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Yevpatoria

City in Crimea

Yevpatoria

City in Crimea

FieldValue
official_nameYevpatoria
native_nameuk
ru
crh
crh
imagesize250px
image_captionYevpatoria panorama
image_flagFlag Eupatoria.svg
image_shieldCOA Yevpatoriia, Crimea, Ukraine.svg
pushpin_mapCrimea#Ukraine#Black Sea
pushpin_map_captionLocation of Yevpatoria within Crimea
pushpin_relief1
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name(occupied by Russia)
subdivision_type1Autonomous republic
subdivision_name1Crimea (de jure)
subdivision_type2Raion
subdivision_name2Yevpatoria Raion (de jure)
area_total_km2120
elevation_m10
population_as_of2014
population_total105,719
population_density_km21618.37
timezoneMSK
utc_offset+3
postal_code_typePostal code
postal_code97400 — 97490
area_code+7-36569
blank_infoKezlev (Gezlev) (till 1784)
blank1_nameClimate
blank1_infoCfa
website(russian site)
subdivision_type3Federal subject
subdivision_type4Municipality
subdivision_name3Crimea (de facto)
subdivision_name4Yevpatoria Municipality (de facto)
mapframeyes
mapframe-zoom10
mapframe-wikidatayes

ru crh crh | mapframe-zoom = 10 | mapframe-wikidata = yes

Yevpatoria (; ; ; ) is a city in western Crimea, north of Kalamita Bay. Yevpatoria serves as the administrative center of Yevpatoria Municipality, one of the districts (raions) into which Crimea is divided. It had a population of

History

Greek settlement

Main article: Greeks in pre-Roman Crimea

The first recorded settlement in the area, called Kerkinitis (Κερκινίτις), was built by Greek colonists around 500 BCE. Along with the rest of the Crimea, Kerkinitis formed part of the dominions of King Mithridates VI Eupator ( BCE). The name of the modern city derives from his nickname, Eupator ('of a noble father').

Khanate period

From roughly the 7th through the 10th centuries, Yevpatoria was a Khazar settlement; its name in Khazar language was probably Güzliev (literally 'beautiful house'). It was later subject to the Cumans (Kipchaks), the Mongols, and the Crimean Khanate. During this period the city was called Kezlev by Crimean Tatars and Gözleve by Ottoman Turks. The Russian medieval name Kozlov is a Russification of the Crimean Tatar name. For a short period between 1478 and 1485, the city was administered by the Ottoman Empire. Afterward, it became an important urban center of the Crimean Khanate.

Main article: Juma-Jami Mosque

The 400-year-old Juma-Jami Mosque is one of the many designed by the Ottoman architect Mimar Sinan. It was built in 1552-1564. 35-metre minarets rose on the flanks of the building. The mosque was of great state significance. It was here that a ceremony of the declaration of rights of the Crimean Khans was held at their enthronement. Only after that did they go to their capital, the city of Bakhchysarai.

Entrance to one of the [[Eupatorian Kenassas

Main article: Crimean Karaites, Eupatorian Kenassas

Yevpatoria became a residence of the spiritual ruler of the Crimean Karaites, the Ḥakham. In this connection, a complex of two prayer houses was built under the supervision of the Rabovich brothers, in which the Renaissance and Muslim architectural styles entwined in a most unusual manner. The ensemble organically incorporates three courtyards. The entrance to it is marked by gates, built in 1900, which look like a refined triumphal arch.

Imperial Russian rule

Soviet-era road sign on P25 road in [[Crimea

In 1783, along with the rest of Crimea, Kezlev was captured by the Russian Empire. Its name was officially changed to Yevpatoriya in 1784. This spelling of the city name came to the French, German, Spanish, and English languages at the end of the 18th сentury.

Polish poet Adam Mickiewicz visited the town in 1825 and wrote one of his Crimean Sonnets here; it was later translated into Russian by Mikhail Lermontov.

