• Northeastern Crimea is an image of the region. Northeastern Crimea. Sivash-plain region, located in the north-eastern part of the Crimean peninsula. The composition of the region: - Nizhnegorsk region. What have we learned

    Crimea is rich in recreational resources. His geographical position And weather created conditions for the formation of unique biological complexes. Which ones, we will consider in this article.

    Natural zones of the Crimean peninsula

    There are three main natural areas:

    • steppe;
    • altitudinal zones;
    • hard-leaved evergreen forests (Mediterranean).

    Rice. 1. detailed map natural areas Crimea

    Most of the peninsula is occupied by steppes. This is a flat area, completely developed by man. In the northeast, closer to the Sea of ​​Azov, there are semi-desert steppes and salt marshes.

    The greatest wealth of the flat part of Crimea is its fertile land. It is represented by chernozems and dark chestnut soils. To date, 70% of the territory of the steppe has been mastered by man. There are plantations of corn, rice, wheat, sunflower, and grapes.

    Rice. 2. Vineyards in Crimea

    Among the plants, feather grass, fescue, and perennial grasses predominate. In spring, the fields are covered with plantations of amazing flowers: tulips, irises. Animals live in burrows. These are ground squirrels, jerboas, ferrets, hamsters, various mice. Lots of steppe birds.

    Natural zones of mountain ranges

    The foothills are represented by forest-steppe. The main representative of this part is oak. There are also many other Mediterranean plants: maple, hawthorn, euonymus, pistachios, blackthorn.

    On the northern and southern slopes of the main mountain range there are broad-leaved forests. The soils here are mountain-forest. A special place on the tops of the mountains is given to the Crimean pine. This tree is low, but with a very wide and spreading crown.

    Rice. 3. Landscape in Crimea

    Yayla are covered with mountain steppes and meadows. The soils are appropriate: mountain-steppe and mountain-meadow. Flora is represented by grass steppe plants, meadow flowers. In spring, yayla are covered with crocuses, edelweiss are not uncommon.

    Yayly is the Turkic name for pastures on mountain peaks.

    The coastline of the Crimean peninsula is covered with dry juniper-oak forests and shrubs, typical for the Mediterranean climate. Plants thrive in brown soils. Among the unique species are found: derzhitree, sumac, skumpia, cistus, walnut, almond.

    Many species of animals of the mountainous Crimea are completely exterminated by man. Now in wild nature you can meet only deer and roe deer, wild boar and mouflon. There are even fewer predators: marten, fox, weasel.

    What have we learned?

    Crimea is a rich fertile land, fully developed by man. wild forests there are practically none left in this region, and all unique animals live in reserves. At the same time, nature is very rich here: the steppe region in the north of the peninsula, the most beautiful broad-leaved forests on the Southern and Northern slopes of the Mountain Range and the amazing hot Mediterranean region on the very coast of the Black Sea.

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    In 1475, the Ottomans retook Kaffa in three days and gave it the name Kefe, Soldaya stood a little longer, but she also passed to the Turks, becoming Sudak. Kerch as part of the Ottoman Empire was called the city of Cherzeti, which quickly fell into decay, often being subjected to Cossack raids.

    Meanwhile, the Crimean peninsula became interested Russian state. The Ottoman Empire understood that it was necessary to strengthen its positions and at the beginning of the 18th century. initiated the construction of the Yeni-Kale fortress. But in 1774 the fortress and Kerch became the property Russian Empire, and from 1783 the entire Crimea belonged to Russia.

    Life and worldview of the peoples of the Eastern Crimea

    As you can see, the history of the Eastern Crimea is literally full of events. At the same time, one should not forget that the past is, first of all, the life and activities of specific people who produced something and left behind traces of their existence.

    The first inhabitants of the Eastern Crimea ate thanks to hunting and gathering. Neanderthals lived in caves, dressed in clothes made from the skins of dead animals, ate meat roasted over a fire. In the Mesolithic era, the ancient inhabitants of the Crimea already had a bow and arrows, but also used spears and darts, invented earlier. In the lower reaches of the Crimean rivers that flowed into the Sea of ​​Azov, there was always a lot of game, so this part of the east of the peninsula was especially attractive to the first hunters.

    The Cro-Magnons already lived in tribal matriarchal communities; they began to build houses in the form of tents from bones and branches. In addition, at this stage of history, the first religious ideas and primitive art were born.

    The emergence of agriculture in the Neolithic period led to the rapid settlement of certain territories. But, even in the Bronze Age there were such inhabitants of the Eastern Crimea, who led the semi sedentary life. Representatives of the Yamnaya culture, traces of which were found in burials located on the outskirts of Feodosia, were pastoralists. In the burials of these people, scientists found carts on four wheels, which, most likely, were both means of transportation and dwellings.

    In the era of early metals, the inhabitants of the Eastern Crimea worshiped the Sun, the god of fertility, they had a bull cult.

    In the first half of the 2nd millennium BC. e. a significant part of the inhabitants of the east of the peninsula had housing in the form of a dugout or semi-dugout. At the end of the Bronze Age, there were few nomads left, but due to the deterioration of the climate in the 11th-10th centuries. BC e. settled inhabitants of the steppe regions left their native places. Those who remained were forced to return to the occupation of their ancestors - to nomadism.

    The Cimmerians lived at the beginning of the Iron Age. Their appearance and horse harness fully corresponded to the time. The Cimmerian walked in a caftan tied with a wide belt. Weapons were attached to such clothes. Families of livestock warriors followed their breadwinners on wagons. They left few burials, the dead relatives were more often interred in the burial mounds of the Bronze Age. Rare burials of this people are decorated with sculptures in the form human body with weapon. It is interesting that facial features were not depicted on such stone statues. Apparently, because of some religious considerations.

    That part of the people who lived in the Eastern Crimea in the Late Bronze Age and could not or did not want to return to nomadism moved to the Crimean Mountains and the foothill regions of the peninsula. There, the settlers built dugouts and semi-dugouts, and over time they began to build ground structures with stone walls. Near such dwellings, pits for storing grain were found. Scientists call this culture Kizil-Koba and almost agree that its representatives were Taurians.

    The inhabitants of the mountainous regions of the Eastern Crimea settled collectively, in several large families, used molded dishes, and with the arrival of the Greeks, they got acquainted with pottery. The dead Kizil-Kobans were buried in stone boxes that rose above the surface of the earth.

