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Rich gorge

Rich Gorge (until 1945 - Kokluz ; Ukrainian Bagat Ushchelina , Crimean-Tat. Kokluz, Kokluz ) - a village in the Golubinsky rural settlement of the Bakhchisaray district of the Republic of Crimea (according to the administrative-territorial division of Ukraine - in the Golubinsky rural council of the Bakhchisaray Autonomous Republic of Crimea ) .

Village
Rich gorge
Ukrainian Bagata Gorge , Crimean Tat. Kokluz
A countryRussia / Ukraine [1]
RegionRepublic of Crimea [2] / Autonomous Republic of Crimea [3]
AreaBakhchisarai district
CommunityGolubinsky rural settlement [2] / Golubinsky village council [3]
History and Geography
First mention1520
Former namesuntil 1945 - Kokluz
Square0.23 km²
Center height319 m
TimezoneUTC + 3
Population
Population↘ 104 [4] people ( 2014 )
Density452.17 people / km²
Official languageCrimean Tatar , Ukrainian , Russian
Digital identifiers
Telephone code+7 36554 [5] [6]
Postcode298474 [7] / 98474
OKATO Code
OKTMO Code35604419111
COATUU code

Content

Current status

In Rich Gorge 1 street - Gornaya [8] , the area occupied by the village, 23.4 hectares, in which in 58 courtyards, according to the Village Council, in 2009, there were 130 inhabitants [9] , an old mosque was restored and is functioning [10] (for 2015 it is positioned as the cult building "Koklouz" [11] ). The rich gorge is connected by bus with Bakhchisarai [12] .

Geography

The Rich Gorge is located in the south-east of the Bakhchisaray district, in the depths of the Second ridge of the Crimean mountains , in a valley formed by the left tributary of Belbek - the Suatkan River, 5.5 kilometers south of the 35K-020 Bakhchisaray-Yalta highway. Highway 35N-065 Bogatoe Gorge - Black Waters [13] (according to the Ukrainian classification - S-0-10227 [14] ), the distance to Bakhchisaray from the village is about 32 kilometers [15] , the nearest railway station is Lilac , approximately at 27 kilometers. Neighboring villages: Putilovka at 1.5 kilometers, Novopolie at 3 km and Polyana at 4.5 km (less than 2 km along the lane). The peaks around the village exceed 700 m (the mountains of Ak-Yar, Cave, Dva Tatarina, Karaul, etc. [16] ), and are covered with deciduous forest, the height of the center of the village above sea level is 319 m [17] .

Title

The historical name of the village is Kokluz. The etymology of the name is unclear, apparently it comes from one of the languages ​​common in the Crimea in the pre-Turkic era (Greek, Gothic, Alanian, Scythian, Taurus) [18] .

History

Mangup and the Ottoman Empire

The early history of the Rich Gorge - Koklouz is poorly known, archaeological and other historical studies in the village were not carried out, it is only known that in the Middle Ages the village was part of the Principality of Theodoro and, obviously, like the whole valley of Suatkan, being the fiefdom of the owner of the castle, located in XIII-XV centuries on Mount Sandyk-Kai (the remnants of a small medieval castle on the hill preserved to this day [19] .) After the fall of the principality Theodoro in 1475 [19] the village was included in the Mangupsky kadylyk Kefinskogo Eyalet (about intsii) of the Ottoman Empire . According to Ottoman censuses in 1520, in the village of Koklus attributed to Inkirman, there were 11 Christian ("non-Muslim") families, of which 1 was a lost breadwinner. By 1542, in already attributed to Mangup Koklus - 11 complete families and 5 adult unmarried men - all Christians [20] . The village spent only 9 years as part of the Crimean Khanate : from the independence of the Khanate in 1774 [21] to its annexation to Russia in 1783, although economic and other ties with the rest of Crimea were very close, even local men went to “serve” the army of the Crimean Khan (they were called Taty , the region - Tatian Ile and were considered the best infantry soldiers in the khanate [22] ). The Ottoman presence was limited mainly in the collection of taxes. By 1778, when, after the Russo-Turkish war of 1768-1774 , at the initiative of the Russian command, with the support of the last Metropolitan of Gotfeysko-Kafaysky Ignatius [23], there was an eviction of Crimean Christians in the Sea of ​​Azov , the inhabitants evicted from Kokluz are not listed .

