The urban district of Alushta ( Ukrainian Municipal District of Alushta , Crimean-Tat. Aluşta şeer bölgesi, Alushta Sheer Bolgesi ) is a municipality [3] as part of the Republic of Crimea of the Russian Federation [4] . It was formed on the territory of the administrative-territorial unit of the Republic of Crimea of the city of republican significance Alushta with the territory subordinate to it . [5] [6] [7]
| City district | |||
| Alushta urban district | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Ukrainian Moscow District Alushta Crimean Tat. Aluşta şeer bölgesi | |||
| |||
| A country | |||
| Subject of the federation | Republic of Crimea | ||
| Adm. center | Alushta | ||
| Includes | 26 settlements | ||
| Population ( 2019 ) | ↗ 54 866 [1] people | ||
| Density | people / km² | ||
| Ethnic composition | Russians , Ukrainians , Crimean Tatars | ||
| Area | 599.9 [2] | ||
| Heights • highest point | 91.46 m | ||
| Head of the municipality, chairman of the city council | Egorov Boris Borisovich | ||
| Head of the city administration | Ogneva Galina Ivanovna | ||
| Timezone | MSK + 0 ( UTC + 3 ) | ||
| Postcode | 298500 - 298517 | ||
| OKTMO Code | |||
| https://alushta-adm.ru | |||
The administrative center of the district is the city of Alushta [6] .
Population
Population dynamics (until 2014 - the current population of the City Council and the district , for 2001 and 2014 - the resident population) [8] :
| Population size | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1939 [9] | 1959 [10] | 1970 [11] | 1979 [12] | 1989 [13] | 2001 [14] |
| 25,996 | ↘ 24 076 | ↗ 38 986 | ↗ 50 642 | ↗ 58 858 | ↘ 53 727 |
| 2009 [15] | 2010 [15] | 2011 [15] | 2012 [16] | 2013 [16] | 2014 [17] |
| ↘ 52 413 | ↗ 52 472 | ↘ 52 401 | ↘ 52 284 | ↘ 52 221 | ↗ 52 318 |
| 2015 [18] | 2016 [19] | 2017 [20] | 2018 [21] | 2019 [1] | |
| ↗ 52 515 | ↗ 53 607 | ↗ 53 951 | ↗ 54 515 | ↗ 54 866 | |
According to the census in the Crimean Federal District, as of October 14, 2014, the resident population of the urban district amounted to 52,318 people (55.58% of which are urban, 44.42% are rural). [22]
As of January 1, 2014, the population of Alushta with settlements subordinate to the city council amounted to 50805 permanent residents and 52253 people of the current population [23] . As of July 1, 2014 - 50897 permanent residents and 52345 people of the current population [24] .
- National composition
According to the censuses of 2001 and 2014 :
| nationality | 2001 [25] , Total, people | % of all- go | 2014 [26] Total, people | % of all- go | % of indicating shih |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| indicated | 48382 | 92.48% | 100.00% | ||
| Russians | 35030 | 67.09% | 35245 | 67.37% | 72.85% |
| Ukrainians | 11987 | 22.96% | 7967 | 15.23% | 16.47% |
| Crimean Tatars | 3081 | 5.90% | 3025 | 5.78% | 6.25% |
| Belarusians | 743 | 1.42% | 499 | 0.95% | 1.03% |
| Tatars | 93 | 0.18% | 351 | 0.67% | 0.73% |
| Armenians | 223 | 0.43% | 299 | 0.57% | 0.62% |
| Azerbaijanis | 102 | 0.20% | 115 | 0.22% | 0.24% |
| Greeks | 101 | 0.19% | 0.21% | ||
| Uzbeks | 83 | 0.16% | 0.17% | ||
| Moldavians | 104 | 0.20% | 69 | 0.13% | 0.14% |
| Georgians | 72 | 0.14% | 57 | 0.11% | 0.12% |
| Poles | 85 | 0.16% | 47 | 0.09% | 0.10% |