The city was occupied in September 1854 by British, French and Turkish troops during the Crimean War prior to the Allied landing in Kalamita Bay, after which the Battle of the Alma south of the bay followed. It became a garrison of Ottoman troops later during the war and was the site of the Battle of Eupatoria in February 1855, which was the largest military clash in the Crimean theatre outside the Sevastopol area.

Soviet rule

Hydro-massage on Lake Moynaki

Natural factors at Yevpatoria created beneficial conditions for the treatment of osteoarticular tuberculosis and other children's diseases; in 1933, at a scientific conference in Yalta, it was agreed that among Soviet resort towns for the organization of children's resorts, most people approved Yevpatoria. In 1936, the Soviet government placed the All-Union children's resort in Yevpatoria. In 1938, the approved plan of a general reconstruction of the city.

During World War II, sanatoriums were used as military hospitals. By 1 July 1945, Yevpatoria operated 14 sanatoriums, and have taken 2,885 people. By the 1980s, the city operated 78 sanatoriums for 33 thousand people.

Independent Ukraine and Russian annexation

On 24 December 2008, a blast destroyed a five-story building in the town. 27 people were killed. President of Ukraine Viktor Yushchenko declared 26 December to be a day of national mourning.

Two beaches in Yevpatoria have been Blue Flag beaches since May 2010, these were the first beaches (with two beaches in Yalta) to be awarded a Blue Flag in a CIS member state.

In 2014 due to the military operation of the Russian Armed forces, the city of Yevpatoria was occupied by Russia along with the entire Crimean peninsula. The UN General Assembly condemned the Russian operation and considered the annexation the temporary occupation of part of the territory of Ukraine—the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the City of Sevastopol.

Today, Yevpatoria is a major Black Sea port, a rail hub, and a resort town. The main industries of the city include fishing, food processing, winemaking, limestone quarrying, weaving, manufacturing, machinery, furniture manufacturing, and tourism.

Yevpatoria has spas of mineral water, salt, and mud lakes. These resorts belong to a vast area with curative facilities where the main health-improving factors are the sunshine and sea, air and sand, brine and mud of the salt lakes, as well as the mineral water of the hot springs. The curative qualities of the local mud was witnessed by the manuscripts of Pliny the Elder, a Roman scholar ().

Economy

  • Industry, Engineering
  • Agriculture
  • AO Vympel NPO (MicroElectronics and Electronics, circuits microchips IC, Electrical parts, connectors, optoelectronics television and other devices and machinery, metallurgy engineering technology)
  • Eupatoria Aircraft Plant and Repair EupAZ EARZ (An, Mi, Ka, Su, MiG, Yak, Il, Be, Tu; An-22, Su-25, MiG-31, Yak-38, Be-12, transport aircraft and amphibious)
  • Construction, Building

Education

  • Institute of Social Sciences (Branch), Crimean Federal University

Demographics

Ethnic composition of Yevpatoria in 2001 according to the Ukrainian census:

  1. Russians: 64,9%
  2. Ukrainians: 23,3%
  3. Crimean Tatars: 6,9%
  4. Belarusians: 1,5%
  5. Armenians: 0,5%
  6. Jews: 0,4%
  7. Tatars (excluding Crimean Tatars): 0,2%
  8. Poles: 0,2%
  9. Moldovans: 0,2%
  10. Azerbaijanis: 0,2%

Geography

Climate

Yevpatoria has a humid subtropical climate (Cfa) under the Köppen climate classification with cool winters and warm to hot summers.

| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210717143555/https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/pub/data/normals/WMO/1981-2010/RA-VI/Ukraine/12.6.%20WMO_Normals_Excel_Template%20%282%29.xls | archive-date = 17 July 2021 | archive-format = XLS | access-date = 17 July 2021}}

Area attractions

Famous attractions within or near Yevpatoria are:

The garden at the Karaite Kenasa in Yevpatoria
  • Juma-Jami Mosque
  • Eupatorian Kenassas
  • St. Nicholas' the Miracle Worker Cathedral
  • Tekie Dervishes

