Adygea

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Republic of Adygea (English)
Республика Адыгея (Russian)
Адыгэ Республик (Adyghe)

Location of the Republic of Adygea (red) in Russia
Coat of Arms Flag

Coat of arms of Adygea

Flag of Adygea
Anthem: Anthem of the Republic of Adygea
Capital Maykop
Established July 27, 1922
Political status
Federal district
Economic region
Republic
Southern
North Caucasus
Code 01
Area
Area
- Rank
7,600 km²
82nd
Population (as of the 2002 Census)
Population
- Rank
- Density
- Urban
- Rural
447,109 inhabitants
74th
58.8 inhab. / km²
52.5%
47.5%
Official languages Russian, Adyghe
Government
President Aslan Tkhakushinov
Prime Minister Vladimir Samozhenkov
Legislative body State Council (Khase)
Constitution Constitution of the Republic of Adygea
Official website
http://www.adygheya.ru

The Republic of Adygea (Russian: Респу́блика Адыге́я, IPA: [adɨ'ɟeja]; Adyghe: Адыгэ Республик) is a federal subject of Russia (a republic) enclaved within Krasnodar Krai. The direct transliteration of the republic's name is Respublika Adygeya. Other ways of transliterating the republic's name include Adygeya and Adyghea.

Contents

Adygea is in the foothills of the Caucasus Mountains, with plains in the north, and mountains in the south. Forests cover almost 40% of its territory.

Adygea is in the Moscow Time Zone (MSK/MSD). UTC offset is +0300 (MSK)/+0400 (MSD).

Kuban River (870 km) is one of the major rivers in the Caucasus region, and it is navigable. It forms part of the northern border between Adygea and Krasnodar Krai. Other rivers include:

There are no large lakes in the republic. There are several reservoirs, such as:

The republic's major mountains range in height from 2,000 to 3,238 m and include:

The republic is rich in oil and natural gas. Other natural resources include gold, silver, tungsten, and iron.

  • Average January temperature: -2°C
  • Average July temperature: +22°C
  • Average annual precipitation: 70 cm

Map of Adygea
Map of Adygea

The Adyghe people were the ancient dwellers of the North-West Caucasus, sometimes known as Circassians since the 13th century.

Cherkess (Adyghe) Autonomous Oblast was established within the Russian SFSR on July 27, 1922, in the territories of Kuban-Black Sea Oblast, primarily settled by the Adyghe people. At that time, Krasnodar was the administrative center. It was renamed Adyghe (Cherkess) Autonomous Oblast on August 24, 1922, soon after its creation. In the first two years of its existence the autonomous oblast was a part of the Russian SFSR, but on October 17, 1924, it was transferred to the jurisdiction of the newly created North Caucasus Krai within the RSFSR.[1]

It was renamed Adyghe Autonomous Oblast in July 1928. On January 10, 1934, the autonomous oblast became part of new Azov-Black Sea Krai, which was removed from North Caucasus Krai. Maykop was made the administrative center of the autonomous oblast in 1936. Adyghe AO became part of Krasnodar Krai when it was established on September 13, 1937.

On July 3, 1991, the oblast was elevated to the status of a republic under the jurisdiction of the Russian Federation. The first president of Adygea was Aslan Aliyevich Dzharimov, elected in January 1992. From 2002 to 2007 Hazret Sovmen was president. He, and most of the rest of the political elite in Adygea, are Adyghes. As a reaction to that, an organisation calling itself the Union of Slavs was established, claiming that ethnic Russians are discriminated against in Adygea. They advocate the merger of Adygea with Krasnodar Krai, but have so far have had little support for that proposition from the Russian government.

The head of government in Adygea is the President of Adygea, who is elected for a five-year term. Proficiency in Adyghabze (Adyghe language) is a prerequisite for presidential candidacy.

