Chuvanskoye Explained

En Name:Chuvanskoye
Ru Name:Чуванское
Map Label Position:right
Coordinates:65.2167°N 225°W
Federal Subject:Chukotka Autonomous Okrug
Federal Subject Ref:[1]
Adm Data As Of:June 2009
Adm District Jur:Anadyrsky District
Inhabloc Cat:Rural locality
Inhabloc Type:Selo
Mun Data As Of:October 2010
Mun District Jur:Anadyrsky Municipal District
Mun District Jur Ref:[2]
Rural Settlement Jur:Chuvanskoye Rural Settlement
Mun Admctr Of:Chuvanskoye Rural Settlement
Pop 2010Census:209
Pop 2010Census Ref:[3]
Pop Latest:175
Pop Latest Date:January 2018
Pop Latest Ref:[4]
Established Date:1930
Postal Codes:689532
Dialing Codes:42732
Dialing Codes Ref:[5]
Date:November 2009

Chuvanskoye (Russian: Чуванское) is a rural locality (a selo) in Anadyrsky District of Chukotka Autonomous Okrug. Russia, located west of Markovo on the banks of the Yeropol river (a tributary of the Anadyr River meaning "place of the Yukaghir games"[6]), about 780 km from the mouth of the Anadyr.[7] Population: with an estimated population as of 1 January 2015 of 188. Municipally, the village is incorporated as Chuvanskoye Rural Settlement.

History

There are two theories regarding the origin of the name. The first states that Chuvanskoye is simply named after the Chuvans themselves, whereas the second theory suggests that the name is derived from an older tribe, the Cha'achen, who used to live in the area and were a Yukaghir tribe from which the Chukchi themselves eventually developed.

Chuvanskoye was founded in 1930 as a collective farm, which was reorganised in the 1940s as the Chuvanskoye Kolkhoz "Znamya Sovetov" (although other sources suggest the village was not formally established until 1951[8]). In the 1960s the Kolkhoz was merged with the collective farm in Markovo and Lamutskoye to form the "Markovsky State Farm". As a result of the collapse of the Soviet Union, small villages like Chuvanskoye were extremely hard hit. In 2000, the monthly living wage across Chukotka was estimated at R.3,800 however, the average wage in Chuvanskoye was a meagre R.50–100.[9]

Demographics

Population a significant reduction on a 2006 estimate of 290,[10] though this represented an increase from 217 reported in 2005 for an environmental impact report for the Kupol gold project.[11] Of the people living in the village in 2005, all of them were of indigenous origin.[12] Chuvanskoye and the lands surrounding it are the main area of settlement in the autonomous okrug for the Chuvans ethnic group,[13] a branch of the Yukaghir people, who lived near the Anadyr River. Almost all the men in the village spend most of their time in the Taiga with their reindeer herds.

The village has a school, library and house of culture.

Climate

Chuvanskoye has a continental subarctic climate (Dfc).[14] The village experiences extremely cold winters. Temperatures generally do not rise above freezing between the beginning of October and the following May and are generally below −20 °C between the beginning of November and the following February. The summer is short and mild with temperatures averaging above 10 °C in July only, although record temperatures over 30 °C have been recorded.

See also

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Law #33-OZ, Article 13.2
  2. Law #148-OZ, Article 10
  3. The results of the 2010 Census are given for Chuvanskoye Rural Settlement, a municipal formation of Anadyrsky Municipal District. According to Law #148-OZ, Chuvanskoye is the only inhabited locality on the territory of Chuvanskoye Rural Settlement.
  4. Office of the Federal State Statistics Service for Khabarovsk Krai, Magadan Oblast, Jewish Autonomous Oblast and Chukotka Autonomous Okrug. Численность населения Чукотского автономного округа по муниципальным образованиям на 1 января 2018 года
  5. http://www.minjustmag.ru/amc.html Ministry of Justice of the Russian Federation
  6. http://www.chukot.izbirkom.ru/way/935141.html Chuvanskoye
  7. Chereshev, p.11
  8. http://www.anadyr-mr.ru/region/inform/chuvanskoe.php Rural Village of Chuvanskoye
  9. Chereshev, p.13
  10. Strogoff, p. 93
  11. Bema Gold Corporation, p.87
  12. Bema Gold Corporation, p.89
  13. Dallman, Map 3.6
  14. McKnight and Hess, pp.232–5