Novocherkassk Explained

En Name:Novocherkassk
Ru Name:Новочеркасск
Coordinates:47.4222°N 40.0939°W
Map Label Position:top
Image Coa:Novocherkassk COA (2008).png
Federal Subject:Rostov Oblast
Adm City Jur:Novocherkassk Urban Okrug
Adm Ctr Of:Novocherkassk Urban Okrug
Inhabloc Cat:City
Urban Okrug Jur:Novocherkassk Urban Okrug
Mun Admctr Of:Novocherkassk Urban Okrug
Leader Title:Head of Administration
Leader Name:Anatoly Volkov
Representative Body:Council of Deputies
Pop 2010Census:168746
Pop 2010Census Rank:108th
Established Date:1805
Postal Codes:3464xx
Dialing Codes:8635
Website:http://www.novochgrad.ru

Novocherkassk (Russian: Новочерка́сск|lit=New Cherkassk) is a city in Rostov Oblast, Russia, located near the confluence of the Tuzlov and Aksay Rivers, the latter a distributary of the Don River. Novocherkassk is best known as the cultural capital of the Cossacks, and as the official capital of the Don Cossacks. Population:

History

Imperial era

Foundation

Although the first settlement in the region was founded by Temroqwa Idar,[1] [2] the city of Novocherkassk was founded in 1805 by Lieutenant-general Matvei Platov, the Ataman of the Don Cossacks, as the administrative center of the Don Host Oblast. It was established in reaction to the original administrative center, the stanitsa of Cherkassk, being deemed unsuitable as the capital for the Don Cossacks for several reasons. Cherkassk was repeatedly flooded for long periods of time due to its low-lying location on the banks of the Don River, and attempts at constructing levees to protect the town were found to be too costly and ineffective. Additionally, Cherkassk was prone to destructive fires due to its chaotic layout and wooden buildings, and was located far away from any major roads. Despite the fact that ten of the eleven representatives of the villages that were part of Cherkassk refused to move the capital, Platov still made a presentation to Tsar Alexander I asking him to allow the capital of the Don Cossacks to be moved to another location, and was granted permission in a decree from the Tsar on August 23, 1804.

Plan as new capital of the Don Cossacks

Platov and the engineer François Sainte de Wollant developed Novocherkassk as a planned city, deciding to build it on a location at the top of a hill known as the "Wolf's Lair" to the north of Cherkassk, near the confluence of the Tuzlov River and Aksay River. On November 7, 1804, De Wollant and Platov presented to Tsar Alexander a plan for the future of the city and an extensive report, in which the clearly embellished merits of the area chosen for construction were described. The city was designed in the popular traditions of European models of urban development, with spacious areas, wide avenues and boulevards full of greenery. De Wollant, calling the future Novocherkassk "little Paris" on the basis of numerous town squares, each of which was supposed to feature a church, and to have streets beginning radially around each square. On December 31, 1804, after reviewing the plan and the report of Platov and De Wollant, Tsar Alexander personally inscribed: "To be according to this. Alexander". The construction of the city was slow, primarily because of the reluctance of most Don Cossacks to leave their homes in Cherkassk, and the new capital being 20km (10miles) from the River Don, with which the Cossacks were closely connected throughout its history. To compensate, there were even plans to deepen the Aksay River (a distributary of the Don) where the new city was located to eventually alter the course of the Don through the city. This plan was abandoned due to lack of funds, and for more than three decades the question of the place of the capital of the Don Cossack remained unresolved, while growth of Novocherkassk stagnated.

By 1837, an alternative to transfer the capital to the village of Aksayskoy, which was also on a hill and near the Don, gained popularity. However, Tsar Nicholas I personally inspected Novocherkassk and the village of Aksayskoy that same year, and after returning to Saint Petersburg ordered the Don Cossacks to keep the capital in Cherkassk because of the difficulties and uselessness of the transfer. In the first half of the 19th century, Novocherkassk was built only as an army center, administrative buildings, guest yards, taverns, wine cellars, hotels, and generals and noblemen's houses. In the 1850s, industrialization reached Novocherkassk and industrial enterprises were formed, however only one-thousand of the city's twenty-thousand residents worked in them.