    Unlike most of the local population, the Scythians were nomadic warriors, so it took time for them to learn how to cultivate the land and manage to settle down. Even their women could oppose the enemy in case of impending danger, so it is not surprising that the representatives of these tribes worshiped the god of war. Over time, part of the Scythians switched to a settled way of life. Around the settlements of the Eastern Crimea, then multi-layer mounds appeared, in which there were crypts of members of a particular family.

    The first Eastern Crimean Greeks lived in dugouts and semi-dugouts. They did not build cities with large houses at once. On the emergence of the ancient policies of the Crimea and salient features life of their inhabitants, is described in detail in a separate series of articles on our site, so we invite the reader to familiarize themselves with this information. In the III century. BC e. the Greeks had to think about the safety of their own homes, as the barbarians began to become more active. At that time, the Hellenes fortified pre-existing settlements, for example, on the lands of the village of Beregovoye; built new strongholds (including Biyuk-Yanyshar). However, such actions could not save many settlements around Feodosia, where at the end of the 2nd - in the 1st century. BC e. there was no one else. It is not known exactly what happened then, but there is an assumption that the Bosporans suffered as a result of the Sarmatian raid. In the 1st century BC e. Asander resumed the construction of fortresses. Under him, the Kutlak stronghold and the fortifications of the Solkhat valley grew.

    As for the religion of the Hellenes of the Eastern Crimea, they traditionally revered the gods of Olympus. In Theodosius, the supreme deity was Apollo. The dead Hellenes were cremated. Christianity began to penetrate this part of the peninsula in the 3rd-4th centuries, and a little earlier, at the beginning of our era, its population became acquainted with Gnostic teachings.

    The Goths of the Eastern Crimea, unlike the Hellenes, were originally warriors, the Bosporan kingdom even provided them with their ships. With the help of such ships, the Germans were engaged in piracy. Gradually, everything changed: having felt the taste of a peaceful life, the Goths forgot about the way of existence of their ancestors, began to equip their own settlements. The Crimean nature influenced the Alans in the same way. This wild Sarmatian tribe settled in the Crimea for a long time. As already mentioned, its representatives in the III century. were the founders of Sugdeya, which in the VIII century. became the center of the Christian episcopate. The Alans also lived on the territory of Feodosia.

    In that part of the Eastern Crimea, where from the XIII century. the Mongol-Tatars settled, life also stabilized. The capital of the ulus, Solkhat, has turned into a city with a developed infrastructure. Representatives of various nationalities lived there, who settled in separate communities. Almost everyone knows that the Tatars who lived in the Crimea have long been adherents of Islam. However, few people know that Islam spread precisely from Solkhat. At the same time, in those areas where there were few Mongol-Tatars, alien pagans often adopted Christianity.

    Enough has been written about the way of life of the Venetians and Genoese. There is also an article on our website that tells in detail about these inhabitants of the Eastern Crimea. Since the population of trading posts was multinational, it professed different religions. Among the inhabitants of the fortresses there were Orthodox and Catholics, representatives of the Armenian Christian community and Jews. After the Italian fortresses of Crimea were occupied by the Ottomans, the number of mosques increased sharply there. These and other lands of the peninsula became an important appendage of the Ottoman Empire, Istanbul did a lot to ensure that Islam prevailed in Crimea and Turkish culture spread.

    From the end of the XVIII century. Muslims gradually left the Crimea, many Tatars then went to live in Turkey. The authorities of the next owner of the peninsula, the Russian Empire, immediately began to populate the deserted lands. Russian landowners with their own peasants and European settlers came to Eastern Crimea. So in those days the Germans appeared in Sudak, and the Bulgarians in Koktebel. Features of the life of the peoples who lived in the Eastern Crimea in different periods of its history have partially survived to this day. The worldview of modern Crimeans is also a symbiosis of different ideas about the universe and the role of man in it.

    Development of agriculture, crafts, industry
    and trade in Eastern Crimea

    Archaeologists managed to find Mesolithic sites near the New World and north of Sudak, in which, next to the dwellings of people, caught foals, wild pigs and mountain goats were already kept. Agriculture and real cattle breeding appeared in the Neolithic. During that period of the past, there was an active settlement of the expanses around modern Feodosia and the territories of the Kerch Peninsula. One of these sites was located near the village of Primorsky.

    The inhabitants of the Eastern Crimea, who chose a settled way of life for themselves, preferred the cultivation of large cattle. People who did not have time to say goodbye to nomadism more often bred small animals. In the Bronze Age, mankind had already tamed goats, sheep, cows and horses, sowed wheat and barley.

    There are fewer monuments of the Catacomb culture here, but they also exist. This culture is characterized by the transition to an integrated agricultural and livestock economy. Near the dwellings of its representatives, stone rounded buildings were found, which may have been pens for pets. Agricultural and cattle-breeding farms also existed among representatives of the Kizil-Koba culture.

    The Cimmerians were nomadic cattle breeders, so they did not cultivate the land, but mainly fought and raised horses. As for the following inhabitants of the Eastern Crimea - the Scythians, then from the V-IV centuries. BC e. a significant part of them were engaged in soil cultivation and livestock breeding. Today it is known that the first agricultural villages of the Scythians were located on the Ak-Monai Isthmus (Front) and on the territory of the Kerch Peninsula (Andreevka). In the IV century. BC e. a large agricultural region was formed around Feodosia, the borders of which passed along the lower reaches of the Salgir, near the rivers Kuchuk-Kara-Su and Biyuk-Kara-Su, went along the Kerch Peninsula to Kazantip, and in the south of Eastern Crimea ended at the Black Sea. Scythian farmers lived in densely located stone houses that stood in villages and farms. Cereal crops, which were grown by the Scythians in the east of the Crimean peninsula, were sold to Greece.

    The appearance of the Scythian at first was not much different from the appearance of the Cimmerian, but over time the weapon changed, new decorations began to appear. Archaeologists have found other arrowheads, long swords and helmets made of bronze. Until the 5th century BC e. in the Eastern Crimea they made decorations in the animal style. Later they were replaced by Greek ornaments.

