Fisherman (until 1945 Tuak ; Ukrainian Ribache , Crimean-Tat. Tuvaq, Tuvak ) - a village on the south-eastern coast of Crimea. It is part of the City District Alushta of the Republic of Crimea (according to the administrative-territorial division of Ukraine - it is part of the Malorechensky village council of the Alushta city council of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea ).
| Village | |
| Fishing | |
|---|---|
| Ukrainian Ribache , Crimean Tat. Tuvaq | |
| A country | Russia / Ukraine [1] |
| Region | Republic of Crimea [2] / Autonomous Republic of Crimea [3] |
| Area | City District Alushta [2] / Alushta City Council [3] |
| History and Geography | |
| First mention | 1385 |
| Former names | until 1945 - Tuak |
| Area | 6.1353 [4] km² |
| Center height | 17 m |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | ↗ 1,414 [5] people ( 2014 ) |
| Density | 230.47 people / km² |
| Official language | Crimean Tatar , Ukrainian , Russian |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Telephone code | +7 36560 [6] [7] |
| Postcode | 298522 [8] / 98522 |
| OKATO Code | |
| OKTMO Code | 35703000206 |
| COATUU code | 110392105 |
Content
- 1 population
- 1.1 population dynamics
- 2 Geography
- 3 Current status
- 4 History
- 5 notes
- 6 Literature
- 7 References
Population
| Population size | |
|---|---|
| 2001 [9] | 2014 [5] |
| 1273 | ↗ 1414 |
The 2001 All-Ukrainian Census showed the following distribution by native speakers [10] :
| Language | The number of inhabitants. | Percent |
|---|---|---|
| Russian | 1081 | 84.92 |
| Crimean Tatar | 95 | 7.46 |
| Ukrainian | 79 | 6.21 |
| Armenian | 6 | 0.47 |
| Belorussian | four | 0.31 |
Population Dynamics
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|
Geography
Fishing is located on the southeastern coast of Crimea on the Black Sea coast . The rivers Alachuk and Andus flow through the village, which merge within the village and flow into the sea in its center [23] , the height of the center of the village above sea level is 17 m [24] . The distance to Alushta is about 30 kilometers (along the highway) [25] , the nearest railway station is Simferopol-Passenger — about 70 kilometers [26] . The nearest settlement is Malorechenskoye , 5 kilometers closer to Alushta [27] . Transport communication is carried out along the regional highway 35K-005 Alushta - Sudak [28] (according to the Ukrainian classification - P-29 [29] ).
Current status
For 2018, there are 18 streets and 3 alleys in Rybachy [30] ; in 2009, according to the village council, the village occupied an area of 613.5 hectares, which was inhabited by 1316 people [21] . In the village there is a comprehensive school [31] , kindergarten “Periwinkle” [32] , a village club, a library [33] , a feldsher-midwife station [34] , the Church of the Protection of the Holy Virgin [35] , a Muslim religious community is registered [36] . The village is connected by bus with Alushta [37] .
History
There is an opinion that Tuak originated at the beginning of our era, and was settled by Greeks from Byzantium in the VIII century (period of iconoclasm ) [38] , but there is no reliable evidence for this yet.
It is known that in 1365 the Genoese captured the coast and secured an agreement with the consul Kaffa Dzhannone del Bosco with the governor of Solhat Elias Bey Solhatsky in 1381, according to which the “mountainous southern part of Crimea to the north-east of Balaklava”, with its settlements and people , which are Christians , completely passed into the possession of the Genoese [39] . In the treaty itself, the settlements that were part of the Consular Consulate are not named, in later documents, letters of 1385 and subsequent years, Tuak is recorded as de Buzult [40] . After the defeat of Kafa by the Ottomans in 1475 [41], the village included the composition of the Sudak Kadylyk sanjak Kefe (until 1558, in 1558-1774 - an ejalet ) of the empire . According to the census of the Kefinsky Sanjak of 1520, 2 Muslim families lived in the village of Duvak , 12 families of Christians and 2 families who lost the male breadwinner. According to the census of 1542, there are also 2 Muslim families, and 9 non-Muslim families of 9 and 9 unmarried men [42] . According to Jizye of the defector Liva-i Kefa (Ottoman tax sheets) of 1652, 38 names and surnames of the heads of Christian taxpayer families are listed in the village of Tuvak kadylyk Sugdak [43] . In the 17th century, Islam [44] began to actively spread on the southern coast of Crimea, and gradually all the inhabitants of the village accepted Islam - neither in the sheet on the Christians removed from the Crimea in the Azov Sea by A. V. Suvorov of September 18, 1778, nor in the sheet of Metropolitan Ignatius Tuak does not appear before this, in 1774, according to the Kuchuk-Kainardzhi peace treaty , the former Turkish possessions became part of the Crimean Khanate , administratively - according to the Cameral Description of the Crimea ... 1784 - in Sudak Kadylyk of Kefinsky kaymakanism [45] .