Russian Empire

(8) On April 19, 1783 [24] a manifesto was issued on the annexation of Crimea to Russia, and (8) February 19, 1784, by the registered decree of Catherine II to the Senate , the Tauride region was formed on the territory of the former Crimean Khanate. [25] By this time A cameral description of Crimea was compiled, in which, in the Mangup Kadylyk of the Bakhchisaray Kaymakanism , Gyuk Gyus , Other Gyuk Gyus and Treti Gyuk Gyus [26] - parishes-maale of a large village [27] are indicated. Initially, the village was assigned to the Simferopol district of the Tauride region [28] . After the Pavlovsk reforms, from 1796 to 1802, it was part of the Akmechet district of Novorossiysk province [29] . According to the new administrative division, after the creation of the Tauride province on October 8 (20), 1802 [30] , Kokluz was included in the Mahuldur volost of Simferopol district.

According to Vedomosti, about all the villages in Simferopol Uyezd consisting of an indication in which the volost is the number of yards and souls ... dated October 9, 1805, 33 yards in which 157 Crimean Tatars lived were recorded in the village of Kokluz [31] . On the military topographic map of Major General Mukhin in 1817, 37 yards are already indicated in the village [32] . After the reform of the volost division of 1829, Kokluz, according to the Vedomosti on the official volosts of the Tauride province of 1829 , was assigned to the Baidar volost [33] .

By the personal decree of Nicholas I of March 23 (old style), 1838, on April 15, a new Yalta district was formed [34] and the village was transferred to the Bogatyr parish of the new county. On the map of 1842, 97 yards are indicated in the village [35] .

In the 1860s, after the Zemstvo reform of Alexander II , the village remained part of the transformed Bogatyr volost. According to the “List of Populated Places of the Tauride Province according to 1864” , compiled from the VIII revision of 1864, Kokkoluz is a “state” Tatar village, with 92 courtyards, 401 inhabitants and a mosque at the wells [36] . On the three-verst map of 1865-1876, 80 yards were recorded [37] . For 1886, in the village of Kokkluz near Suuk-Su water , according to the directory “Volosts and important villages of European Russia”, 589 people lived in 87 households, 2 mosques, a school and 2 shops were operating [38] . According to the data of the X revision of 1887, the Memorial Book of the Tauride Province of 1889 contains 128 yards and 625 inhabitants [39] (on the versts map in 1890 there are 121 yards with the Crimean Tatar population [40] ).

After the Zemstvo reform of the 1890s [41], the village remained part of the Bogatyr Volost. According to the "... Memorial Book of the Tauride Province for 1892" , in the village of Kokluz, which was part of the Fotisal rural community , there were 698 residents in 81 households who owned 385 tithes of their own land [42] . According to the All-Russian census of 1897, there were 660 people in the village of Kokluz, of which 652 were Crimean Tatar [43] . According to the "... Memorial Book of the Tauride Province for 1902" in the village there were 825 inhabitants in 98 yards, owning 385 tithes individually owned by each householder under an orchard, hayfields and arable lands [44] . In 1909, the construction of a new mekteba building was begun in the village [45] . In the Statistical Directory of the Tauride Province of 1915 [46] in the Bogatyrsky volost of the Yalta district, the village of Kokluz is recorded [47] .

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New time

After the establishment of Soviet power in Crimea, according to the decree of the Krymrevkom of January 8, 1921 [48] , the volost system was abolished and the village became part of the Kokkoz district of the Yalta district (district) [49] . By the resolution of the Crimean Central Executive Committee and the Council of People's Commissars of April 4, 1922, the Kokkozsky District was separated from the Yalta District and the villages were transferred to the Bakhchisaray District of Simferopol District [50] . On October 11, 1923, according to the decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee, the administrative division of the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was amended, as a result of which the districts (counties) were liquidated, the Bakhchisarai district became an independent unit [28] and the village was included in its composition. 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 Kokluz, the center of the Kokluz village council of the Bakhchisarai district, there were 149 households, 146 of them were peasant, the population was 639 (310 men and 329 women). In national terms, 626 Tatars and 13 Russians were taken into account, the Tatar school operated [51] . In 1935, a new Fotisalsky district was created, in the same year ( at the request of residents ), renamed Kuibyshevsky [28] [49] and Kokluz were included in its composition. According to the All-Union Population Census of 1939, 403 people lived in the village [52] .