    During the ancient colonization of the Eastern Crimea, somewhere in the middle of the VI century. BC e., Feodosia began to grow. She was destined to become a major port and the main trading center of the peninsula. The city even minted its own money. Goods from the Eastern Crimea ended up in Balkan Greece, in the cities of the Black Sea region, and on the Aegean Islands. Many countries of the world delivered their products to the Crimea. However, the Greeks not only traded, they were good fishermen, knew how to hunt, were engaged in salt mining, making fabrics, utensils and jewelry, dressing leather. The Hellenes in the Eastern Crimea grew grapes, crops, fruits and vegetables, and raised livestock. In addition, life forced them to learn carpentry, building crafts and carpentry. The Crimean Greeks also had their own ships.

    Under the Polovtsians, the role of Sugdeya (Sudak) increased. In the X-XIII centuries. this city was the largest trade center of the Crimea. Goods from Rus', Eastern Europe and the Eurasian steppes were brought to its port, Mediterranean ships and ships sailed there, on board of which there were merchants from Western Europe, North Africa, Middle East and other parts of the world.

    Under the Mongol-Tatars, Solkhat was of great commercial importance. There you could buy overseas spices, fabrics, leather, sell wax, fur, honey and much more. At the same time, the city was especially famous for its slave markets. Among the sold slaves of Solkhat was the Egyptian sultan Baibars. Good potters, builders and jewelers lived in the capital of Crimea. There was a mint, the services of which were used even by the Genoese Kaffa.

    The neighbors of the Mongol-Tatars - the Italians - were talented artisans. Foreigners were especially surprised by the wonderful products of the Genoese stone-cutters. In addition, the inhabitants of trading posts knew how to process metals, sewed clothes and hats, and made jewelry that was in demand far beyond Gazaria. During the stay of the Italians in the east of the Crimea, the economic role of Feodosia increased again. She flourished again: she received merchant ships from almost all over the world and sent local goods overseas. During the Ottoman period in the history of Crimea, Kaffa remained the same important trading center of the Northern Black Sea region, continued to grow and develop.

    Under the Ottomans, Eastern Crimea became famous for fragrant apples and white cherries from the gardens of Sudak. The peasants of the entire east coast were engaged in viticulture and horticulture, sowing grain and legume crops. On the other side of the Black Sea, the fish caught by the inhabitants of the Eastern Crimea was valued. Far beyond the peninsula, local shoemakers, weavers, and jewelers were known. Their products were sold in numerous shops in Kefe and Sudak, where you could also buy honey, butter and other products. There were also slave markets.

    In the Eastern Crimea, during the reign of the Russian Empire, grapes were grown and fish were caught. At the end of the 18th century, mulberries, lemon trees and other crops were planted in Stary Krym, but only walnuts, almonds and tobacco. In Feodosia and in Kerch they were engaged in the extraction of table salt. At the turn of the XIX and XX centuries. Feodosia again became a large trading port.

    Resorts of Eastern Crimea, monuments of history and architecture

    The fact that Eastern Crimea could be a resort area became clear to Russians only in the second half of the 19th century. Tatars traveled to Solkhat (Old Crimea) to improve their health, even during the existence of the Crimean ulus. The memoirs of the Dominican monk d "Ascoli, who stayed in the capital of Crimea in the first half of the 17th century, have been preserved. He wrote that every year from spring to mid-summer Tatars arrive in Solkhat, who take healing hot baths there with herbs and flowers. D" Ascoli claimed that such baths can cure many diseases. In the 60s. 19th century they remembered the traditions of their ancestors and Stary Krym again became famous as a place for healing. Since then, people suffering from lung diseases and nervous diseases have come to the city. At that time, baths with medicinal herb collected outside the locality.

    The resort history of Koktebel began at the end of the 19th century, after the heirs of E. A. Junge decided to sell off part of the lands that previously belonged to him. People bought up plots and built cottages on them. This area was known as a place of rest for the intelligentsia. Before the Great Patriotic War in Koktebel, rooms and rooms for tourists were already rented out, in the village there was a cafe "Bubny".

    At the same time, Sudak grew. G. Moskvich wrote in 1910 that the tourists of Sudak have the opportunity to swim, ride horses and boats, and take carriage rides. In 1880, vacationers, mostly students and intellectuals, were already coming there en masse, so it was decided to build a zemstvo hospital. However, in the 19th century, healthcare facilities were no longer a curiosity in the eastern part of the peninsula. For example, since 1813 the city hospital in Feodosiya worked, and since 1829 - in Kerch, since 1864 there was an old Crimean medical outpatient clinic.

    The history of medicine in the Eastern Crimea dates back to antiquity. Then the local population used healing mud and sea water to fight against various diseases. After the barbarian raids, medicine revived at the end of the 13th century. Then, already under the Genoese, the hospital of St. John was opened in Feodosia (Kaffa).

    At the beginning of the XX century. It was decided to build the Alexandrida resort in the Kanakskaya Balka tract, but the work went on for a long time, and further revolutionary actions did not allow the plan to be completed. During the First World War, in order to improve their health, wounded soldiers began to come to the east of the peninsula. In the same Old Crimea, a small sanatorium was opened. But Civil War interrupted the process of formation of local resorts.

    Tourists come to Eastern Crimea not only to get medical treatment. There are many monuments of history and architecture in this region of the peninsula.

    In Feodosia, for example, the Mufti-Jami mosque, erected under the Ottomans in 1623, the church of St. Sergius (XIV century), the church in the name of the Holy Great Martyr Catherine (1875), the Aivazovsky fountain and many other buildings and architectural objects, among which in the first place are the ruins of the fortress of Kaffa and the tower of Constantine.

    Among the most interesting buildings in Sudak are the Genoese Choban-Kule tower and the Lutheran church (1887).

    In Koktebel, tourists are always attracted by the Vintage Wine and Cognac Factory, the construction of which began in 1879. A year earlier, L.S. Golitsyn opened a winery in the New World, which was destined to become a Champagne Factory - another attraction of the Eastern Crimea.

    Stary Krym also has several interesting places- Surb-Khach monastery complex (mid-14th century) and Uzbek mosque (1314).

    No less marvelous tourist sites are located on the Kerch Peninsula: the remains of the ancient cities of Panticapaeum and Nymphaeum, the Royal Mound (4th century BC), the Turkish fortress of Yeni-Kale (early 18th century) and the Russian stronghold of Kerch (second half of the 18th century .), as well as the Great Stairs of Mithridates (1832-1840), on the first tier of which you can see a copy of the Crypt of Demeter.