After the annexation of Crimea to Russia (8) April 19, 1783 [46] , (8) February 19, 1784, by registered decree of Catherine II to the Senate , in the territory of the former Crimean Khanate, the Tauride region was formed and the village was assigned to Simferopol uezd [47] . With the outbreak of the Russo-Turkish War of 1787-1791 , in February 1788, Crimean Tatars were evicted from coastal villages to the interior of the peninsula, including Tuak. At the end of the war, on August 14, 1791, everyone was allowed to return to their former place of residence [48] . After the Pavlovsk reforms, from 1796 to 1802, it was part of the Akmechet district of Novorossiysk province [49] . According to the new administrative division, after the creation of the Tauride province on October 8 (20), 1802 [50] , Tuak was included in the Arginsky volost of Simferopol district.
According to the Vedomosti on the number of villages, the names of them, their yards ... consisting in Simferopol Uyezd on October 14, 1805 , in the village of Tuvak there were 35 yards and 203 inhabitants, exclusively Crimean Tatars [11] . On the military topographic map of Major General Mukhin in 1817, the village of Tuak is marked with 60 courtyards [51] . After the reform of the volost division of 1829, Tuvak , according to the “Vedomosti on state volosts of the Tauride province of 1829”, was transferred from the Arginsky volost to the Alushta [52] .
By a personal decree of Nicholas I of March 23 (old style), 1838, on April 15, a new Yalta district was formed [53] and the southern coastal part of Alushta volost was transferred to it ( Alushta volost of Yalta district ). On the map of 1842, Tuak is marked with 60 yards [54] .
In the 1860s, after the Zemstvo reform of Alexander II , the village remained part of the Alushta volost. According to the “List of Populated Places of the Tauride Province according to the Information of 1864” compiled from the VIII revision of 1864, Tuvak is a state - owned Tatar village, with 54 courtyards, 433 inhabitants and a mosque at the Suuk-Su river [12] . On the three-verst map of 1865-1876, 76 yards are already indicated in the village of Tuak [55] . In 1886, in the village of Tuvak at the river Alochik-Uzen , according to the directory “Volosts and important villages of European Russia”, 638 people lived in 132 households, a mosque operated [13] . According to the "Memorial Book of the Tauride Province of 1889" , according to the results of the X revision of 1887, there were 136 yards and 657 inhabitants in the village of Tuvak [14] . According to the "... Memorial Book of the Tauride Province for 1892" in Tuvak, which made up the Tuvak rural society , there were 862 inhabitants in 115 households [15] , and on the 1893 verst map in the village of Tuak 136 courtyards with the Tatar population were indicated [56] .
After the Zemstvo reform of the 1890s [57] , which took place after 1892 in the Yalta district, the village was transferred to the new Kuchuk-Uzen volost of the Yalta district. A census of 1897 recorded 1074 residents in the village of Tuvak, of which 1020 were Muslims (Crimean Tatars) [16] . According to the "... Memorial Book of the Tauride Province for 1902" in the village of Tuvak, which made up the Tuvak rural society, there were 1070 inhabitants in 160 households [17] . In the Statistical Directory of the Tauride Province. Part II. The statistical essay, issue of the eighth Yalta district, 1915 in the Kuchuk-Uzen volost of the Yalta district also lists the village of Tuvak [58] .
