Akhalkalaki uezd explained

Area Total Km2:2,739.32
Established Date:1874
Established Title:Established
Extinct Date:1930
Extinct Title:Abolished
Mapsize:220px
Akhalkalaki uezd
Native Name:Ахалкалакский уезд
Native Name Lang:ru
Population As Of:1916
Population Density Km2:auto
Population Rural:93.42%
Population Total:107,173
Population Urban:6.58%
Seat:Akhalkalak
(present-day Akhalkalaki)
Seat Type:Capital
Settlement Type:Uezd
Subdivision Name:Russian Empire
Subdivision Name1:Caucasus
Subdivision Name2:Tiflis
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Viceroyalty
Subdivision Type2:Governorate
Total Type:Total

The Akhalkalaki uezd was a county (uezd) of the Tiflis Governorate of the Caucasus Viceroyalty of the Russian Empire, and then of Democratic Republic of Georgia, with its administrative centre in Akhalkalak (present-day Akhalkalaki). The county bordered the Gori uezd to the north, the Borchaly uezd to the east, the Alexandropol uezd of the Erivan Governorate and the Kars and Ardahan okrugs of the Kars Oblast to the south, and the Akhaltsikhe uezd to the west. The area of the county roughly corresponded to the contemporary Samtskhe–Javakheti region of Georgia.

History

The territory of the Akhalkalaki uezd, then part of the Akhaltsikhe uezd, entered into the Kutais Governorate of the Russian Empire following the Russo-Turkish War of 1828. By 1874, the Akhkalaki uezd was detached from the hitherto larger Akhaltsikhe uezd, becoming a constituent county of the Tiflis Governorate.

Following the Russian Revolution, the Akhalkalaki uezd was incorporated into the short-lived Democratic Republic of Georgia, however, it was strongly disputed by the Democratic Republic of Armenia which also claimed the county on the grounds of history and ethnography.

As a result of the Ottoman occupation of the uezd, of the initial 80,000 Armenians in 1918, 30,000 died whilst the surviving 40,000 still in the district were affected by famine and concubinage.[1]

Lord Curzon during the Paris Peace Conference discussions on the fate of the independent Transcaucasian republics assessed the ethnographic situation in the southwestern uezds of the Tiflis Governorate:[2]

On the grounds of nationality, therefore, these districts ought to belong to Armenia, but they command the heart of Georgia strategically, and on the whole it would seem equitable to assign them to Georgia, and give their Armenian inhabitants the option of emigration into the wide territories assigned to the Armenians towards the south-west.

Administrative divisions

The subcounties (uchastoks) of the Akhalkalaki uezd in 1913 were as follows:

Name1912 populationArea
Baraletskiy uchastok 51,061895verst2
Bogdanovskiy uchastok 41,3311512verst2

Demographics

Russian Empire Census

According to the Russian Empire Census, the Akhalkalaki uezd had a population of 72,709 on, including 37,903 men and 34,806 women. The majority of the population indicated Armenian to be their mother tongue, with significant Tatar, Georgian, and Russian speaking minorities.[3]

Linguistic composition of the Akhalkalaki uezd in 1897!Language!Native speakers!%
Armenian52,53972.26
Tatar6,5729.04
Georgian6,4488.87
Russian5,1557.09
Kurdish8101.11
Turkish2960.41
Ukrainian2860.39
Jewish2110.29
Polish1450.20
Lithuanian870.12
Greek750.10
German400.06
Belarusian120.02
Avar-Andean60.01
Ossetian40.01
Chechen30.00
Mingrelian30.00
Persian30.00
Romanian30.00
Other110.02
TOTAL72,709100.00

Kavkazskiy kalendar

According to the 1917 publication of Kavkazskiy kalendar, the Akhalkalaki uezd had a population of 107,173 on, including 56,140 men and 51,033 women, 106,307 of whom were the permanent population, and 866 were temporary residents:

NationalityUrbanRuralTOTAL
Number%Number%Number%
Armenians6,15187.1976,62476.5382,77577.23
Georgians2653.7610,03910.0310,3049.61
Russians4296.087,1137.107,5427.04
Sunni Muslims00.005,4315.425,4315.07
Kurds00.009040.909040.84
Jews2042.8900.002040.19
Other Europeans60.0970.01130.01
TOTAL7,055100.00100,118100.00107,173100.00

See also

Bibliography

41.4056°N 43.4861°W

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hovannisian, Richard G. . The Republic of Armenia . 1971–1996 . University of California Press . 0-520-01805-2 . 2 . Berkeley . 151–152 . 238471.
  2. Book: Hovannisian, Richard G.. The Republic of Armenia. 1971–1996. University of California Press. 0-520-01805-2. 1. Berkeley. 267. 238471.
  3. Web site: Демоскоп Weekly - Приложение. Справочник статистических показателей. . 2022-06-30 . www.demoscope.ru.