The current president, Aslan Tkhakushinov (since January 13, 2007), succeeded Hazret Sovmen, appointed by Vladimir Putin although he received only 2% of the vote in 2002.[2] There is also a directly elected State Council (Khase or Xase—not to be confused with the Adyghe Khase, a union of Adyghe who supported Sovmen for a second term), which comprises the Council of Representatives and the Council of the Republic. Both councils are elected every five years and have 27 deputies each.

The Prime Minister of Adygea is appointed by the president with the consent of the National Assembly. The acting prime minister of Adygea is Kazbek Paranuk (since September 16, 2006).

The republic sends three representatives to the parliament of the Russian Federation; one to the Duma and the other two to the Federation Council.

Adygea's constitution was adopted on May 14, 1995.

Administrative divisions of the Republic of Adygea
Administrative divisions of the Republic of Adygea

Adygea is administratively divided into seven districts (raions), two cities/towns, and five urban-type settlements. Municipally, Adygea is divided into two urban okrugs, five urban settlements, and 46 rural settlements.

  • Population: 447,109 (2002)
    • Urban: 234,900 (52.5%)
    • Rural: 212,209 (47.5%)
    • Male: 208,019 (46.5%)
    • Female: 239,090 (53.5%)
  • Females per 1000 males: 1,149
  • Average age: 37 years
    • Urban: 36.6 years
    • Rural: 37.4 years
    • Male: 34 years
    • Female: 39.6 years
  • Number of households: 151,597 (with 440,449 people)
    • Urban: 82,949 (with 230,286 people)
    • Rural: 68,648 (with 210,163 people)
  • Vital statistics (2005)
    • Births: 4,550 (birth rate 10.3)
    • Deaths: 6,726 (death rate 15.2)
  • Ethnic groups
    • According to the 2002 Census, ethnic Russians make up 64.5% of the republic's total population, while the ethnic Adyghe are only 24.2%. Other groups include Armenians (3.4%), Ukrainians (2.0%), Kurds (3,631, or 0.8%), Tatars (2,904, or 0.7%), and a host of smaller groups, each less than 0.5% of the population.
census 1926 census 1939 census 1959 census 1970 census 1979 census 1989 census 2002
Adyghe 50,821 (44.8%) 55,048 (22.8%) 65,908 (23.2%) 81,478 (21.1%) 86,388 (21.4%) 95,439 (22.1%) 108,115 (24.2%)
Russians 29,102 (25.6%) 171,960 (71.1%) 200,492 (70.4%) 276,537 (71.7%) 285,626 (70.6%) 293,640 (68.0%) 288,280 (64.5%)
Armenians 738 (0.7%) 2,348 (1.0%) 3,013 (1.1%) 5,217 (1.4%) 6,359 (1.6%) 10,460 (2.4%) 15,268 (3.4%)
Ukrainians 26,405 (23.3%) 6,130 (2.5%) 7,988 (2.8%) 11,214 (2.9%) 12,078 (3.0%) 13,755 (3.2%) 9,091 (2.0%)
Others 6,415 (5.7%) 6,313 (2.6%) 7,289 (2.6%) 11,198 (2.9%) 13,939 (3.4%) 18,752 (4.3%) 26,355 (5.9%)

Even though it is now one of the poorest parts of Russia, the republic has abundant forests and rich soil. The region is famous for producing grain, sunflowers, tea, tobacco, and other produce. Hog and sheep breeding are also developed.

Food, timber, woodworking, pulp and paper, heavy engineering, and metal-working are the most developed industries.

There is a small airport in Maykop (ICAO airport code URKM). Several rail lines pass through the republic.

Adyghabze (Adyghe language) is a member of West North-Caucasian group of Caucasian languages. Along with the Russian language, the Adyghe language is the state language of Adygea.

There are 8 state and 23 public museums in the republic. The largest museum is the National Museum of the Republic of Adygea in Maykop.

Adyghe State University and Maykop State Technological University, both in the capital Maykop, are the two major higher education facilities in Adygea.


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