After the establishment of Soviet power in Crimea, according to the decision of the Krymrevkom of January 8, 1921 [59] , the volost system was abolished and the village was subordinated to the Yalta district of the Yalta district [60] . In 1922, the districts were called districts, the Alushta district was isolated from Yalta [61] , and by the decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee on September 4, 1924, the Alushta district was abolished and the village was again annexed to Yalta [62] . According to the List of settlements of the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic according to the All-Union Census on December 17, 1926 , in the village of Tuak, the center of the Tuak village council of the Yalta region, there were 317 households, all peasant, the population was 1334 people, including 1281 Crimean Tatar, 30 Russians, 4 Belarusians, 1 Ukrainian , 1 Greek, 17 are recorded in the column "other", the Tatar school was operating [18] . For 1928, according to the Atlas of the USSR of 1928, the village was part of the Karasubazar district [63] . By the decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee on October 30, 1930, the Alushta Tatar National District was formed [64] (according to other sources - in 1937 [65] ), the village was included in its composition. According to the 1939 All-Union Population Census, 1,508 people lived in the village [19] . In the prewar years, the village was divided into six quarters (maalle): Dere-maalle, Orta-maalle, Yukhara-maalle, Ashagy-maalle, Khashi-maalle, Khabur-maalle, on the outskirts there were three azizas - Bash-dyurbe, Gobek-dyurbe, Ayak-dyurbe [66] .
In 1944, after the liberation of Crimea from the Nazis, according to GKO Decree No. 5859 of May 11, 1944, on May 18, Crimean Tatars were deported to Central Asia [67] . On August 12, 1944, Resolution No. GOKO-6372s “On the Relocation of Collective Farmers to the Crimean Regions” was adopted, according to which 7,500 people moved to the Alushta district from the Krasnodar Territory [68] , including 300 families that had deserted Tuak. Some soon left, between 1944 and 1945, only 84 families remained of them. (In 1946, five more families arrived, in 1950 - eleven, in 1951 - ten families) [69] . In the early 1950s, a second wave of immigrants from various regions of Ukraine followed [70] . By a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR of August 21, 1945, Tuak was renamed Rybachye and Tuak Village Council - Rybachevsky [71] . On June 25, 1946, Rybachye as part of the Crimean region of the RSFSR [72] , and on April 26, 1954, the Crimean region was transferred from the RSFSR to the Ukrainian SSR [73] . The time for the abolition of the village council has not yet been established: on June 15, 1960, the village was already part of the Malorechensky village council [74] . January 1, 1965, by a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian SSR “On Amending the Administrative Zoning of the Ukrainian SSR - in the Crimean Region” [75] , the Alushta district was transformed into the Alushta City Council and the village was included in it [76] [77] . According to the 1989 census , 1211 people lived in the village [19] . Since February 12, 1991, a village in the restored Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic [78] , on February 26, 1992, was renamed the Autonomous Republic of Crimea [79] . From March 21, 2014 - as part of the Republic of Crimea of Russia [80] , from June 5, 2014 - in the City District of Alushta [81] .
Notes
- ↑ This settlement is located on the territory of the Crimean peninsula , most of which is the subject of territorial disagreements between Russia , which controls the disputed territory, and Ukraine , within the borders of which the disputed territory is recognized by the international community. According to the federal structure of Russia , the subjects of the Russian Federation are located in the disputed territory of Crimea - the Republic of Crimea and the city of federal significance Sevastopol . According to the administrative division of Ukraine , the regions of Ukraine are located in the disputed territory of Crimea - the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city with special status Sevastopol .
- ↑ 1 2 According to the position of Russia
- ↑ 1 2 According to the position of Ukraine
- ↑ On amendments to the Decision of the Verkhovna Rada of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea of February 19, 2003 N 453-3 / 03 "On the Establishment of the Borders of the Villages Malorechenskoye, Solnechnogorskoye, Rybachye (Malorechensky Village Council, Alushta)" . Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine. Date of treatment February 5, 2016.
- ↑ 1 2 2014 Census. The population of the Crimean Federal District, urban districts, municipalities, urban and rural settlements . Date of treatment September 6, 2015. Archived on September 6, 2015.
- ↑ Order of the Ministry of Communications of Russia “On Amendments to the Russian System and Numbering Plan, approved by Order of the Ministry of Information Technologies and Communications of the Russian Federation of November 17, 2006 No. 142” . Ministry of Communications of Russia. Date of treatment July 24, 2016.
- ↑ New telephone codes of Crimean cities (unavailable link) . Krymtelecom. Date of treatment July 24, 2016. Archived on May 6, 2016.
- ↑ Order of Rossvyaz of March 31, 2014 No. 61 “On the Assignment of Postal Codes to Postal Facilities”
- ↑ Ukraine. 2001 Census . Date of treatment September 7, 2014. Archived on September 7, 2014.
- ↑ Rozpodil population beyond my river, Autonomous Republic of Crimea (Ukrainian) (inaccessible link - history ) . State Statistics Service of Ukraine. Date of treatment October 26, 2014.