After the liberation of Crimea during the Great Patriotic War , according to the Decree of the State Defense Committee No. 5859 of May 11, 1944, on May 18 the Crimean Tatars of Kokluz were evicted to Central Asia [53] . On August 12, 1944, Resolution No. GOKO-6372s “On the Relocation of Collective Farmers to the Crimea” was adopted, according to which it was planned to resettle 9,000 collective farmers from the villages of the Ukrainian SSR [54] and in September 1944 the first new settlers (2349 families) came from various regions of Ukraine, and in the early 1950s, also from Ukraine, a second wave of immigrants followed [55] . Since June 25, 1946 as part of the Crimean region of the RSFSR [56] . On August 21, 1945, by the decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR [57], the village of Kokluz was renamed the Rich Gorge, and the Kokluzsky village council was renamed Bogatushchelsky. On June 25, 1946, the Rich Gorge as part of the Crimean region of the RSFSR [56] , and on April 26, 1954 the Crimean region was transferred from the RSFSR to the Ukrainian SSR [58] . The time for the abolition of the village council and the inclusion of the Rich Gorge in Golubinsky has not yet been established: on June 15, 1960 the village was already listed in its composition [59] .

By a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the Ukrainian SSR "On the consolidation of rural areas of the Crimean region" of December 30, 1962, the Kuybyshevsky district was abolished and the village was annexed to the Bakhchisarai [60] [61] . According to the 1989 census , 112 people lived in the village [52] . Since February 12, 1991, a village in the restored Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic [62] , on February 26, 1992, was renamed the Autonomous Republic of Crimea [63] . Since March 21, 2014 - as part of the Republic of Crimea of ​​Russia [64] .

Population

Population
152015421805186418871897
54↗ 60↗ 157↗ 401↗ 625↗ 660
1926193919892001 [65]20072014 [4]
↘ 639↘ 403↘ 112↗ 166↘ 130↘ 104
 
National composition
  • 1520 - 54 people (all non-Muslims) [20]
  • 1542 - 60 people (all non-Muslims) [20]
  • 1805 - 157 people (all Crimean Tatars) [31]
  • 1864 - 401 people. [36]
  • 1886 - 539 people [38]
  • 1889 - 625 people [39]
  • 1892 - 698 people [42]
  • 1897 - 660 people (652 Crimean Tatar) [43]
  • 1902 - 825 people [44]
  • 1926 - 639 people (626 Crimean Tatars) [51]
  • 2009 - 130 people [9]

The 2001 All-Ukrainian Census showed the following distribution by native speakers [66]