| the Jews | 71 | 0.14% | 46 | 0.09% | 0.10% |
| Germans | 46 | 0.09% | 0.10% | ||
| Bulgarians | 44 | 0.08% | 0.09% | ||
| Karaites | 6 | 0.01% | 0.01% | ||
| Krymchaks | 2 | 0.00% | 0.00% | ||
| other | 624 | 1.20% | 380 | 0.73% | 0.79% |
| did not indicate | 3936 | 7.52% | |||
| Total | 52215 | 100.00% | 52318 | 100.00% |
The composition of the urban district
The urban district consists of 26 settlements, including 1 city, 1 urban-type settlement, 6 villages (rural type) and 18 villages:
| No. | Locality | Historical name [27] | Type of | Population |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| one | Alushta | city admin. center | ↗ 29 963 [1] | |
| 2 | Bondarenkovo | Karabakh | village | ↗ 30 [17] |
| 3 | Upper Kutuzovka | Noise | village | ↘ 751 [17] |
| four | Grape | Castel | village | ↗ 274 [17] |
| 5 | General | Ulu Ozen | village | ↗ 312 [17] |
| 6 | Zaprudnoe | Degirl | village | ↘ 788 [17] |
| 7 | Green mountains | Arpat | village | ↘ 231 [17] |
| 8 | Abundant | Korbekul | village | ↗ 2333 [17] |
| 9 | Cypress | Kuchukkoy | village | ↗ 434 [17] |
| 10 | Lavender | village | ↗ 206 [17] | |
| eleven | Bay | Kurkulet | village | ↗ 270 [17] |
| 12 | Azure | Castel-Primorsky | village | ↘ 148 [17] |
| 13 | Radiant | Demirgi | village | ↗ 1180 [17] |
| fourteen | Malorechenskoye | Kucuk Ozen | village | ↗ 1313 [17] |
| fifteen | Small Lighthouse | Biyuk Lambat | village | ↗ 2298 [17] |
| 16 | Nizhny Zaprudnoe | Lower Degirl | village | ↗ 161 [17] |
| 17 | Lower Kutuzovka | Noise | village | ↗ 976 [17] |
| eighteen | Partenit | town | ↗ 6193 [17] | |
| 19 | Greetings | Uskut | village | ↗ 1867 [17] |
| twenty | Pushkino | Kyzylkoy | village | ↗ 273 [17] |
| 21 | Pink | village | ↘ 227 [17] | |
| 22 | Fishing | Tuwak | village | ↗ 1414 [17] |
| 23 | Seven Compound | Ed ev | village | ↗ 102 [17] |
| 24 | Solnechnogorsk | Kuru ozen | village | ↗ 1150 [17] |
| 25 | Cliff | Kuchuk Lambat | village | ↗ 274 [17] |
| 26 | Gull | village | ↘ 35 [17] |
History
The territory of the modern urban district from 1920 to 1964. It was Alushta district , from 1964 to 2014. - Alushta city council . These administrative-territorial units from the 1920s to 1945. were part of the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic of the RSFSR as part of the USSR , from 1945 to 1954. - to the Crimean region of the RSFSR as part of the USSR , from 1954 to 1991. - to the Crimean region of the Ukrainian SSR as part of the USSR , from 1991 to 2014. - to the Autonomous Republic of Crimea as part of Ukraine .
In 2014, a city district was formed as part of the Republic of Crimea of the Russian Federation [6] .
Links
- City District Website
- Website of the urban district on the portal of the Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan
- Alushta on the website of the Ministry of Economic Development of the Republic of Crimea (Inaccessible link) . Date of treatment August 3, 2016. Archived July 26, 2016.
- List of Cultural Heritage Sites of the Alushta Urban District in Wikigid
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 Assessment of the resident population by urban districts and municipal districts of the Republic of Crimea as of 01.01.2019 . Date of treatment March 22, 2019.