- ↑ 1 2 Lashkov F.F. A sheet of all villages in the Simferopol district consisting of an indication in which the volost is the number of yards and souls ... dated October 9, 1805. Page 91 // Proceedings of the Taurida Scientific Commission, vol. 26 .. - Simferopol: Tauride Provincial Printing House, 1897.
- ↑ 1 2 M. Raevsky. Tauride province. List of settlements according to 1864 82 . St. Petersburg. Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. Karl Wolfe Printing House. Date of treatment February 16, 2016.
- ↑ 1 2 Volosts and important selenia of European Russia. According to the survey, carried out by statistical institutions of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, on behalf of the Statistical Council . - St. Petersburg: Statistical Committee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, 1886. - T. 8. - P. 80. - 157 p.
- ↑ 1 2 Werner K.A. Alphabetical list of villages // Collection of statistical information on the Tauride province . - Simferopol: Printing house of the newspaper Crimea, 1889. - T. 9. - 698 p.
- ↑ 1 2 Tauride Provincial Statistical Committee. Calendar and Commemorative Book of the Tauride Province for 1892 . - 1892. - S. 76.
- ↑ 1 2 foreword: N. Troitsky. Populated places of the Russian Empire of 500 or more inhabitants ... according to the census of 1897, p. 219. . St. Petersburg: Public benefit printing house. Date of treatment February 22, 2016. Archived on April 7, 2013.
- ↑ 1 2 Tauride Provincial Statistical Committee. Calendar and Memorial Book of the Tauride Province for 1902 . - 1902. - S. 134-135.
- ↑ 1 2 Collective of authors (Crimean CSB). List of settlements of the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic according to the All-Union Census of December 17, 1926. . - Simferopol: Crimean Central Statistical Bureau., 1927. - P. 192, 193. - 219 p.
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 R. Muzafarov. Crimean Tatar Encyclopedia. - Vatan, 1995.- T. 2 / L - I /. - 425 p. - 100,000 copies.
- ↑ Ukraine. 2001 Census . Date of treatment September 28, 2017. Archived on September 7, 2014.
- ↑ 1 2 Cities and villages of Ukraine, 2009 , Malorechensky village council.
- ↑ Population of the Crimean Federal District, urban districts, municipal districts, urban and rural settlements. . Federal State Statistics Service. Date of treatment April 22, 2018.
- ↑ Mountain Crimea. . This is Place.ru (2010). Date of appeal April 30, 2018.
- ↑ Weather forecast for s. Fishing (Crimea) . Weather.in.ua. Date of treatment February 5, 2016.
- ↑ Route Alushta - Fishing . Dovezuha of the Russian Federation. Date of appeal April 14, 2018.
- ↑ Route Train station Simferopol - Rybachye . Dovezuha of the Russian Federation. Date of appeal April 16, 2018.
- ↑ The Rybachye - Malorechenskoye route . Dovezuha of the Russian Federation. Date of treatment May 5, 2018.
- ↑ On the approval of the criteria for classifying public roads ... of the Republic of Crimea. . Government of the Republic of Crimea (03/11/2015). Date of treatment May 5, 2018.
- ↑ List of public roads of local importance of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea . Council of Ministers of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea (2012). Date of treatment May 5, 2018.
- ↑ Crimea, the city of Alushta, Fishing . CLADR RF. Date of appeal April 13, 2018.
- ↑ Municipal educational institution "Rybachevskaya school" of the city of Alushta . The official website of the Rybachev School. Date of treatment February 9, 2016.
- ↑ Rybachevsky preschool educational institution nursery school No. 16 "Periwinkle" . klasna.com/ru. Date of treatment February 9, 2016.
- ↑ Municipal formation Alushta urban district. The list of municipal cultural institutions and municipal educational institutions in the field of culture administered by the Department of Culture . Official site .. Date of treatment April 25, 2018.
- ↑ Malorechensky medical dispensary. . Alushta central city hospital. Official site. Date of appeal April 26, 2018.
- ↑ Alushta deanery . Simferopol and Crimean diocese. Official site. Date of appeal April 27, 2018.
- ↑ Muslim Religion community “Tuak” . Today.com.ua. Date of treatment February 9, 2016.
- ↑ Bus departure time Alushta-Rybachye . Crimea is a journey for you. Date of treatment February 7, 2016.