    The main trends in the development of culture and
    formations of Eastern Crimea

    The culture of the Eastern Crimea is traditions, architecture, literature, music, painting, photography, cinematography... It's no secret that all this has been formed over the centuries, thanks to the efforts and talents of representatives of many peoples.

    As for architecture, in this part of the peninsula there are samples of ancient Greek architecture, monuments of the Venetian-Genoese period of history, Tatar, Armenian, Russian buildings. However, in the XV-XVIII centuries. in the Crimea, a single architectural direction was formed, which can be described as a symbiosis of details brought by the Ottomans, Armenians and representatives of the Crimean Tatar people.

    Talented architects, just like philosophers and poets, lived in the Eastern Crimea even during the existence of the Bosporan kingdom. The Greeks introduced the local population to qualitatively new material and cultural values, as a result of which the Greco-Scythian-Meotian culture appeared. And these values ​​were able to survive even the truly Scythian nomadic culture, which was accepted by the alien peoples. True, there is information that the Sarmatians eventually barbarized the Bosporans, but the Greek culture did not disappear without a trace.

    The active development of the ancient cities of Crimea led to the development of painting and sculpture. The drawings in the aforementioned crypt of Demeter allow us to conclude that at the time of the construction of this architectural monument, painting was already subjective.

    In the Byzantine period of the history of the peninsula, as well as under the Italians, Christian culture confidently penetrated into the Eastern Crimea. At this time, the temples were decorated with frescoes. Such examples of church art survived until today, they can be seen in the cities of the East Coast and in the southwestern part of Crimea.

    Little is known about the monumental and decorative art of the Eastern Crimea of ​​the Middle Ages. What survived appeared in the XIV century. And even then the Seljuk architectural style was noticeable. It is believed that in the XII-XIII centuries. church utensils and items that were used during worship were delivered from Asia Minor.

    Over time, Armenian trends joined the culture of the Eastern Crimea, and with the emergence of the Crimean Khanate, they strengthened along with the Seljuk ones. Instead of church construction, the period of construction of mosques and mausoleums begins.

    In the second half of the XIX century. Christianity returned to the Crimea in the guise of Orthodoxy. Russian culture, elements of which can be seen even during the existence of the Tmutarakan principality, is now firmly rooted on the peninsula. Eastern Crimea has become a place of work and recreation for many talented individuals, subjects of the Russian Empire.

    At the beginning of the 20th century, the Cimmerian school of painting arose, whose representatives depicted the unique landscapes of the Eastern Crimea. Among the talented artists who worked in this direction,.

    Films were shot on the shores of the Eastern Crimea " Scarlet Sails”,“ Amphibian Man ”,“ Sportloto-82 ”,“ Pirates of the XX century ”,“ Man from Capuchin Boulevard ”,“ 9th Company ”,“ I will give myself up in good hands ”,“ inhabited island" and others.

    A land where culture develops in modern concept of this word, it is difficult to imagine without educational institutions. Information about schools and gymnasiums in ancient policies is in the article "Greek city-states of Crimea". The Genoese were also not illiterate, just like the inhabitants of the Crimean Khanate, who received knowledge in the madrasah, and the Eastern Crimean Armenians, who had their own schools. A special place at that time was occupied by the theological school at Surb-Khach. Modern education in Eastern Crimea began with the arrival of the Russians.

    In August 1811, a district school was opened in Feodosia. At first it was two-class, but from 1836 it became three-class. At the county school there was a lower department, after which the children freely read, wrote, knew how to count and knew the basics of the Law of God. In 1868 it was transformed into a parish school. Since 1860, there was a private women's boarding school in the city, and since 1866, a women's school has been operating, which later became a gymnasium. In 1885, the district school was renamed into a city school, and soon the duration of study there increased to six years. Since 1912 it has been a four-class higher primary school. Since 1873, the Feodosia State Men's Progymnasium has been operating. After the establishment of Soviet power, the technical school of the peoples of the East was located in its building, later there was a teacher's institute. Since the 19th century private schools also operated in Feodosia. In 1902 and 1915 two private real schools appeared in the city, which soon ceased to exist, so in 1913 the local authorities opened a state educational institution of this type. In addition, after some time, the Teachers' Institute, craft classes, women's vocational, nautical schools, and an Armenian school appeared in the city.

    Thanks to rapid growth the number of educational institutions, the high level of teaching Feodosia became the cultural and educational center of the Eastern Crimea. Creative people, lovers of history and just romance aspired to this ancient city. Since 1880, the Feodosia National Art Gallery of Ivan Aivazovsky has existed, and a year later the first Crimean museum appeared - the Museum of Antiquities. At the beginning of the XX century. Feodosia, like no other city in the Crimea, attracted writers.

    But education developed not only in Feodosia. Kerch at the end XIX-early XX century It was considered one of the educational centers of the Taurida province, folk, nautical and vocational schools, women's and men's gymnasiums worked in the city, and the Kushnikov girl's institute operated. In 1919-1921. in Kerch there was a Bosporus University. In 1804, a decision was made to build a winemaking school in Sudak. In Stary Krym, for example, in 1842 a four-year zemstvo school was opened. According to A. A. Shelyagov in 1914-1915. in the Feodosiya district, which included the Kerch-Yenikalsk city administration, there were 304 educational institutions (of which 8 were secondary or I category and 3 belonged to II category and progymnasiums).

    Famous personalities who lived and worked in Eastern Crimea

    The Crimean peninsula has always attracted bohemians and people who were looking for perfect place for creativity. Famous politicians, artists, poets, writers, singers and people of other public professions visited Eastern Crimea. Since this region is quite large, consider the relationship famous people with individual cities and towns along the coast.

    Let's start with Kerch. IN different times Emperors Peter the Great and Alexander the First visited this settlement with an ancient history. In 1820 A. Pushkin was sent to Kerch, and in 1888 the young A. Chekhov visited this city. In 1914, the people of Kerch had the opportunity to listen to the poems of V. Mayakovsky, but, according to the newspaper notes of that time, they did not like the work of the futurist. J. Matrunetsky lived and painted in Kerch. In 1942, accordionist and vocalist V. Kovtun was born there, in the second half of the 20th century. born journalist S. Dorenko and singer A. Sviridova.

