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Novozybkovsky District


FieldValue
en_nameNovozybkovsky District
ru_nameНовозыбковский район
image_map
map_captionLocation of Novozybkovsky District in Bryansk Oblast
image_viewОзеро Карна.jpeg
image_captionKarna Lake, Novozybkovsky District
coordinates
image_flagFlag of Novozybkovsky rayon (Bryansk oblast).png
federal_subjectBryansk Oblast
federal_subject_ref
adm_ctr_nameNovozybkov
adm_ctr_ref
selsoviet_type1Rural administrative okrugs
no_of_selsoviets_type18
no_of_rural_localities57
counts_ref
mun_formation1Novozybkovsky Municipal District
mun_formation1_ref
mun_formation1_no_of_urban_settlements0
mun_formation1_no_of_rural_settlements8
mun_formation1_counts_ref
area_km2990
area_km2_ref
pop_2010census12415
urban_pop_2010census0%
rural_pop_2010census100%
pop_2010census_ref
websitehttp://www.adminnovzraion.ru/

Novozybkovsky District () is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-seven in Bryansk Oblast, Russia. It is located in the west of the oblast and bordered by Gordeyevsky and Krasnogorsky District in the north, Klintsovsky in the east, Zlynkovsky and Klimovsky in the south, and Homel region of Belarus in the west. The area of the district is 990 km2. Its administrative center is the town of Novozybkov (which is not administratively a part of the district). Population: 14,170 (2002 Census);

Ecological problems

As a result of the Chernobyl disaster on April 26, 1986, part of the territory of Bryansk Oblast has been contaminated with radionuclides (mainly Gordeyevsky, Klimovsky, Klintsovsky, Krasnogorsky, Surazhsky, and Novozybkovsky Districts). In 1999, some 226,000 people lived in areas with the contamination level above 5 Curie/km2, representing approximately 16% of the oblast's population.

Administrative and municipal status

Within the framework of administrative divisions, Novozybkovsky District is one of the twenty-seven in the oblast. The town of Novozybkov serves as its administrative center, despite being incorporated separately as an urban administrative okrug—an administrative unit with the status equal to that of the districts.

As a municipal division, the district is incorporated as Novozybkovsky Municipal District. Novozybkov Urban Administrative Okrug is incorporated separately from the district as Novozybkov Urban Okrug.

Notable residents

  • Nikolay Goloded (1894, Staryy Krivets village – 1937), Belarusian Bolshevik revolutionary and Soviet bureaucrat

References

Notes

Sources

NOTOC

References

  1. "Novozybkovsky District, Indicators Characterising Condition of the Economy and Social Municipality". Federal State Statistics Service.
  2. Law #13-Z
  3. Law #3-Z
  4. Law #69-Z stipulates that the borders of the administrative divisions match those of the corresponding municipal divisions. Law #3-Z contains the lists of the inhabited localities for each municipal division.
  5. {{ru-pop-ref. 2002Census
  6. "Leaders of Belarusian national revival and state building in 1918-1920s".
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This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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