En Name: | Raychikhinsk |
Ru Name: | Райчихинск |
Coordinates: | 49.7833°N 154°W |
Map Label Position: | top |
Image Coa: | Coat of Arms of Raychikhinsk (Amur oblast).png |
Federal Subject: | Amur Oblast |
Adm Data As Of: | November 2013 |
Adm City Jur: | Raychikhinsk Urban Okrug |
Adm Ctr Of: | Raychikhinsk Urban Okrug |
Inhabloc Cat: | Town |
Mun Data As Of: | July 2013 |
Urban Okrug Jur: | Raychikhinsk Urban Okrug |
Mun Admctr Of: | Raychikhinsk Urban Okrug |
Leader Title: | Head |
Leader Name: | Viktor Radchenko |
Pop 2010Census: | 20534 |
Established Date: | 1932 |
Current Cat Date: | 1944 |
Prev Name1: | Raychikha |
Prev Name1 Date: | 1944 |
Postal Codes: | 676770–676772, 676776, 676779 |
Dialing Codes: | 41647 |
Website: | http://www.raychihinsk.ru |
Date: | April 2010 |
Raychikhinsk (Russian: Райчи́хинск) is a town in Amur Oblast, Russia, located in the Zeya–Bureya basin, about 40km (30miles) from the Amur River and the border with China, and about 165km (103miles) east of Blagoveshchensk, the administrative center of the oblast. Population:
The town is located near a brown coal deposit which had been known of since the late 1800s. Mining began in 1913, with the foundation of the first permanent settlement in 1932, named Raychikha (Russian: Райчиха) after a local stream.
From 1938 until 1942, Raychikha was host to a prison camp of the gulag system, where up to 11,000 prisoners were kept for forced labor in the mining of coal.[1]
In 1944, it was granted town status and given its present name.
Within the framework of administrative divisions, it is, together with three rural localities, incorporated as Raychikhinsk Urban Okrug—an administrative unit with the status equal to that of the districts.[2] As a municipal division, this administrative unit also has urban okrug status.[3]
Brown coal mining remains the main economic focus of the town; two open-pit mines surround the town almost completely. The city's largest enterprise is JSC Amursky Coal (Severo-Vostochny and Yerkovetsky open-pit mines, Kontaktovy plot).
The town is terminus for a 39km (24miles) branch line, which connects to the Trans-Siberian Railway at Bureya.