Adygea

(Redirected from Adygean Republic)

The Republic of Adygea, (/ˌɑːdɪˈɡə/)[11][a] also known as the Adyghe Republic, is a republic of Russia. It is situated in the North Caucasus of Eastern Europe. The republic is a part of the Southern Federal District, and covers an area of 7,600 square kilometers (2,900 sq mi), with a population of roughly 496,934 residents.[7] It is an enclave within Krasnodar Krai and is the fifth-smallest Russian federal subject by area. Maykop is the capital and the largest city of Adygea, home to one-third of the republic's population.

Republic of Adygea
Адыгэ Республик (Adyghe)
Республика Адыгея (Russian)
Anthem: "Anthem of the Republic of Adygea" [2]
Location of Republic of Adygea
Coordinates: 44°39′N 40°00′E / 44.650°N 40.000°E / 44.650; 40.000
CountryRussia
Federal district[1]Southern
Economic region[3]North Caucasus
CapitalMaykop[4]
Government
 • TypeState Council (Khase)[5]
 • HeadMurat Kumpilov[5]
Area
 • Total7,792 km2 (3,009 sq mi)
Population
 • TotalIncrease 496,934
 • Rank75th
 • Density63.77/km2 (165.2/sq mi)
 • Urban
49.4%
 • Rural
50.6%
Time zoneUTC+3 (MSK[8])
ISO 3166 codeRU-AD
Vehicle registration01
Official language(s)Adyghe[9] • Russian[10]

Adygea is one of Russia's ethnic republics, primarily representing the indigenous Circassian people that form 25% of the Republic's population, while Russians form a majority at 60%, and with minority populations of Armenians and Ukrainians. The official languages of Adygea are Adyghe and Russian.

History

Map of Adygea

The Cherkess (Adyghe) Autonomous Oblast was established within the Russian SFSR on July 27, 1922, on the territories of the Kuban-Black Sea Oblast, primarily settled by the Adyghe people.[12] 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.[13]

It was renamed Adyghe Autonomous Oblast (AO) in July 1928. On January 10, 1934, the autonomous oblast became part of the 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.[14] The first President of the republic was Aslan Dzharimov, elected on 5 January 1992.[15]

Relations between the Adyghe and ethnic Russians in Adygea are currently good. Russians make up two-thirds of the population within Adygea.[16] The current Head of Adygea is Murat Kumpilov.[17]

Geography

Adygea lies in Russia's Southern Federal District of Eastern Europe, in the foothills of the Northwestern Caucasus in the Caucasus Mountains System, with plains in the northern areas and mountains in the southern area. Forests (mainly of European beech, oak, and maple) cover almost 40% of its territory.

  • Area — 7,792 km2 (3,009 sq mi).
  • Borders — the Republic of Adygea is entirely surrounded by Krasnodar Krai.
  • Highest pointChugush Mountain: 3,238 m (10,623 ft).

Rivers

Khodz river headwaters, endemic region

The 870-kilometer (540 mi) long Kuban River is one of the major navigable rivers in the Caucasus region. It forms part of the northern border between the Republic of Adygea and Krasnodar Krai.
Other rivers include:

Lakes

Lago-Naki area in Adygea

The republic has no large lakes. However, the several large reservoirs include:

Mountains

Mount Fisht

The republic's major mountains and peaks range in height from 2,000–3,238 metres (6,562–10,623 ft), and include:

Natural resources

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

Climate

  • Average January temperature: −0.5 °C (31.1 °F)
  • Average July temperature: +23 °C (73 °F)
  • Average annual precipitation: 70 centimeters (28 in)

February 15, 2010, recorded the absolute maximum for the winter months—in the capital, the city of Maykop, the temperature was 23.4 °C (74.1 °F).

Politics

Former Head of the Republic of Adygea, Aslan Tkhakushinov, in 2010

The chief executive of the government of the Republic of Adygea is the Head (called "President" until May 2011), who is appointed for a five-year term. Proficiency in the Adyghe language is a prerequisite for the candidate.[19]

The current Head, Murat Kumpilov (since January 27, 2017), succeeded Aslan Tkhakushinov, initially as acting Head of the region. 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 Republic sends three representatives to the parliament of the Russian Federation; one to the State Duma and the other two to the Federation Council.

The Constitution of the Republic of Adygea was adopted on May 14, 1995.

Divisions

Administrative divisions of the Republic of Adygea

The Republic of Adygea is administratively divided into seven districts (raions), two cities/towns, and (at a lower administrative level) five urban-type settlements. Municipally, the republic is divided into two urban okrugs, five urban settlements, and 46 rural settlements.