    Catherine II came to Feodosia. The “God-given” city amazed A. Pushkin, K. Paustovsky with its history and nature. Creative people lived there: I. Aivazovsky, K. Bogaevsky, M. Tsvetaeva, V. Mukhina, M. Voloshin, L. Lagorio, A. Fessler, A. Green, S. Balukhaty, V. Zakrutkin, A. Barsak and others .

    Since the 19th century and to this day celebrities go to Koktebel. The sites of E. Junge, P. von Tesch, E. Kiriyenko-Voloshina, opera soloist M. Deisha-Sionitskaya were the first to appear in this village. Among famous people who worked and lived there later, one can name the publicist G. Petrov, M. Voloshin, N. Gumilyov, the sisters Tsvetaev, L. Dmitrieva, F. Ranevskaya, V. Aleinikov, L. Polishchuk, and many others. Even Lenin came to Koktebel.

    Countess de La Mothe (Milady from the novel by A. Dumas) is buried in Stary Krym. A. Grin lived in this village and K. Paustovsky stayed for a long time.

    Famous guests of Sudak: Catherine II, Empress Maria Alexandrovna, future monarch Alexander III, Nicholas II, researcher K. Gablitz, academician P. Pallas, poet and playwright V. Kapnist, historian P. Koeppen, botanist H. Steven. A. Griboyedov, artists I. Aivazovsky and K. Bogaevsky, composers A. Glazunov and N. Cherepnin, as well as A. Tolstoy, M. Voloshin, M. Bulgakov and other famous personalities visited Sudak.

    with the village New World the name of L. S. Golitsin is associated, who bought the estate from the nobleman de Galere and began to engage in winemaking. This almost extreme corner of the Eastern Crimea inspired N. Levin and M. Voloshin.

    This is what Eastern Crimea is like. A land covered with legends and ancient glory, a meeting place for talented people, a strategically important corner of the peninsula and just a resort area suitable for relaxing romantic natures. Eastern Crimea has experienced a lot and many events are yet to come. But the tragic moments of the past and the vicissitudes of the present only strengthen the spirit of the local population, teach them to enjoy every moment, love the sea, mountains, steppe dear to the heart even more and appreciate the guests of the peninsula, which have long been perceived as an integral part of the life of the Crimeans.

    INLIGHT

    While the peninsula is in a fever with every new news regarding the construction of a bridge across the Kerch Strait, another part of the Crimea has planned the construction of another transport crossing over the reservoir. The bridge in the Nizhnegorsk region is an opportunity to attract tourists to the northern region of the peninsula, to give new life local villages to develop infrastructure. On this moment, in the view of many tourists, Crimea is the western harbors, Tarkhankut, Sevastopol-hero, Balaklava bays, the unique South Coast, the Crimean mountains, the gentle sea and the beaches of Feodosia, a historical heritage on the coast of the Kerch Peninsula. The north of Crimea for an ordinary tourist is a white spot on the map. Indeed, what could be interesting in an ordinary steppe, without significant sights, without unique picturesque mountains, forests and noisy entertainment resort towns. Crimean residents hope that there will be a skilled leadership that will be able to turn the northern depressive regions of the peninsula into a resort area that could compete with other tourist regions. An incredible miracle of nature that few tourists have seen is the Arabar arrow. It stretches from the north-west of Crimea to the east, separating the Sea of ​​Azov from Lake Sivash. Throughout its length, the width of the arrow diverges from a minimum of 270 meters to 8 kilometers. Behind the Arabat Spit you can observe the lakes that were dug in Soviet times when sand was mined here.
    The arrow originates on the territory of Ukraine, near Genichesk, and connects with the Crimea in the Leninsky district. The longest river of Crimea, the Salgir, flows into the Sivash Bay. The most frequent visitors to the Arabat Spit are tourists - fans of a relaxing holiday, clean, long beaches, lovers of yacht tourism. There are amazing sunsets and sunrises that do not interfere with observing the high Crimean mountains. A huge number of birds live in the local thickets of reeds, the lakes are filled with fish and shrimps.
    To attract tourists here, it is necessary to create a special innovative project, the basis of which is the construction of a bridge to connect the Crimean peninsula with a spit. To do this, they choose the narrowest place, and then three Crimean regions will become resorts at once - Dzhankoy, Sovetsky and Nizhnegorsky. In addition, it is necessary to make plans for the development of the recreational zone in such a way that the construction of roads and infrastructure does not destroy the local ecological state. It is planned to build a crossing almost 2 kilometers from the village of Izobilny. The future bridge will consist of a two-lane road, a pedestrian zone and a path for cyclists. Empty areas near Sivash give a good prospect for the future construction of sanatoriums, recreation centers, hotels, resort infrastructure. The Sovietsky district has its own reserves of therapeutic mud, on the basis of which it is possible to equip medical sanatoriums. In addition, there are opportunities for the construction of a yacht club on the Arabat Spit, which can become a competitor to Balaklava. Yachts can be delivered to the Sea of ​​Azov by rafting along the canals and rivers flowing into it. @

    GEOGRAPHICAL POSITION
    Northeastern Crimea is perhaps the most
    unknown and little visited region
    Crimea. But in this far corner you
    you can find a lot of interesting and
    unusual. This is the place for those who
    paves
    roads
    yourself
    myself.
    Recommended
    view
    transport
    bike,
    moto
    or
    quad bike,
    SUV or regular car
    car.

    Features of the nature of the northeastern Crimea
    plan
    characteristic
    Relief,
    mineral
    resources
    The relief is flat. North Crimean lowland.
    North Kazantip and East Kazantip
    gas fields.
    climatic
    conditions
    Characterized by climate temperate zone from the snow
    and windy winter, short spring, hot and dry
    in summer and rainy autumn. Winter temperature - -2.3,
    summer - +23. The annual amount of precipitation is from 340–350 mm.
    Inland waters
    Wet Indole, Churuk-Su, Biyuk-Karasu, Dry Indole
    Soils
    Chestnut, solonetzes solonchaks, meadow
    Vegetable world
    Wormwood, fescue, chamomile, oak, hornbeam
    Animal world
    Lark, partridge, quail viper, lizard, snake,
    ground squirrel, vole Hamster

    Geographical center of Crimea
    The Nizhnegorsk region has its own "zest". Also in
    Soviet times here in the village of Yastrebki was
    the sign "GEOGRAPHICAL CENTER OF CRIMEA" was installed

    STATE BOTANICAL RESERVE
    "PRISIVASH"
    It is protected virgin steppe with medicinal
    plants, including extensive thickets of chamomile, a valuable and
    very popular medicinal plant No less beneficial for
    health has Lake Sivash, framing the reserve. .