- ↑ Investment passport of the municipality of the city district of Alushta
- ↑ Do not confuse concepts such as “urban district” and “city”. The “urban district” is the territory in which local self-government is exercised, and the “city” is the locality, an administrative-territorial unit. The municipality may have several settlements.
- ↑ in the framework of the territorial-municipal structure of the Republic of Crimea. In the framework of the administrative division of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, the relevant territory is occupied by the Alushta city council
- ↑ Charter of the municipality city district Alushta of the Republic of Crimea
- ↑ 1 2 3 Law of the Republic of Crimea No. 15-ЗРК dated June 5, 2014 “On Establishing the Borders of Municipalities and the Status of Municipalities in the Republic of Crimea” . Adopted by the State Council of the Republic of Crimea on June 4, 2014. Date of treatment June 15, 2014.
- ↑ Law of the Republic of Crimea dated June 6, 2014 No. 18-ЗРК "On the administrative-territorial structure of the Republic of Crimea"
- ↑ population of Alushta with settlements subordinate to the city council
- ↑ All-Union Population Census of 1939. The population size of the USSR by region and city .
- ↑ 1959 All-Union Population Census. The current population of cities and other settlements, districts, district centers and large rural settlements as of January 15, 1959 by region of the Union Republics (except the RSFSR) .
- ↑ 1970 All-Union Population Census. Population of cities, towns, districts, and district centers of the USSR according to the census as of January 15, 1970 in republics, territories, and regions (except the RSFSR) .
- ↑ 1979 All-Union Census of the Population of the Union and Autonomous Republics, Autonomous Oblasts and Districts, Territories, Regions, Districts, Urban Settlements, Village District Centers, and Rural Settlements with a Population of More Than 5,000 People (Except the RSFSR) .
- ↑ 1989 All-Union Population Census. Population of the Union Republics of the USSR and their territorial units by gender .
- ↑ Strength and territorial distribution of the population of Ukraine. The data of the All-Ukrainian Population Census 2001 Roku about administrative and territorial supply of Ukraine, the number, distribution and warehouse of the population of Ukraine for the article, the group of population of the cities, administrative districts of the city of 5, 2001. . Date of treatment November 17, 2014. Archived November 17, 2014.
- ↑ 1 2 3 Statistical zbіrnik "The number of the explicit population of Ukraine on 1 September 2011 rock". - Kiev, BCS, 2011 .-- 112s. . Date of treatment September 1, 2014. Archived September 1, 2014.
- ↑ 1 2 Statistical zbіrnik "The number of the explicit population of Ukraine on 1 September 2014" . Date of treatment September 1, 2014. Archived September 1, 2014.
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 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.
- ↑ The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2015 . Date of treatment August 6, 2015. Archived on August 6, 2015.
- ↑ Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2016
- ↑ The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2017 (July 31, 2017). Date of treatment July 31, 2017. Archived July 31, 2017.
- ↑ Estimated resident population by urban districts and municipal districts of the Republic of Crimea as of 01.01.2018 . Date of treatment March 24, 2018.
- ↑ Tables with the results of the Federal Statistical Observation "Population Census in the Crimean Federal District" in 2014
- ↑ The number of people on 1 September 2014 rooku and the middle for sichen-groen 2013 rooku (inaccessible link) . Archived on October 6, 2014. (Krymstat, 01/01/2014)
- ↑ Demographic situation of the Republic of Crimea for January – June 2014 . Archived on August 19, 2014. (Krymstat, 07/01/2014, resident population); The population as of July 1, 2014 and the average for January-June 2014 (inaccessible link) . Archived on August 19, 2014. (Statistical information of Krymstat)
- ↑ 2001 All-Ukrainian Population Census (unavailable link) . The results of the 2001 census for the Autonomous Republic of Crimea (Krymstat). Archived December 28, 2012.
- ↑ 4.1. The national composition of the population // The results of the census in the Crimean Federal District in 2014 on the website of Krymstat
- ↑ The historical names of villages changed in 1944-1948 after the deportation of Crimean peoples are indicated.