Soviet era

On the eve of the February Revolution, Novocherkassk had a population of about sixty thousand people, about twenty-five thousand of whom were serving Cossacks and their families, three thousand were noblemen, and about five hundred were clergymen. Novocherkassk, unlike many Russian cities at the time, had almost no permanent merchants or peasants. During the Russian Civil War from 1917 to 1922, Novocherkassk was the center of the Don Army counter-revolution and came under the command of General Alexey Kaledin. The Red Army eventually defeated ousted the White-aligned Don Army from Novocherkassk on January 7, 1920.

During World War II, the Wehrmacht of Nazi Germany occupied Novocherkassk between July 24, 1942 and February 13, 1943. The city was chosen as the headquarters of the Don Army Group, headed by Erich v. Manstein in November of 42’.

On June 1–2, 1962, events known as the Novocherkassk massacre occurred when food riots and workers rights protests broke out following a labor strike at the locomotive factory, the Novocherkassk Electric Locomotive Plant, in the city. The protests were suppressed by troops of the Soviet Army, resulting in 26 protesters being killed and 87 being wounded.

On November 20, 1990, Andrei Chikatilo, one of the Soviet Union's most prolific serial killers, with 56 convicted murders, was arrested in Novocherkassk. On 14 February 1994, he was taken from his death row cell to a soundproofed room in Novocherkassk prison and executed with a single gunshot behind the right ear.[3] [4] He was buried in an unmarked grave at the prison cemetery.[5]

Recent history

On October 5–6, 1991, a meeting of the Grand Circle of the Union of Cossacks of the Don Military Region took place, where the status of the historical and modern center of the Don Cossacks was established in the city, officially making Novocherkassk the capital of the Don Cossacks. On July 17–18, 1993, a meeting of the United Supreme Circle of Cossack troops of Russia and abroad was held in Moscow, where Novocherkassk was proclaimed the world capital of the Cossacks.

Administrative and municipal status

Within the framework of administrative divisions, it is incorporated as Novocherkassk Urban Okrug—an administrative unit with the status equal to that of the districts.[6] As a municipal division, this administrative unit also has urban okrug status.[7]

Economy

Novocherkassk NEVZ ElektroVagon Plant, trains and locomotives.

Culture and religion

Novocherkassk was once an archiepiscopal see of the Greek Orthodox Church and has a huge neo-Byzantine cathedral (1904), as well as the Church of Our Lady of the Don (2013), the palace of the ataman of the Cossacks, and monuments to Matvei Platov and Yermak Timofeyevich (Mikhail Mikeshin, 1904). During the bicentenary celebrations in September 2005 another monument, dedicated to the reconciliation of White and Red Cossacks, was opened in the presence of the members of the Romanov family.

In 1856, the Trinity Church was built, but later it was destroyed.

Cinemas

Monuments

Twin towns – sister cities

See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in Russia.

Novocherkassk is twinned with:[9]

Notable people

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bronevsky . S.N. . Historical summary on Russia's relations with Persia, Georgia and with the mountain peoples of the Caucasus . 2021-09-09 . Vostlit.
  2. Khasht, Ali. Circassian Prince Temroqwa Idar.
  3. News: Russia Executes 'Rostov Ripper' Serial Killer. New Straits Times. The New Straits Times Press. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. 16 February 1994. 25 July 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160313022843/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=iu8VAAAAIBAJ&sjid=1xMEAAAAIBAJ&pg=5278,1621788&hl=en#. 13 March 2016. live.
  4. Born to Kill in the USSR p. 197
  5. https://fakty.ua/179768-andrej-chikatilo-ya-molyu-boga-chtoby-takih-kak-ya-bolshe-ne-bylo-na-zemle Андрей Чикатило: ″Я молю Бога, чтобы таких, как я, больше не было на земле!"
  6. Law #340-ZS
  7. Law #237-ZS
  8. News: ПАМЯТНИКИ ПЛАТОВУ. 2016-08-23. Новочеркасский городской информационный портал. 2018-05-20. ru-RU.
  9. Web site: Побратимские связи. novochgrad.ru. Novocherkassk. ru. 2020-02-05.