    AGARMYSH FOREST
    Over 200 years. In 1964 it was declared a protected area.
    Beech, oak, hornbeam are the main species of the Old Crimean forest.
    Here are under protection the unique Crimean beech,
    rare view hornbeam - oriental hornbeam and two varieties
    oak: fluffy and rocky.

    SIVASH - the coast of the bay is extremely dissected and winding.
    The coastline does not have clear, stable outlines and
    creates a picture of a complex natural labyrinth. Big
    part of narrow, elongated in a northeasterly direction
    peninsulas are called "tyups" or "kuts", and
    temporarily flooded due to surge currents
    land areas - "droughts"

    Mount AGARMYSH is a classic Mediterranean type karst. Water, dissolving
    limestone, forms a variety of grottoes, wells, mines, caves. Here
    there is an interesting cave "Bottomless well". The entrance to this cave is closed
    reinforced concrete slab. Bottomless well - an open mine. Is
    a dip leading to a chamber 4 m in diameter, from the bottom of which begins
    38 meter shaft extending downwards. At the bottom - a blocky bulk, on the walls
    - separate leaks. There are many legends about this cavity that have found
    reflected in its names. The main feature is an increase in the warm period
    concentration of carbon dioxide to life-threatening (up to 4 vol.%). Record
    CO2 content - 7.62%. Descent only in an insulating gas mask. Content
    oxygen drops to 1416%. Winter concentration
    carbon dioxide goes down.

    ARABAT ARROW -
    From the Akmonai Isthmus in a northwestern direction
    a narrow and long (113 km) spit stretches. She separates from
    Sea of ​​Azov its shallow and very salty (up to 200
    ppm) lagoon - Sivash. The Arabat Spit consists mainly
    from shell material, width from 270 meters to 8 kilometers.

    ARMS OF REGIONS

    NIZHNEGORSKY
    Nizhnegorsky (until 1944 Seitler; Crimean Tatar Seyitler, Seyitler) - a village
    urban type in the Sivash steppe region of the Republic of Crimea,
    center of the Nizhnegorsk region. The largest and most significant enterprises
    Nizhnegorsky include a plant for the production of feed, juices,
    oils, various cereals, flour and canned fruits and vegetables. The village has
    a bread factory and organizations providing housing and communal services. Numerous small enterprises of Nizhnegorsky
    engaged in trade and construction activities

    Soviet
    (until 1944 - Ichki, Crimean Tatar. İçki) - an urban settlement
    type in the Soviet district of the Republic of Crimea of ​​Russia (Autonomous
    Republic of Crimea). In the village there are selenergo-, rayagrostroy-,
    hatchery and poultry farm and other enterprises of the local
    values ​​that are engaged in the maintenance of agricultural
    enterprises of the region. The largest enterprises: a bakery plant,
    winery, typography. On the territory of the region operates
    449 enterprises. Trade services for the population are carried out
    consumer cooperation enterprises and entrepreneurial
    structures.

    KIROVSKE
    - Terek; Crimean. Islam Terek, Islam
    Kirovskoe (until 1945 Islam
    Terek) is an urban-type settlement in the east of Crimea. Center of Kirovsky
    region of the republic. The population is about 7 thousand people. Industry
    the village is represented by such enterprises: OATP "Kirovskoe
    repair and transport
    company"
    (engineering
    And
    metalworking), printing house, OATP "Kirovskiy fodder
    factory".

    ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES OF THE REGIONS
    NORTH-EAST CRIMEA
    At the heart of the economy
    - agricultural production.
    IN last years active work is underway in the area to develop
    tourism and recreation sectors. Particularly promising are
    territories on the coast of Sivash. Variety of natural
    landscapes (floodplains, spits, shallow waters, reed beds),
    deposits of unique therapeutic mud, the presence of fish ponds,
    a large concentration of hunting bird species - all these factors
    create a fertile ground for development in the area of ​​recreational and
    tourism activities (primarily commercial tourism).
    Rural (“green”) tourism is developing rapidly, which
    also due to favorable natural conditions. big
    attention is paid to the development of folk crafts, mainly
    associated with the processing of sheep products.

    ARCHAEOLOGICAL OBJECTS OF THE NORTH-EASTERN CRIMEA
    First of all, these are mounds - the so-called "pyramids of the steppes" One of them
    - Nogaychinsky mound near the village of Chervonoe (Nizhnegorsky district) - in 1974
    delighted with a unique find. The burial of a woman was found
    who supposedly lived at the end of the second century BC. - first century AD
    The woman's head was crowned with a golden diadem, and a massive golden crown adorned her neck.
    a hryvnia with the image of griffins, a golden brooch rested on his chest, on his hands and
    the legs were bracelets, and the hands were decorated precious stones Remains
    wooden caskets contained gold rings, incense bottles,
    beads, rock crystal zasezhaka in the form of a dolphin

    City OLD CRIMEA - tourist "Mecca" of Kirovsky
    district

    Stary Krym is a city in the eastern part of Crimea.
    Population
    -
    near
    10
    thousand
    people
    Main
    attractions
    cities
    are
    buildings of the XIII-XIV centuries, when Kyrym was the center
    Crimean Yurt. Well preserved to this day
    the functioning mosque of Khan Uzbek. In the eastern part of the city
    the ruins of a mint, a caravanserai and
    mosque Kurshum-Jami, and 5 kilometers west of the Old
    Crimea is the medieval Armenian monastery SurbKhach (Holy Cross), the revival of which began in
    last years. In addition, the city has
    ethnographic
    museum,
    dedicated
    culture
    Crimean Tatar people.

