Butyrsky District Explained

En Name:Butyrsky District
Ru Name:Бутырский район
Image View:Вид с Останкинской телебашни на 'Савеловский-Сити'.jpg
Image Coa:Coat of Arms of Butyrsky (municipality in Moscow).png
Federal Subject:Moscow
Area Km2:5.04
Pop Latest:68700
Pop Latest Date:2017
Website:http://butyrsky.mos.ru/
Date:August 2011

Butyrsky District (Russian: Бутырский райо́н) is an administrative district (raion) of North-Eastern Administrative Okrug, and one of the 125 raions of Moscow, Russia. It is 6 km north of the Moscow city center, located just outside the third ring road, with Timiryazevsky District to the west and Marfino District and Maryina roshcha District to the east. The area of the district is 5.04km2.[1] Population: 68,700 (2017 est.).

History

History first records the village of Butyrka in the 14th century, on the road from Moscow north to Dmitriv (that road is now Butyrskaya Street running up the western border of the district.)[2] The village eventually came into the possession of boyar Nikita Romanovich Zakharin, the grandfather of Tsar Michael I. The farming area gradually developed as a soldier's settlement, then as a fashionable residential area after 1812.[2] After WWII, the area developed with blocks of apartment buildings.

See also

References

Sources

55.8161°N 37.5858°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: General Information. Butyrsky District. russian. February 5, 2018.
  2. Web site: History of the District. Butyrsky District. ru.