En Name: | Cherdyn |
Ru Name: | Чердынь |
Other Name: | Чердін |
Other Lang: | Komi |
Coordinates: | 60.4167°N 86°W |
Map Label Position: | top |
Image Coa: | Cherdyn COA (2020).gif |
Federal Subject: | Perm Krai |
Adm District Jur: | Cherdynsky District |
Adm Ctr Of: | Cherdynsky District |
Inhabloc Cat: | Town |
Mun District Jur: | Cherdynsky Municipal District |
Urban Settlement Jur: | Cherdynskoye Urban Settlement |
Mun Admctr Of1: | Cherdynsky Municipal District |
Mun Admctr Of2: | Cherdynskoye Urban Settlement |
Pop 2010Census: | 4920 |
Postal Codes: | 618601, 618603 |
Cherdyn (Russian: Че́рдынь; Komi: Чердін) is a town and the administrative center of Cherdynsky District in Perm Krai, Russia, located on the Kolva River. Population:
Local authorities advertise Cherdyn to tourists as the capital of the ancient Principality of Great Perm.[1] [2] This information is based on an 1835 study by the Swedish historian A.M. Strinnholm[3] as well as the 1815 study by the Russian historian Nikolay Karamzin.[4] Strinnholm mentioned that the last trip of Scandinavian Vikings to Bjarmia (aka the Great Perm) happened in 1222. Four well-equipped ships of Haakon IV of Norway burned Bjarmian towns to the ground.
After that, the fur trade between the Great Perm and Western Europe was possible only via the Novgorod Republic, which became the suzerain of all Northern Russia. After the centralization of Russian principalities by the Grand Dukes of Moscow, the princes of Perm, who already had Russian names, became their vassals as well as answering to Novgorod. Great Perm–Cherdyn supplied a great deal of silver paid as tribute of Moscow, which in turn paid the Golden Horde. Tension between Moscow and Novgorod led to a war of 1471, after which the defeated Novgorod Republic was annexed by the Grand Duchy of Moscow. The next year (1472) Cherdyn, Pokcha, and all other towns of Great Perm also became the prizes of conquest. The main fort of the Muscovites was built in Pokcha, located 7km (04miles) to the north of Cherdyn. It was burned by indigenous tribes in the beginning of the 16th century.
Cherdyn, as well as all of Perm, was still governed by the dynasty of local Great Perm princes until 1505. After that, the Grand Duke sent a governor from Moscow, and he chose Cherdyn as his residence. In 1535, Cherdyn was granted town rights. It was the starting point of an early river route to Siberia. Following the establishment of the Babinov Road—a more traveled overland route—the town quickly lost its significance.
Within the framework of administrative divisions, Cherdyn serves as the administrative center of Cherdynsky District, to which it is directly subordinated.[5] As a municipal division, the town of Cherdyn is incorporated within Cherdynsky Municipal District as Cherdynskoye Urban Settlement.[6]
Cherdyn has a subarctic climate (Köppen climate classification Dfc), with very cold winters and warm summers. Precipitation is moderate and is somewhat higher in summer and fall than at other times of the year.
In 1934, during the times of Stalin, Cherdyn was the place to which poet Osip Mandelstam was sentenced to internal exile with his wife Nadezhda.