    MOSQUE OF KHAN UZBEK IN OLD CRIMEA
    Khan
    Uzbek,
    entered
    on
    throne of the Golden Horde in 1312, becoming
    adherent of Islam, ordered to build in
    Solkhat beautiful mosque and higher
    Muslim spiritual school madrasah. The construction of the mosque was
    begun in 1314. According to the message
    Turkish traveler Evliya Celebi,
    V
    1512-1513
    years
    at
    Mengli Giray I was a cathedral mosque. Now
    the mosque is rectangular
    in terms of a basilica-type building with
    entrance from the north side and built into
    northeastern
    corner
    minaret.
    The longitudinal axis of the building is oriented in
    north-south direction so that
    the faithful in the building,
    praying, their faces turned to the south, to
    side of Mecca.

    SURB-KHACH
    Surb Khach
    Armenian
    monastery. Church wearing
    Name
    Surb-Nshan,
    was
    built in 1358
    timesad
    Armenian
    colonization of the Crimea. Later,
    a gavit was added to the temple
    (porch) with a bell tower. And in
    1719 - fraternal corps with
    cells
    For
    monks.
    The monastery is more like
    fortress than humble
    monastery. Windows are like loopholes
    and from the bell tower, similar to
    watchtower while the forest
    did not surround the monastery, was
    access road is visible.

    GREEN MUSEUM IN THE OLD CRIMEA
    The museum exposition consists of two
    small rooms. One of them is saved
    completely in original condition. Here
    Alexander Stepanovich died. Iron
    a bed by the window, a couch on which
    Nina was on duty at the sick bed
    Nikolaevna Grin, badger skin, old
    alarm clock, vase for flowers. In the second
    room - books, manuscripts, old
    photographs with views of Stary Krym and Karadag.

    HOUSE-MUSEUM OF K.G. PAUSTOVSKY
    The museum is located in the building
    shady old garden. Here
    the writer stopped in the 1950s. In confirmation of this
    established
    original
    exposition
    under
    open
    sky - a wonderful garden, in
    quotations
    from the works of Paustovsky.
    as if
    myself
    writer
    tells the visitor about
    your favorite corner. IN
    four
    halls
    recreated
    typological
    interior
    provincial bourgeois
    houses of the beginning of the 20th century, deployed
    exhibition about
    life and creative path
    Paustovsky.

    TOPONYMS OF THE NORTH-EASTERN CRIMEA
    AGARMYSH - "White"; mountain range in
    Crimea, the easternmost part of the Inner Ridge
    Crimean mountains
    Seitler - the village of Nizhnegorsky
    Sivash - "sticky"
    Solkhat - distorted from the Armenian Surb-Khach
    Surb-Khach means "holy cross" in Armenian

    Commemorative historical places Northeastern Crimea
    Old Crimea - a city of museums
    museum complex cities
    Literary and artistic
    House-Museum of A.S. Green
    House-Museum of K. Paustovsky
    Museum of Culture and Life of the Tatars
    Museum of History and Local Lore
    Memorable places of the Old Crimea
    Memorial Complex
    medieval church
    Mosque of Sultan Baybars
    Uzbek mosque and madrasah
    Kurshum-Jami Mosque
    Ruins of a caravanserai
    Source of St. Panteleimon
    Starokrymskoe cemetery, incl.
    ---Tomb of Alexander Grin
    ---grave of Yulia Drunina

    Northeastern Crimea is perhaps the most unknown and little visited region of Crimea. But in this distant corner you can find a lot of interesting and unusual things. This place is for those who pave the way for themselves. The recommended mode of transport is a bicycle, a motorcycle or an ATV, an SUV or an ordinary passenger car. GEOGRAPHICAL POSITION


    Features of the nature of the northeastern Crimea plan characteristic Relief, mineral resources The relief is flat. North Crimean lowland. Severo-Kazantipskoe and Vostochno-Kazantipskoe gas fields. Climatic conditions It is characterized by a temperate climate with snowy and windy winters, short springs, hot and dry summers and rainy autumns. Inland waters Wet Indole, Churuk-Su, Biyuk-Karasu, Dry Indole Soils Chestnut, solonets solonchaks, meadow Plant world Wormwood, fescue, chamomile, oak, hornbeam Animal world Lark, partridge, quail viper, lizard, snake, ground squirrel, vole Hamster




    STATE BOTANICAL RESERVE "PRISIVASHSKY" It is protected virgin steppe with medicinal plants, including extensive thickets of chamomile, a valuable and very popular medicinal plant. Lake Sivash, framing the reserve, has no less health benefits..


    AGARMYSH FOREST More than 200 years old. In 1964 it was declared a protected area. Beech, oak, hornbeam are the main species of the Old Crimean forest. A unique Crimean beech, a rare species of hornbeam - oriental hornbeam and two varieties of oak are under protection here: fluffy and rocky.


    SIVASH - the coast of the bay is extremely dissected and winding. The coastline does not have a clear, stable outline and creates a picture of a complex natural labyrinth. Most of the narrow peninsulas elongated in the northeast direction are called “tyups” or “kuts”, and the land areas temporarily flooded due to surge currents are called “droughts”


    Mount AGARMYSH is a classic Mediterranean type karst. Water, dissolving limestone, forms a variety of grottoes, wells, mines, caves. Here is an interesting cave "Bottomless well". The entrance to this cave is closed with a reinforced concrete slab. The bottomless well is an open mine. It is a failure, leading to a chamber with a diameter of 4 m, from the bottom of which a 38-meter shaft expanding downwards begins. At the bottom there is a blocky heap, on the walls there are separate streaks. There are many legends about this cavity, which are reflected in its names. The main feature is the increase in the warm period of carbon dioxide concentration to life-threatening (up to 4 vol.%). Record CO2 content of 7.62%. Descent only in an insulating gas mask. The oxygen content drops to 1416%. In winter, the concentration of carbon dioxide decreases.


    ARABAT STRELKA - A narrow and long (113 km) spit extends from the Akmonai isthmus in a northwestern direction. It separates from the Sea of ​​Azov its shallow and very salty (up to 200 ppm) lagoon - Sivash. The Arabat Spit consists mainly of shell material, the width is from 270 meters to 8 kilometers.