- ↑ Fishing . Crimea. Travel Magazine. Date of treatment February 10, 2016.
- ↑ Bertier-Delagard A.L. The study of some perplexing questions of the Middle Ages in Tauris. Page 23 // Bulletin of the Taurida Scientific Commission, vol. 57 .. - Simferopol: Tauride Provincial Printing House, 1920.
- ↑ Bocharov, Sergey Gennadievich. Notes on the historical geography of Genoese Gazaria of the XIV – XV centuries. Consulate of Soldiers. Page 286 unspecified . Electronic scientific archive of Ural Federal University. Date of treatment February 10, 2016.
- ↑ Murzakevich Nikolay. History of Genoese settlements in Crimea . - Odessa: City Printing House, 1955. - P. 87. - 116 p.
- ↑ Yücel Öztürk. Osmanlı Hakimiyeti'nde Kefe: (1475-1600) . - Ankara: Kültür ve Turizm Bakanlığı Yayınları, 2000 .-- T. 1 .-- 570 p. - ISBN 975-17-2363-9 .
- ↑ From the jizye of the defector Liva-i Köfe 1652 (Ottoman tax sheets) . Azov Greeks. Date of treatment February 10, 2006.
- ↑ A.G. Herzen . Crimean Tatars // From Cimmerians to Krymchaks (Crimean peoples from ancient times to the end of the 18th century) / A.G. Herzen. - Charity Fund "Legacy of the Millennia". - Simferopol: Share, 2004 .-- S. 228-240. - 293 p. - 2000 copies. - ISBN 966-8584-38-4 .
- ↑ Lashkov F.F. of the Kaymakanstvo and who are the members of the Kaymakan // Cameral description of the Crimea, 1784 . - Simferopol: Bulletin of the Taurida Scientific Archival Commission, 1888. - T. 6.
- ↑ Grzhibovskaya, 1999 , Manifesto on the adoption of the Crimean peninsula, Taman Island and the entire Kuban side under the Russian state. 1783 p. 96.
- ↑ Grzhibovskaya, 1999 , Decree of Catherine II on the formation of the Tauride Region. February 8, 1784, p. 117.
- ↑ Lashkov F.F. Materials for the history of the second Turkish war of 1787-1791 // Bulletin of the Taurida Scientific Scientific Archival Commission / A.I. Markevich . - Simferopol: Printing House of the Tauride Provincial Government, 1890. - V. 10. - P. 79-106. - 163 p.
- ↑ About the new division of the State in the Province. (Named given to the Senate.)
- ↑ Grzybowska, 1999 , From the Decree of Alexander I to the Senate on the Creation of the Tauride Province, p. 124.
- ↑ Map of Mukhin in 1817. . Archaeological map of Crimea. Date of treatment February 13, 2016.
- ↑ Grzhibovskaya, 1999 , Bulletin of official volosts of the Tauride province, 1829 p. 127.
- ↑ Treasure Peninsula. Story. Yalta . Date of treatment February 14, 2016. Archived May 24, 2013.
- ↑ Map of Betev and Oberg. Military Topographic Depot, 1842 . Archaeological map of Crimea. Date of treatment February 14, 2016.
- ↑ Three-verst map of Crimea VTD 1865-1876. Sheet XXXIV-13-e . Archaeological map of Crimea. Date of treatment February 18, 2016.
- ↑ Milestone map of Crimea, end of XIX century Sheet XV-XVI-17. . Archaeological map of Crimea. Date of treatment February 21, 2016.
- ↑ Boris Veselovsky. The history of the zemstvo over forty years. T. 4; History of Zemstvo . - St. Petersburg: Publisher O. N. Popova, 1911.
- ↑ Grzybowska, 1999 , Statistical Handbook of the Tauride Province. Part II. Statistical Review, Issue Eighth. Yalta County, 1915, p. 299.
- ↑ History of cities and villages of the Ukrainian SSR. / P.T. Tronko . - 1974. - T. 12. - S. 521. - 15,000 copies.
- ↑ History of cities and villages of the Ukrainian SSR. / P.T. Tronko . - 1974. - T. 12. - S. 197-202. - 15,000 copies.
- ↑ I. M. Sarkizov-Serazini . Population and industry. // Crimea. Guide / I.M.Sarkizov-Serazini. - Moscow-Leningrad: Land and Factory , 1925. - S. 55-88. - 416 p.
- ↑ Decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of August 4, 1924 "On the abolition of certain regions of the Autonomous Crimean S. S. R."
