ethnic makeup of Mozdok was as follows:

  • Russians: 62.7%
  • Ossetians: 7.7%
  • Armenians: 6.1%
  • Kumyks: 4.6%
  • Chechens: 4.3%
  • Kabardians: 3.2%
  • Koreans: 2.4%
  • Other: 9.0%

Military

The Mozdok airbase is nearby. From 1961 to 1998, the 182nd Heavy Bomber Aviation Regiment of Long Range Aviation, flying Tupolev Tu-95s, was based there. The airbase has been used to support military operations in Chechnya during the First Chechen War, Second Chechen War, and in the Russo-Georgian War. In June 2003, a female suicide bomber targeted a bus carrying pilots and other personnel employed at the airbase on the Mozdok-Prokhladnoye motorway, killing approximately 15 and wounding 12.

Notable people

  • Sergei Aslamazyan, was a Soviet Armenian cellist, composer, People's Artist of Armenian SSR (1945), awarded the Stalin Prize (1946).
  • Valeri Makiyev, professional footballer

References

Notes

Sources

References

  1. {{ru-pop-ref. 2010Census
  2. Barrett, Thomas M. (1999). ''At the edge of empire: the Terek Cossacks and the North Caucasus frontier, 1700-1860''. [[Westview Press]], {{ISBN. 0-8133-3671-6, p. 44.
  3. (1998). "Imperial Russia: New Histories for the Empire". Indiana University Press.
  4. (2014-03-03). "О включении города Моздока Ставропольского края в состав Северо-Осетинской АССР {{!}} Моздокский "Стыр ныхас"".
  5. Василий Потто — Кавказская война. Том 1. От древнейших времен до Ермолова.
  6. John Channon and Robert Hudson (1995). ''The Penguin historical atlas of Russia''. Viking, {{ISBN. 0-670-86461-7, p. 72.
  7. Taran, Natalya. (24 July 2021). "Неизвестные гении нефтяной отрасли".
  8. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3020231.stm BBC News mentions bombings]
  9. Law #34-RZ
  10. Law #16-RZ
  11. Владимирович, Бурда Эдуард. (2013). "Образование Моздока и переселение волжских и донских казаков". Общество: философия, история, культура.
  12. Butuwski, International Air Power Review, Summer 2004, No. 13, 82.
  13. (2015). "The Guns of August 2008: Russia's War in Georgia". [[Routledge]].
  14. De Haas, Marcel. (2004). "Russian Security and Air Power, 1992-2002". [[Routledge]].
  15. Potter, Matt. (2011). "Outlaws Inc.: Under the Radar and on the Black Market with the World's Most Dangerous Smugglers". [[Bloomsbury Publishing]].
  16. Pravda.ru. (2003). "Criminal case opened after blast in North Ossetian bus".
  17. (12 September 2004). "Two years of attacks". [[BBC News]].
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