TonguePercent
Crimean Tatar50
Russian43.98
Ukrainian4.82

Notes

  1. ↑ 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 .
  2. ↑ 1 2 According to the position of Russia
  3. ↑ 1 2 According to the position of Ukraine
  4. ↑ 1 2 2014 Census. The population of the Crimean Federal District, urban districts, municipalities, urban and rural settlements (Neopr.) . Date of treatment September 6, 2015. Archived on September 6, 2015.
  5. ↑ 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” (neopr.) . Ministry of Communications of Russia. Date of treatment November 5, 2016.
  6. ↑ New telephone codes of Crimean cities (unopened) (unavailable link) . Krymtelecom. Date of treatment November 5, 2016. Archived on May 6, 2016.
  7. ↑ Order of Rossvyaz of March 31, 2014 No. 61 “On the Assignment of Postal Codes to Postal Facilities”
  8. ↑ Crimea, Bakhchisaray District, Aromatic (neopr.) . CLADR RF. Date of treatment December 12, 2014.
  9. ↑ 1 2 Cities and villages of Ukraine, 2009 , Golubinsky Village Council.
  10. ↑ Crimean mosques. Bakhchisarai district. (unspecified) . CM. Pure red. The return of the Crimean Tatar people: problems of ethnocultural revival. Crimean Tatar national movement. Volume 4 .: 1994-1997 ../ Ed. M.N. Guboglo, - M., 1997. Date of treatment January 17, 2015.
  11. ↑ List of Muslim places of worship in the Bakhchisarai district (Neopr.) (Inaccessible link) . State Committee of the Republic of Tatarstan on Tourism. Date of treatment February 17, 2015. Archived February 16, 2015.
  12. ↑ Bus schedule at the Rich Gorge bus stop. (unspecified) . Yandex timetables. Date of treatment December 9, 2014.
  13. ↑ On the approval of the criteria for classifying public roads ... of the Republic of Crimea. (unspecified) . Government of the Republic of Crimea (03/11/2015). Date of treatment November 21, 2016.
  14. ↑ List of public roads of local importance of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea (Neopr.) . Council of Ministers of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea (2012). Date of treatment January 17, 2015.
  15. ↑ Bakhchisaray - Rich Gorge (unopened) (inaccessible link) . Dovezuha. RF Date of treatment December 8, 2014. Archived December 9, 2014.
  16. ↑ Southern Coast of Crimea. Central part of Crimea. Topographic map. (unspecified) . This is Place.ru (2002). Date of treatment December 9, 2014.
  17. ↑ Weather forecast for s. Rich Gorge (Crimea) (neopr.) . Weather.in.ua. Date of treatment December 7, 2014.
  18. ↑ Henryk Jankowski. A Historical-Etymological Dictionary of Pre-Russian Habitation Names of the Crimea. - Leiden - Boston ,: Brill Academic Pub, 2006 .-- 1298 p. - ISBN 9004154337 .
  19. ↑ 1 2 T.M. Fadeeva, A.K. Shaposhnikov. Principality of Theodoro and his princes. Crimean-Gothic collection .. - Simferopol: Business Inform, 2005. - 295 p. - ISBN 966-648-061-1 .
  20. ↑ 1 2 3 Yücel Öztürk. Osmanlı Hakimiyetinde Kefe 1475-1600. - Ankara: Kültür ve Turizm Bakanlığı Yayınları, 2000 .-- 568 p. - ISBN 9751723639 .
  21. ↑ Kuchuk-Kainardzhi peace treaty (1774). Art. 3
  22. ↑ Evlia Celebi. Travel book. (Seyahatnam) (unopened ) . The science. 1961 year. Date of treatment October 4, 2014.
  23. ↑ Life of Metropolitan Ignatius (Neopr.) (Inaccessible link) . Greeks of Ukraine. Date of treatment October 11, 2014. Archived October 15, 2014.
  24. ↑ Grzhibovskaya, 1999 , Manifesto on the adoption of the Crimean peninsula, Taman Island and the entire Kuban side under the Russian state. 1783 p. 96.
  25. ↑ Grzhibovskaya, 1999 , Decree of Catherine II on the formation of the Tauride Region. February 8, 1784, p. 117.
  26. ↑ 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.
  27. ↑ Chernov E.A. Identification of settlements of the Crimea and its administrative-territorial division of 1784 (neopr.) . Azov Greeks. Date of treatment October 3, 2014.
  28. ↑ 1 2 3 Administrative and territorial division of Crimea (Neopr.) (Inaccessible link) . Date of treatment April 27, 2013. Archived April 29, 2013.
  29. ↑ About the new division of the State in the Province. (Named given to the Senate.)
  30. ↑ Grzybowska, 1999 , From the Decree of Alexander I to the Senate on the Creation of the Tauride Province, p. 124.
  31. ↑ 1 2 Lashkov F.F. Vedomosti about all villages in Simferopol Uyezd consisting of an indication in which the volost is the number of yards and souls ... dated October 9, 1805. Page 85 // Proceedings of the Tauride Scientific Commission, vol. 26 .. - Simferopol: Tauride Provincial Printing House, 1897.
  32. ↑ Map of Mukhin in 1817. (unspecified) . Archaeological map of Crimea. Date of treatment November 8, 2014.
  33. ↑ Grzhibovskaya, 1999 , Bulletin of official volosts of the Tauride province, 1829 p. 127.
  34. ↑ Treasure Peninsula. Story. Yalta (neopr.) . Date of treatment May 24, 2013. Archived May 24, 2013.
  35. ↑ Map of Betev and Oberg. Military Topographic Depot, 1842 (neopr.) . Archaeological map of Crimea. Date of treatment November 12, 2014. ]
  36. ↑ 1 2 M. Raevsky. Tauride province. List of settlements according to 1864 83 (neopr.) . St. Petersburg. Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. Karl Wolfe Printing House. Date of treatment February 16, 2016.