NameLocal NameArea in
km2
Population
Census[20] 2010
Population
Estimate[21]
1 Jan 2018
Cities (republican municipal districts)
MaykopГородской округ
Майкоп
58.6166,540165,279
AdygeyskГородской округ
Адыгейск
32.414,65915,207
Districts
Giaginsky DistrictГиагинский м.р.790.031,76631,394
Koshekhablsky DistrictКошехабльский м.р.606.730,42229,726
Krasnogvardeysky DistrictКрасногвардейский м.р.725.530,86831,765
Maykopsky DistrictМайкопский м.р.3,667.458,43960,107
Takhtamukaysky DistrictТахтамукайский м.р.440.069,66282,909
Teuchezhsky DistrictТеучежский м.р.710.020,64320,802
Shovgenovsky DistrictШовгеновский м.р.521.416,99716,187
Adygea Republic Республика Адыгея7,600.0439,996453,376
  • Note "м.р." above is an abbreviation for "муниципальный район" (Municipal District)

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1926113,481—    
1939241,799+113.1%
1959284,690+17.7%
1970385,644+35.5%
1979404,504+4.9%
1989432,588+6.9%
2002447,109+3.4%
2010439,996−1.6%
2021496,934+12.9%
Source: Census data
20192021
Average:73.8 years71.2 years
Male:69.1 years66.6 years
Female:78.4 years75.8 years

Vital statistics

Source: Russian Federal State Statistics Service Archived April 12, 2008, at the Wayback Machine[28]
Average populationLive birthsDeathsNatural changeCrude birth rate (per 1000)Crude death rate (per 1000)Natural change (per 1000)Fertility rates
1970386,0005,6813,3072,37414.78.66.2
1975396,0005,9003,9071,99314.99.95.0
1980409,0006,6104,8281,78216.211.84.4
1985423,0006,9665,2831,68316.512.54.0
1990436,0006,1715,37579614.212.31.82.06
1991439,0005,9125,905713.513.50.01.96
1992444,0005,3065,969- 66312.013.5-1.51.73
1993447,0004,7746,662-1 88810.714.9-4.21.54
1994449,0004,9076,519-1 61210.914.5-3.61.59
1995450,0004,7986,475-1 67710.714.4-3.71.55
1996450,0004,6256,382-1 75710.314.2-3.91.49
1997450,0004,4306,302-1 8729.814.0-4.21.42
1998451,0004,3406,245-1 9059.613.9-4.21.38
1999450,0003,8796,215-2 3368.613.8-5.21.22
2000448,0004,0716,710-2 6399.115.0-5.91.27
2001447,0004,2126,566-2 3549.414.7-5.31.31
2002447,0004,5406,715-2 17510.215.0-4.91.39
2003446,0004,6346,929-2 29510.415.6-5.21.40
2004444,0004,6486,645-1 99710.515.0-4.51.37
2005443,0004,5506,726-2 17610.315.2-4.91.32
2006441,0004,6066,686-2 08010.415.2-4.71.33
2007440,0005,2106,454-1 24411.814.7-2.81.50
2008440,0005,6016,558- 95712.714.9-2.21.60
2009439,0005,5136,219- 70612.514.2-1.61.66
2010439,0005,7216,065- 47613.014.1-1.11.70
2011441,0005,5116,197- 55412.513.8-1.31.66
2012444,0005,7005,924- 22412.913.4-0.51.71
2013445,0005,5685,814- 24612.513.1-0.61.68
2014448,0005,6995,938- 23912.713.3-0.61.73
2015450,0005,6135,841- 22812.513.0-0.51.72
2016453,0005,4515,818- 36712.112.9-0.81.69(e)
2017453,0004,7585,734- 97610.512.7-2.2
20194,1845,654- 1,4709.112.3-3.2
20204,4196,154- 1,7359.513.3-3.8

Ethnic groups

According to the 2021 Census,[29] ethnic Russians make up 64.4% of the republic's total population, while the ethnic Adyghe are 25.7%. Other groups include Armenians (3.3%), Kurds (1.2%), Romani people (0.7%) and Ukrainians (0.6%).

