Gunibsky district is an administrative unit of the Dagestan region and the Dagestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic , which existed in 1860 - 1928 . The center is the village of Gunib .
| Gunibsky District | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Province | Dagestan region |
| County town | Gunib |
| History and Geography | |
| Date of formation | 1860 |
| Area | 4.4 thousand km² km² |
| Population | |
| Population | 55.9 thousand (1897) people. |
Content
- 1 History
- 2 population
- 3 Administrative divisions
- 4 notes
- 5 Links
History
The Gunibsky district as part of the Dagestan region was formed in 1860 from Avar societies annexed to Russia a year earlier. In 1921 it became part of the Dagestan ASSR.
In November 1928, canton division was introduced in the Dagestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic and all districts were abolished.
Population
According to the 1897 census, 55.9 thousand people lived in the okrug. Including Avars - 93.4%; Laks - 3.8%; Dargins - 1.4%. 685 people lived in the village of Gunib. [one]
Administrative Division
The district was divided into naibes , which in 1899 were converted into plots. The plots were divided into societies.
In 1895 there were 6 naibas in the county: Andalyal (center - the village of Sogratl ), Antsuho-Kapuchinsky (center - the village of Kalaki ), Bognadel (center - the village of Tlyarat), Kuyadinskoye (center - the village of Koroda ), Tilitl-Gidatlinskoye (center - v . Uroda ), Tleiseruhskoye (center - v . Irib ) [2] .
By 1926, the district was divided into 7 sections: Andolyalsky (center - Gunib fortification), Antsuho-Kapuchikhinsky (center - village Chodo-Kolo), Bukhvadalsky (center - village Tlyarata ), Karakhsky (center - village Tlyakh ), Kuyadinsky ( the center is the village of Doroda ), Telitl-Gidatlinsky (the center is the village of Telitl ), Tleiserukhsky (the center is the village of Irib ).
In December 1926, the southern part of the district was allocated to a separate Tlyaratinsky district .
Notes
- ↑ Demoscope Weekly - Application. Statistics Handbook
- ↑ Memorial book of the Dagestan region / E.I. Kozubsky. - Temir-Khan-Shura: "Russian Printing House", 1895.
Links
- Gunibsky district // Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary : in 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - SPb. , 1890-1907.