Markhamat ( Uzbek. Markhamat, Marhamat ) is a city (since 1974) in Uzbekistan , Andijan region .
| City | |
| Marhamat | |
|---|---|
| Uzbek Marhamat, Marhamat | |
| A country | |
| Region | Andijan region |
| Fog | Markhamat district |
| History and Geography | |
| Former names | until 1932 - Russian Village |
| City with | 1974 |
| Center height | |
| Climate type | Climate of high subtropical highlands |
| Timezone | UTC + 5 |
| Population | |
| Population | 11,200 people ( 1991 ) |
| Nationalities | Uzbeks |
| Denominations | Islam ( Sunnism ) |
| Official language | Uzbek |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Car code | 17 |
Geography
Located 25 km from Asaka train station. 11.2 thousand inhabitants (1991). The city has an electrical plant, a weaving factory. [1] [1]
By a resolution of the Presidium of the Central Executive Committee of the USSR of March 7, 1933, a resolution was approved by the Central Executive Committee of the Uzbek SSR of November 3, 1932 on renaming the center of the Markhamat district (former Aravan district) of the Russian village in the village of Markhamat [2] .
Almost all Russian-Ukrainian villages were built in the northern, northeastern and eastern foothills of the valley (Manyak and Kurshab volosts of Osh district; Bazarkurgan, Jalalabad, Kugart, Uzgen, Yassyn volosts of Andijan district; the Barysh volost of Namangan district was close to agricultural conditions) habitual for the Russian and Ukrainian peasants, here it was possible to do without artificial irrigation. Only the Russian Village was founded on the site of several villages in the Mingtyuba volost of Andijan district, and the settlers received a large amount of irrigated land here. [3]
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 MARHAMAT / definition of the word MARHAMAT - (until 1974 Russian Village), city (since 1974) in Uzbekistan, Andijan
- ↑ 130. About renaming of the same districts, centers and postal and telegraph institutions in the territory of the Ukrainian SSR, UZSSR, TurkSSR and TajSSR | Project "Historical Materials" . istmat.info. Date of treatment January 30, 2019.
- ↑ The population of the Ferghana Valley in the late XIX - early XX centuries