- ↑ Autonomous Crimean SSR. In: Atlas of the USSR. 1928. . Russian National Library. Date of treatment March 6, 2016.
- ↑ Resolution of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of the RSFSR of 10.30.1930 on the reorganization of the network of regions of the Crimean ASSR.
- ↑ Administrative and territorial division of Crimea (Inaccessible link) . Date of treatment April 27, 2013. Archived April 29, 2013.
- ↑ Gulnara Useinova. Memories of his native village - a spring of tears from a half-forgotten past . Voice of Crimea. Date of treatment March 23, 2016. Archived April 26, 2013.
- ↑ Decree of GKO No. 5859ss dated 05/11/44 "On the Crimean Tatars"
- ↑ Decree of the GKO on August 12, 1944 No. GKO-6372s “On the Relocation of Collective Farmers to the Crimea”
- ↑ Fishing (Tuvak, Tuak) . Crimea through time. Date of treatment February 10, 2016.
- ↑ How Crimea was populated (1944–1954). (inaccessible link) . Elvina Seitova, graduate student of the Faculty of History, TNU. Date of treatment June 26, 2013. Archived June 30, 2013.
- ↑ Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR of August 21, 1945 No. 619/3 “On renaming village councils and settlements of the Crimean region”
- ↑ Law of the RSFSR of 06.25.1946 On the Abolition of the Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic and on the Transformation of the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic into the Crimean Region
- ↑ Law of the USSR of 04/26/1954 On the transfer of the Crimean region from the RSFSR to the Ukrainian SSR
- ↑ Directory of the administrative-territorial division of the Crimean region on June 15, 1960 / P. Sinelnikov. - Executive Committee of the Crimean Regional Council of Workers' Deputies. - Simferopol: Krimizdat, 1960. - S. 16. - 5000 copies.
- ↑ Гржибовская, 1999 , Указ Президиума ВС УССР «О внесении изменений в административное районирование УССР — по Крымской области», от 1 января 1965 года, с. 443.
- ↑ Grzhibovskaya, 1999 , From the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the Ukrainian SSR On Amending the Administrative Zoning of the Ukrainian SSR in the Crimean Region, p. 442.
- ↑ Ефимов С.А., Шевчук А.Г., Селезнёва О.А. Административно-территориальное деление Крыма второй половины XX века: опыт реконструкции . — Таврический национальный университет имени В. И. Вернадского, 2007. — Т. 20. Архивировано 24 сентября 2015 года. Архивная копия от 24 сентября 2015 на Wayback Machine
- ↑ On the restoration of the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic . People’s Front "Sevastopol-Crimea-Russia". Date of treatment March 24, 2018.
- ↑ Law of the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic of February 26, 1992 No. 19-1 “On the Republic of Crimea as the official name of the democratic state of Crimea” . Vedomosti of the Supreme Council of Crimea, 1992, No. 5, Art. 194 (1992). Archived January 27, 2016.
- ↑ Federal Law of the Russian Federation dated March 21, 2014 No. 6-FKZ “On the Admission to the Russian Federation of the Republic of Crimea and the Formation of New Subjects - the Republic of Crimea and the City of Federal Significance of Sevastopol” in the Russian Federation
- ↑ Закон Республики Крым № 15-ЗРК от 05 июня 2014 года «Об установлении границ муниципальных образований и статусе муниципальных образований в Республике Крым» . Принят Государственным Советом Республики Крым 04 июня 2014 года. Дата обращения 9 марта 2016. Архивировано 14 июня 2014 года.
Literature
- Малореченский сельсовет // Города и села Украины. Autonomous Republic of Crimea. The city of Sevastopol. Historical and local history essays. - Glory of Sevastopol, 2009.
- Administrative-territorial transformations in the Crimea. 1783-1998 Handbook / Ed. G. N. Grzhibovskoy . - Simferopol: Tavria-Plus, 1999 .-- 464 p. - ISBN 966-7503-22-4 .
Links
- с Рибаче Автономна Республіка Крим, м Алушта (укр.) . Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine. Date of appeal April 24, 2018.
- Лист карты L-36-118 Судак . Масштаб: 1 : 100 000. Состояние местности на 1974 год. Издание 1976 г.
- Карта территории Алуштинского горсовета. Подробная карта Крыма - Алушта и окрестности . crimea-map.com.ua. Дата обращения 22 октября 2014.