Ethnic
group
1926 Census1939 Census1959 Census1970 Census1979 Census1989 Census2002 Census2010 Census2021 Census1
Number%Number%Number%Number%Number%Number%Number%Number%Number%
Russians29,10225.6%171,96071.1%200,49270.4%276,53771.7%285,62670.6%293,64068.0%288,28064.5%270,71463.6%287,77864.4%
Adyghe50,82144.8%55,04822.8%65,90823.2%81,47821.1%86,38821.4%95,43922.1%108,11524.2%109,69925.8%114,68825.7%2
Armenians7380.7%2,3481.0%3,0131.1%5,2171.4%6,3591.6%10,4602.4%15,2683.4%15,5613.7%14,8103.3%
Kurds20.0%2620.1%3,6310.8%4,5281.1%5,2331.2%
Romani1,1090.3%1,1340.3%1,8440.4%2,3640.6%2,9080.7%
Ukrainians26,40523.3%6,1302.5%7,9882.8%11,2142.9%12,0783.0%13,7553.2%9,0912.0%5,8561.4%2,8100.6%
Others6,4155.7%6,3132.6%7,2892.6%11,1982.9%13,9393.4%18,7524.3%26,3555.9%14,0933.3%18,4034.1%
  1. 50,304 people were registered from administrative databases, and could not declare an ethnicity. It is estimated that the proportion of ethnicities in this group is the same as that of the declared group.[30]
  2. Including 397 Kabardins and 16,133 Cherkess.

Religions

Maykop Central Mosque
Religion in Adygea as of 2012 (Sreda Arena Atlas)[31][32]
Russian Orthodoxy
35.4%
Other Orthodox
1.4%
Other Christians
3.8%
Islam
23.6%
Spiritual but not religious
19.8%
Atheism and irreligion
8.2%
Other and undeclared
7.8%

According to a 2012 survey which interviewed 56,900 people[31] 35.4% of the population of Adygea adheres to the Russian Orthodox Church, 23.6% to Islam, 3% are unaffiliated Christians and 1% are Orthodox Christian believers who do not belong to church or are members of other Orthodox churches. In addition, 19.8% of the population declares to be "spiritual but not religious" 8% is atheist, and 8.6% follows other religions or did not answer to the question.[31]

Education

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

Economy

Maykop Beer Brewery

Even though it is 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.

Transportation

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

Culture

A man speaking Adyghe.

The Adyghe language (Адыгабзэ) is a member of the Northwest Caucasian language family. Along with Russian, Adyghe is the official language of the republic.

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.

Notable people

See also

References

Notes

Sources

  • Государственный Совет – Хасэ Республики Адыгея. Закон №90 от 7 июня 2007 г. «О государственных символах Республики Адыгея (текст в ред. от 7 июня 2007 г.)», в ред. Закона №91 от 28 апреля 2012 г. «О внесении изменений в некоторые Законы Республики Адыгея». Вступил в силу со дня официального опубликования. Опубликован: "Советская Адыгея", No. 112–113, 14 июня 2007 г. (State Council of the Republic of Adygea. Law #90 of June 7, 2007 On the Symbols of State of the Republic of Adygea (text of rev. of June 7, 2007), as amended by the Law #91 of April 28, 2012 On Amending Various Laws of the Republic of Adygea. Effective as of the day of official publication.).
  • Закон №168-1 от 14 февраля 1995 г. «О праздичных днях и памятных датах», в ред. Закона №231 от 1 августа 2013 г. «О внесении изменения в статью 3 Закона Республики Адыгея "О праздичных днях и памятных датах"». Вступил в силу 14 февраля 1995 г. Опубликован: "Ведомости ЗС (Хасэ) - Парламента РА", No. 15, 14 февраля 1995 г.. (Law #168-1 of February 14, 1995 On Holidays and Memorial Dates, as amended by the Law #231 of August 1, 2013 On Amending Article 3 of the Law of the Republic of Adygea "On Holidays and Memorial Dates". Effective as of February 14, 1995.).
  • Государственный Совет — Хасэ Республики Адыгея. 10 марта 1995 г. «Конституция Республики Адыгея (текст в ред. от 3 мая 2007 г.)», в ред. Конституционного закона №459 от 30 октября 2015 г. «О поправках к Конституции Республики Адыгея». Опубликован: "Ведомости ЗС (Хасэ) — Парламента РА", №16, 6–10 марта 1995 г. (State Council of the Republic of Adygea. March 10, 1995 Constitution of the Republic of Adygea (text of rev. of May 3, 2007), as amended by the Constitutional Law #459 of October 30, 2015 On the Amendments to the Constitution of the Republic of Adygea. ).
  • Президент Республики Адыгея. Распоряжение №46-рп от 2 апреля 2007 г. «Об организации официального Интернет-сайта исполнительных органов государственной власти Республики Адыгея». (President of the Republic of Adygea. Directive #46-rp of April 2, 2007 On Creation of the Official Website of the Executive Organs of State Power of the Republic of Adygea. ).
  • Азаренкова, А. С.; Бондарь, И. Ю.; Вертышева, Н. С. (1986). Основные административно-территориальные преобразования на Кубани (1793–1985 гг.) (in Russian). Краснодарское книжное издательство.

External links