    NIZHNEGORSKY Nizhnegorsky (before 1944, Seitler; Crimean Tatar. Seyitler, Seyitler) an urban-type settlement in the Sivash steppe region of the Republic of Crimea, the center of the Nizhnegorsky district. The largest and most significant enterprises of Nizhnegorsk include a plant for the production of mixed fodder, juices, oils, various cereals, flour and canned fruits and vegetables. The village has a bread factory and organizations providing housing and communal services. Numerous small enterprises of the Nizhnegorsk region are engaged in trade and construction activities of the Crimean people of the Republic of Crimea of ​​the Nizhnegorsk region


    Soviet (until 1944 Ichki, Crimean Tatar. İçki) urban-type settlement in the Soviet district of the Republic of Crimea of ​​Russia (Autonomous Republic of Crimea). In the village, there are a village energy, rayagrostroy, incubator-poultry enterprise and other enterprises of local importance that service the agricultural enterprises of the region. The largest enterprises: a bakery, a winery, a printing house. There are 449 enterprises operating in the region. Trade services for the population are provided by consumer cooperation enterprises and business structures.


    KIROVSKOE Kikurovskoye (until 1945 Islam-Terek; Crimean Tatar. İslâm Terek, Islyam Terek) is an urban-type settlement in the east of Crimea. The center of the Kirovsky district of the republic. The population is about 7 thousand people. The industry of the village is represented by such enterprises: OATP "Kikurovsky repair and transport enterprise" (engineering and metalworking), printing house, OATP "Kirov feed mill".


    ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES OF THE NORTH-EASTERN CRIMEA REGIONS The economy is based on agricultural production. In recent years, active work has been carried out in the region to develop the sphere of tourism and recreation. Particularly promising are the territories on the coast of Sivash. A variety of natural landscapes (floodplains, spits, shallow waters, reed beds), deposits of unique therapeutic mud, the presence of fish ponds, a large concentration of hunting bird species - all these factors create favorable conditions for the development of recreational and tourist activities in the area (primarily fishing tourism) . Rural (“green”) tourism is developing rapidly, which is also due to favorable natural conditions. Much attention is paid to the development of folk crafts, mainly related to the processing of sheep products.


    ARCHAEOLOGICAL OBJECTS OF THE NORTH-EASTERN CRIMEA First of all, these are barrows - the so-called "pyramids of the steppes". One of them - the Nogaychinsky barrow near the village of Chervonoe (Nizhnegorussky district) - in 1974 pleased with a unique find. The burial of a woman who supposedly lived at the end of the second century BC was discovered. - first century AD The woman’s head was crowned with a golden diadem, her neck was decorated with a massive golden hryvnia depicting griffins, a golden brooch rested on her chest, there were bracelets on her arms and legs, and her hands were decorated with precious stones. The remains of a wooden box contained golden rings, incense bottles, beads, and a rock crystal clasp in the form of a dolphin





    Stary Krym is a city in the eastern part of Crimea. The population is about 10 thousand people. The main sights of the city are the buildings of the XIIIXIV centuries, when Kyrym was the center of the Crimean Yurt. The current mosque of Khan Uzbek has been well preserved to this day. In the eastern part of the city are the ruins of a mint, a caravanserai and the Kurshum-Jami mosque, and 5 kilometers west of Stary Krym is the medieval Armenian monastery of Surb-Khach (Holy Cross), the revival of which has begun in recent years. In addition, the city has an ethnographic museum dedicated to the culture of the Crimean Tatar people. The medieval Armenian monastery of Surb-Khach (Holy Cross)


    MOSQUE OF KHAN UZBEK In OLD CRIMEA Khan Uzbek, who ascended the throne of the Golden Horde in 1312, having become an adherent of Islam, ordered the construction of a beautiful mosque and a higher Muslim religious school - a madrasah in Solkhat. The construction of the mosque began in 1314. According to the Turkish traveler Evliya Chelebi, in the years under Mengli-Girey, the mosque was a cathedral one. Now the mosque is a rectangular building of the basilica type with an entrance from the north side and a minaret built into the northeast corner. The longitudinal axis of the building is oriented in the north-south direction, so that the faithful in the building, praying, turned their faces to the south, towards Mecca.


    SURB-KHACH Surb-Khach - Armenian monastery. The church bearing the name of Surb-Nshan was built in 1358 during the Armenian colonization of Crimea. Later, a gavotte (porch) with a bell tower was attached to the temple. And in 1719 a fraternal building with cells for monks. The monastery is more like a fortress than a humble abode. The windows are like loopholes, and from the bell tower, which looks like a watchtower, until the forest surrounded the monastery, the access road was visible.


    GREEN MUSEUM IN THE OLD CRIMEA The exposition of the museum consists of two small rooms. One of them is completely preserved in its original form. Alexander Stepanovich died here. An iron bed by the window, a couch on which Nina Nikolaevna Grin was on duty at the bedside, a badger skin, an old alarm clock, a vase for flowers. In the second room there are books, manuscripts, old photographs with views of the Old Crimea and Kara-Dag.


    HOUSE-MUSEUM OF K.G. Paustovsky Museum is located in a house with a shady old garden. The writer stayed here in the 1800s. In support of this, an original open-air exposition has been created - a wonderful garden, which presents quotes from the works of Paustovsky. As if the writer himself tells the visitor about his favorite corner. The typological interior of a provincial petty-bourgeois house of the early 20th century has been recreated in four halls, and an exposition has been deployed that tells about the life and creative path of Paustovsky.


    TOPONYMS OF THE NORTH-EASTERN CRIMEA AGARMYSH - "White"; a mountain range in the Crimea, the easternmost part of the Inner Ridge of the Crimean Mountains Seytler - the village of Nizhnegorussky Sivash - "sticky" Solkhat - distorted from the Armenian Surb-Khach Surb-Khach Surb-Khach - translated from Armenian "holy cross"


    Old Crimea - a city of museums Museum complex of the city Literary and art house-museum of A. S. Grin House-museum of K. Paustovsky Museum of culture and life of the Tatars Museum of history and local history Memorable places of Old Crimea Memorial complex Medieval church Sultan Baibars Mosque Uzbek Mosque and madrasah Mosque Kurshum-Jami The ruins of the caravanserai The source of St. Panteleimon Old Crimean Cemetery Memorial Complex Medieval Church Mosque of Sultan Beybars Mosque of Uzbek and Madrasah Kurshum-Jami Mosque Ruins of Caravanserai Spring of St. Panteleimon Starokrymsky cemetery, incl. --- grave of Alexander Grin --- grave of Yulia Drunina grave of Alexander Green Grave of Yulia Drunina Memorable historical places of the North-Eastern Crimea