Osmanyurt ( Chech. Iosman-Yurt [2] ) is a village in the Khasavyurt district of Dagestan , Russia .
| Village | |
| Osmanyurt | |
|---|---|
| Chech. Iosman-Yurt | |
| A country | |
| Subject of the federation | Dagestan |
| Municipal District | Khasavyurt |
| Rural settlement | Village Council "Osmanyurt" |
| History and Geography | |
| Timezone | UTC + 3 |
| Population | |
| Population | ↗ 2598 [1] people ( 2010 ) |
| Nationalities | the Chechens |
| Denominations | Muslims are Sunnis |
| Digital identifiers | |
| Postcode | 368047 |
| OKATO Code | 82254863001 |
| OKTMO Code | |
It is the administrative center of the Osmanyurt rural settlement [3] .
Content
Geography
The village is located north of the district center of Khasavyurt .
The nearest settlements: in the north-east - the villages of Simsir and Kandauraul , in the north-west - the villages of Batashyurt and Adzhimazhagatyurt , in the south-west - the village of Solnechnoe [4] .
Population
| Population | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1889 [5] | 1914 [6] | 1926 [7] | 2002 [8] | 2010 [1] |
| 556 | ↗ 605 | ↘ 510 | ↗ 2424 | ↗ 2598 |
History
Osmanyurt was founded by Gachkalyk Chechens [9] . Osman sob. name of the first settler (founder of the village) [10] .
By order of General A.P. Ermolov in 1818, the Chechens of the Andreev lands (Andreev, Aksai and Kostekov estates), except for those personally vouched for by the Kumyk princes, including residents of the village of Osman-Yurt, were evicted and escorted before escort before “Chechen border” [11] [12] [13] [14] .
In 1835, in the reports of the Imperial Army, he was named Kumyk village [15] .
In 1883, the village was part of the 2nd (Aksai) site of the Khasavyurt district of the Terek region. There were 89 yards in which 437 people lived, the main population - Kumyks [16] . After the Caucasian war, re-settlement of Chechens began after deportation.
In 1890, it was at the village of Batash-Yurt, Aksaysky site. There were 111 yards in which 556 people lived, the predominant population - Chechens. Rural society owned 3,415 acres of convenient and 200 uncomfortable land. In the village there was a village government and a court, 1 mosque [17] .
November 22, 1928 4 session of the Central Executive Committee of the DASSR 6 convocation adopted a new project of regionalization of the republic. On its basis, a decree was adopted on the disaggregation of districts and regions and the formation of 26 cantons and 2 subcantons. The Khasavyurt canton was formed in part of the territory of the former Khasavyurt district, transferred to the DASSR from the Terek region in 1921. According to the new regionalization, the canton consisted of 18 village councils, including Batashyurt: Batashyurt, Aji-Maj-yurt, Batashevo, Evgenievka, Osmanyurt, Osmanyurt-otar, Sim-Syr, Uzluyanovka, Hamavyurt [18] .
Decree of the Council of People's Commissars of the Dagestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic of April 12, 1944 "On the resettlement of collective farmers of collective farms named after MOPR “,“ January 9 “and“ May 1 “of the Makhachkala district in the Khasavyurt district”, most of the population of the village of Tarki was relocated to the village of Osmanyurt [19] .
Education
Osmanyurt secondary school named after And Beybulatova
Famous Natives
- Baybulatov, Irbaikhan Adylkhanovich - participant of the Great Patriotic War , Hero of the Soviet Union .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 2010 All-Russian Population Census. Table No. 11. The population of urban districts, municipalities, urban and rural settlements, urban and rural settlements of the Republic of Dagestan . Date of treatment May 13, 2014. Archived on May 13, 2014.
- ↑ Suleymanov A. Toponymy of Chechnya. Grozny: State Unitary Enterprise “Book Publishing House”, 2006
- ↑ Osmanyurt rural district (village council) * (Khasavyurt district)
- ↑ Map of Chechnya and Dagestan
- ↑ Statistical tables of populated areas of the Terek region / ed. Tersk. stat. com ; under the editorship of Evg. Maksimova. - Vladikavkaz, 1890-1891. - 7 t. T. 2. Vol. 6: Khasav-Yurt District. .
- ↑ List of populated areas of the Terek region: (according to data as of July 1, 1914) / Ed. S.P. Gortinsky. - Vladikavkaz: Electro-printing type. Tersk. Region Prav., 1915 .
- ↑ Zoned Dagestan: (adm.-economic division of the DSSR according to the new zoning of 1929). - Makhachkala: Orgotd. CEC DSSR, 1930 .-- 56, XXIV, 114 p.
- ↑ 2002 All-Russian Census
- ↑ Academy of Sciences of the Chechen Republic Institute of Humanitarian Studies History of Chechnya from ancient times to the present In four volumes Volume III of Grozny FSUE “IPC“ Grozny Worker ”2013. P 13
- ↑ Part 2: D - K / Toponymic Dictionary of the Caucasus / Т: / Abkhazian Internet Library / Abkhazian Internet Library (inaccessible link)
- ↑ Dubrovin N.F. Dagestan events of 1818. Military Digest: Published by High Command. T. 66, No. 3.-SPb., 1869. p. 9
- ↑ Russia and Chechnya: the last third of the XVIII - the first half of the XIX century - Shakhrudin Aidievich Gapurov, Academy of Sciences of the Chechen Republic, Academy of Sciences of the Chechen Republic, 2009
- ↑ Chechnya and Ermolov: 1816-1827 - Shakhrudin Aidievich Gapurov State Unitary Enterprise “Book Publishing House”, 2006
- ↑ Caucasian war: the national liberation struggle of the highlanders of the North Caucasus in the 20-60s. XIX century - Ahmed Ibragimovich Osmanov, M. G. Autlev Jupiter, 2006
- ↑ http://www.vostlit.info/Texts/Dokumenty/Kavkaz/XIX/1800-1820/Nar_osv_borba/81-100/95.htm
- ↑ / List of inhabited places of the Terek region: According to information as of January 1. 1883 / Comp. Ter. reg. stat. com under the editorship of sec. com N. Blagoveshchensky. - Vladikavkaz: type. Tersky region Board, 1885. - III, [1 , 58, VI p.]
- ↑ Statistical tables of populated areas of the Terek region / ed. Tersk. stat. com ; under the editorship of Evg. Maksimova. - Vladikavkaz, 1890-1891. - 7 t. T. 2. Vol. 6: Khasav-Yurt District. - 1890. - 67, [1 p. : tab.] p. 42
- ↑ Protocols and decisions of the joint meetings of the Presidium of the CEC and the Council of People's Commissars of the DASSR (originals). 4th plenary session of the CEC DASSR 6th convocation. 1928 year. Fund number R-37. Inventory No. 20. Case No. 99
- ↑ Deportations of the population of Dagestan in 1941-1944