Barsuki, Ingushetia Explained

En Name:Barsuki
Ru Name:Барсуки
Loc Name1:Буро́-Кӏале́
Loc Lang1:Ingush
Coordinates:43.2608°N 44.8078°W
Map Label Position:right
Federal Subject:Ingushetia
Adm City Jur:Nazranovsky District
Inhabloc Cat:Selo
Pop 2010Census:10 333
Pop Latest:7601
Pop Latest Date:2021
Pop Latest Ref:[1]
Established Date:1836
Established Date Ref:[2]
Postal Codes:386128

Barsuki (Ingush: Буро́-Кӏале́|Buro-Kʼale) is a rural locality (a selo) in Nazranovsky District of the Republic of Ingushetia, Russia. It forms the municipality of the rural settlement of Barsuki as the only settlement in its composition.[3] [4]

Geography

The village is located at the confluence of the with the Sunzha, northeast of the district center of the city of Nazran. The main part of the village is located between Sunzha (in the east) and the (in the west). On the eastern outskirts of the village are the federal highway "Kavkaz" and the railway line of the North Caucasian Railway (section -).

The nearest settlements: in the northwest - the village of, in the northeast - the village of Plievo, in the east - the village of Gazi-Yurt, in the south - the village of Ekazhevo and in the southwest - the city of Nazran.[5]

Etymology

The Russian name of the settlement, according to some sources, goes back to the name of the officer Bortsak Malsagov. The Ingush name of the village "Буро́-Кӏале́"[6] (also "БурокIалхе"[7]) is translated as "under the fortress" or "under the fortification".[3] [4]

History

Barsuki was founded in 1836.[2] Characteristics of the village (village Bursuka) as of 1874: "at the confluence of the Nazranovka River into the Sunzha river", 232 houses, 1161 residents (577 males and 584 females), Ingush (Sunni Muslims) live.[8]

As of 1925, the village of Bursuki was the center of the Bursukovsky village council of the Nazranovsky district of the Ingush Autonomous Oblast of the North Caucasus Krai, which also included the . The village consisted of 492 households, 2472 people lived in it (1217 males and 1255 females). The settlement at the Nazran fortress included only 13 households, 121 people lived (69 males and 52 females). The village had 2 wells, a primary school, 14 small industrial enterprises (including 12 mills and 2 forges), a state sack point, and 2 party organizations. Also, one school of the first stage was located in the settlement at the Nazran fortress.[9]

From 1944 to 1958, during the period of the deportation of Chechens and Ingush and the abolition of the Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, the village was called Khordzhin (translated from Ossetian — "fruitful").[10] [11]

As of January 1, 1990, the village was the center of the Barsukinsky village council, which also included two small farms — Tibi-Khi and Blue Stone. In the village itself, on that date, 3002 people of the actual population lived.[12]

In 1995, the village of Barsuki was abolished and included in the city of Nazran as one of the administrative districts.[13] In 2009, on the basis of the abolished Barsukinsky administrative district, withdrawn from the city, the village of Barsuki was recreated and a municipal formation was formed on its basis with the status of a rural settlement as part of the Nazranovsky district.[3] [4]

Notable people

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Таблица 5. Численность населения России, федеральных округов, субъектов Российской Федерации, городских округов, муниципальных районов, муниципальных округов, городских и сельских поселений, городских населенных пунктов, сельских населенных пунктов с населением 3000 человек и более. Всероссийской переписи населения 2020 года
  2. Web site: Список населённых пунктов по Ингушской АО, составленный по материалам Всесоюзной переписи населения 1926 года. / p. 8
  3. Web site: Закон Республики Ингушетия от 23 февраля 2009 года № 5-рз «Об установлении границ муниципальных образований Республики Ингушетия и наделении их статусом сельского поселения, муниципального района и городского округа».
  4. Web site: Закон РИ от 17 декабря 2009 года № 62-РЗ «О внесении изменений в Закон Республики Ингушетия "Об установлении границ муниципальных образований Республики Ингушетия и наделении их статусом сельского поселения, муниципального района и городского округа"».
  5. Web site: Map of Chechnya and Ingushetia. (rar) (not earlier than 1995). Volume 8 MB
  6. Web site: Официальный сайт администрации сельского поселения Барсуки Назрановского муниципального района Республики Ингушетия. История сельского поселения Барсуки. https://web.archive.org/web/20150810215627/http://adm-barsuki.ru/index.php/nashe-selo/istoriya-s-p-barsuki . 2015-08-10 .
  7. Web site: О некоторых топонимических названиях плоскостной Ингушетии // Литературная Ингушетия. Куркиев. А.. 2002. ru. Литературная Ингушетия : журнал. № 2 (20)
  8. Сборник сведений о Кавказе. Том V / Списки населенных мест Кавказского края / Ч. 1. Губернии: Эриванская, Кутаисская, Бакинская и Ставропольская и Терская область / Сompiled by Н. Зейдлиц. 1879 / p. 445.
  9. Web site: Список населённых мест Северо-Кавказского края. Ростов-на-Дону, 1925. pp. 464—465..
  10. Web site: В Президиум Верховного Совета РСФСР. Президиум Верховного Совета Северо-Осетинской АССР просит утвердить его постановление о переименовании населённых пунктов в новых районах, вошедших в состав Северо-Осетинской АССР.... https://web.archive.org/web/20180830005016/http://www.ingushetiyaru.org/history/ingushi_v_vov/print.html?id=112 . 2018-08-30 .
  11. Ведомости Верховного Совета РСФСР, 1958, № 5.
  12. http://arhiv-chr.ru/deyatelnost/nashi-izdaniya/send/5-nashi-izdaniya/30-arkhivnyj-vestnik-1|Численность наличного населения по сельским населённым пунктам ЧИАССР на 1 января 1990 года
  13. Web site: Изменения в административном устройстве РФ.