  37. ↑ Three-verst map of Crimea VTD 1865-1876. Sheet XXXIV-12-f (unopened) (inaccessible link - history ) . Archaeological map of Crimea. Date of treatment November 17, 2014.
  38. ↑ 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.
  39. ↑ 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.
  40. ↑ Milestone map of Crimea, end of XIX century Sheet XVIII-11. (unspecified) . Archaeological map of Crimea. Date of treatment November 21, 2014.
  41. ↑ Boris Veselovsky. The history of the zemstvo over forty years. T. 4; History of Zemstvo . - St. Petersburg: Publisher O. N. Popova, 1911.
  42. ↑ 1 2 Tauride Provincial Statistical Committee. Calendar and Commemorative Book of the Tauride Province for 1892 . - 1892. - S. 77.
  43. ↑ 1 2 Populated places of the Russian Empire of 500 or more inhabitants, indicating the total population in them and the number of inhabitants of the predominant faiths, according to the first universal census of 1897 / N. Troitsky . - The Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of the Interior. - St. Petersburg: printing house "Public good" steam tipolithography N. L. Nyrkina, 1905. - S. 216–219. - 270 p. - (The first general census of the population of the Russian Empire in 1897).
  44. ↑ 1 2 Tauride Provincial Statistical Committee. Calendar and Memorial Book of the Tauride Province for 1902 . - 1902. - S. 134-135.
  45. ↑ Case on the construction of a new mektebe building in der. Kokluz of Yalta County. (F. No. 27 op. No. 3 case No. 988) (neopr.) (Unavailable link) . State Archive of the ARC .. Date of access March 6, 2015. Archived September 23, 2015.
  46. ↑ Statistical Handbook of Tauride Province. Part 2. Statistical Review, Issue Eighth. Yalta County, 1915
  47. ↑ Grzybowska, 1999 , Statistical Handbook of the Tauride Province. Part II. Statistical Review, Issue Eighth. Yalta County, 1915, p. 299.
  48. ↑ History of cities and villages of the Ukrainian SSR. / P.T. Tronko . - 1974. - T. 12. - S. 521. - 15,000 copies.
  49. ↑ 1 2 History of cities and villages of the Ukrainian SSR. / P.T. Tronko . - 1974. - T. 12. - S. 197-202. - 15,000 copies.
  50. ↑ A. Vrublevsky, V. Artemenko. Information materials for the Autonomous Republic of Crimea (Neopr.) (Inaccessible link) . Kiev. ICC Lesta, 2006. Date of treatment October 25, 2014. Archived September 23, 2015.
  51. ↑ 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. 12, 13. - 219 p. Archived March 11, 2016.
  52. ↑ 1 2 Muzafarov. R. Crimean Tatar Encyclopedia .. - Simferopol: VATAN, 1993. - T. 1.
  53. ↑ Decree of GKO No. 5859ss dated 05/11/44 "On the Crimean Tatars"
  54. ↑ Decree of the GKO on August 12, 1944 No. GKO-6372s “On the Relocation of Collective Farmers to the Crimea”
  55. ↑ How Crimea was populated (1944–1954). (unopened) (inaccessible link) . Elvina Seitova, graduate student of the Faculty of History, TNU. Date of treatment June 26, 2013. Archived June 30, 2013.
  56. ↑ 1 2 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
  57. ↑ 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”
  58. ↑ Law of the USSR of 04/26/1954 On the transfer of the Crimean region from the RSFSR to the Ukrainian SSR
  59. ↑ 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. 31. - 5000 copies.
  60. ↑ 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.
  61. ↑ Efimov S.A., Shevchuk A.G., Selezneva O.A. The administrative-territorial division of Crimea in the second half of the XX century: the experience of reconstruction . - Taurida National University named after V.I. Vernadsky, 2007. - T. 20. Archived on September 24, 2015. Archived September 24, 2015 on Wayback Machine
  62. ↑ On the restoration of the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (neopr.) . People’s Front "Sevastopol-Crimea-Russia". Date of treatment March 24, 2018.
  63. ↑ 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” (neopr.) . Vedomosti of the Supreme Council of Crimea, 1992, No. 5, Art. 194 (1992). Archived January 27, 2016.
  64. ↑ 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 Sevastopol” as a Part of the Russian Federation
  65. ↑ Ukraine. 2001 Census (neopr.) . Date of treatment September 7, 2014. Archived on September 7, 2014.
  66. ↑ Rozpodil population beyond my river, Autonomous Republic of Crimea (Ukrainian) (inaccessible link - history ) . State Statistics Service of Ukraine. Date of treatment October 26, 2014.

Literature

  • Golubinsky Village Council // Cities and villages of Ukraine. 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

  • from Bagat Uchelina Autonomous Republic of Crimea, Bakhchisaraysky district (Ukrainian) . Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine. Date of treatment October 27, 2014.
  • Map sheet L-36-128 Sevastopol . Scale: 1: 100,000. Status of the terrain for 1984. 1989 Edition
  • Map of the Bakhchisaray region of Crimea. Detailed map of Crimea - Bakhchisarai district (Neopr.) . crimea-map.com.ua. Date of treatment October 19, 2014.
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bogatoe_Gorge&oldid=101380034


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