Notable people

  • Denys Andriyenko (born 1980), Ukrainian football player
  • Lyudmila Alexeyeva (1927-2018), Soviet and Russian human rights activist
  • Borys Babin (born 1981), Ukrainian politician
  • Oleksandr Davydov (1912-1993), Soviet and Ukrainian physicist
  • (1870-1957), City Mayor and Duma Deputy 1905-1919
  • Maria Gorokhovskaya (1921-2001), Russian-born Soviet gymnast
  • Nikolaos Himonas (Nikolai Khimona) (1864-1929), painter of Greek descent
  • Zula Pogorzelska (1896-1936), Polish cabaret and film actress
  • Kseniya Simonova (born 1985), Ukrainian sand animator
  • Sergei Sokolov (1911-2012), Russian-born Soviet Marshal
  • Ruslana Taran (born 1970), Ukrainian sailor
  • Vitya Vronsky (1909-1992), Russian-born American pianist

Names of asteroid number 6489 and number 24648

Asteroid number 6489 has the name Golevka, which has a complicated origin. In 1995, Golevka was studied simultaneously by three radar observatories across the world: Goldstone in California, Eupatoria RT-70 radio telescope (Yevpatoriya is sometimes romanized as Evpatoria or Eupatoria (Russian origin), and Kashima in Japan. ''''Gol-Ev-Ka'''' comes from the first few letters of each observatory's name; it was proposed by the discoverer following a suggestion by Alexander L. Zaitsev.

Asteroid 24648 Evpatoria was discovered on September 19, 1985, by Nikolai Chernykh and Lyudmila Chernykh at the Crimean Astrophysical Observatory, and named in honor of Evpatoria (transliteration from Russian to English). The minor planet marked the occasion of the 2500th anniversary of the town in 2003.

Twin towns – sister cities

ArmsCityNationSince
IoanninaGreece1989
[[File:FIG.png25px]]Figueira da FozPortugal1989
[[File:DEU Ludwigsburg COA.svg25px]]LudwigsburgGermany1992
ZakynthosGreece2002
[[File:POL Ostrowiec Świętokrzyski COA.svg30px]]Ostrowiec ŚwiętokrzyskiPoland2004
[[File:Coat of arms of Krasnogorsky rayon (Moscow oblast).png30px]]Krasnogorsky DistrictRussia2006
LambieGreece2009
[[File:Coat of Arms of Belgorod.svg25px]]BelgorodRussia2010

References

References

  1. Brutzkus, Julius (1944). "The Khazar Origin of Ancient Kiev", Slavonic and East European Review, p. 118
  2. [http://www.ukranews.com/eng/article/171479.html UPDATE: 26 Killed, 5 Hospitalized After Crimea House Blast]{{Dead link. (March 2021)
  3. [http://www.interfax.com.ua/eng/main/3910/ Death toll of Crimean blast reaches 27, says Emergencies Ministry] {{Webarchive. link. (29 December 2008, [[Interfax). Interfax-Ukraine]] (26 December 2008)
  4. [http://www.ukranews.com/eng/article/171480.html Friday Declared Mourning Day In Ukraine For Victims Of Yevpatoriya Gas Explosion] {{webarchive. link. (2012-09-13 , Ukrainian News Agency (26 December 2008))
  5. [https://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7799935.stm Ukraine mourns Crimea blast dead], [[BBC News]] (26 December 2008)
  6. [http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/europe/12/26/ukraine.explosions.death.toll/ 27 dead after Ukrainian apartment blast], [[CNN]] (26 December 2008)
  7. [http://www.kyivpost.com/news/nation/detail/66482/ Four beaches in Crimea receive international certificates of cleanliness], [[Kyiv Post]] (12 May 2010)
  8. "A/RES/71/205 – E – A/RES/71/205".
  9. [http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=24648+Evpatoria JPL Small-Body Database], [[NASA]]
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