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Stavropol

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Stavropol (English)
Ставрополь (Russian)
Image:STAVROPOL maison gouvernement.jpg
Government building
Location of Stavropol on the map of Russia
Coordinates
45°03′N 41°58′E / 45.05, 41.967Coordinates: 45°03′N 41°58′E / 45.05, 41.967
Coat of Arms Flag
Image:Stavropol flag.svg
Administrative status
Federal subject
In jurisdiction of
Administrative center of
Stavropol Krai
Stavropol Krai
Stavropol Krai
Local self-government
Charter Charter of Stavropol
Municipal status Urban okrug
Mayor Dmitry Kuzmin
Legislative body City Council
Area
Area 242.36 km² (93.6 sq mi)
Population (as of the 2002 Census)
Population
- Rank
- Density
354,867 inhabitants
49th
1,464.2/km² (3,792.3/sq mi)
Events
Founded 1777
Town status 1785
Other information
Postal code 355000
Dialing code +7 8652
Official website
http://stavropol.stavkray.ru/

Stavropol (Russian: Ста́врополь) is a city located in south-western Russia and is the administrative center of Stavropol Krai. Population: 355,900 (2005 est.);[citation needed] 354,867 (2002 Census);[1] 318,298 (1989 Census).[2]

Contents

History

Stavropol was founded in 1777 following the Russo-Turkish War of 1768–1774 as a military encampment and designated as a city in 1785.[2] Prince Grigory Potemkin, who founded Stavropol as one of ten fortresses built between Azov and Mozdok at the request of Catherine II of Russia, played a leading role in the creation of the city. Don Cossacks, particularly those from the Khopersky regiment, settled the area in and around the cities of Stavropol and Georgievsk with a mission to defend borders of the Empire.[3]

The name Stavropol is a Russian rendition of a fictitious Greek name, Stauropolis (historically the name of an unrelated archbishopric in Caria, a Roman province in present Anatolia), meaning "The city of the Cross". According to a legend soldiers found a huge cross made out of stone when they were building the fortress in the future city location.[citation needed]

[Alexander I] in 1809, invited several Armenian families to settle by the fortress, in order to encourage trade in the region. [4]

Stavropol's strategic location aided in the Russian Empire's conquest of the Caucasus. By the early 19th century the city grew into a busy trade center of the Northern Caucasus. In 1843 an Episcopal see of the Russian Orthodox Church was established in Stavropol and in 1847 the city became the administrative center of the gubernia (governorate) with the same name.[5]

Well-known Russians who visited or resided in Stavropol include: Generals Suvorov, Alexey Yermolov and Nikolay Raevsky, the poets Alexander Pushkin and Mikhail Lermontov, who were in political disfavour, the surgeon Nikolay Pirogov, Alexander Griboedov, Leo Tolstoy, and the national poet of Ossetia, Kosta Khetagurov. [6]

During the Russian Civil War the city changed hands several times and finally was captured by the Red Army from the Volunteer Army of general Anton Denikin on January 29, 1920. The city was renamed Voroshilovsk on the 5th of May, 1935, after Kliment Voroshilov, but returned to its original name in 1943.[7] The Great Patriotic War took a heavy toll on the city and between August 3, 1942 and January 21, 1943 Stavropol was occupied by the Germans. Since 1946 natural gas is extracted near the city and later a pipeline to Moscow was built to supply it.[8] The first and only executive president of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev, was born in Stavropol Krai (region) and spent several years working in the city of Stavropol as the head of the Krai's administration.

Image:Stavropol00.jpg
Streets of Stavropol around 1900. The building, Baider's pharmacy, still stands

Modern city

Stavropol has a theatre and a football team called Dynamo Stavropol. The main educational institutions of the town are: Stavropol State University, Northern Caucasus State Polytechnic University, Agrarian University and Stavropol State Medical Academy. The area of Russia in which Stavropol resides is very mountainous, placing the city in the midst of the Caucasus mountain range. The city has one the biggest and best city parks in Russia. Stavropol's economy focuses on production of automobiles, furniture, and construction equipment and materials. The city relies on air ( Shpakovskoye airport), rail, and highway connections to other Russian cities. Stavropol's population includes a significant number of recent arrivals escaping instability of the Russian border regions and neighbouring Caucasus nations.

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