ڤيازما

Coordinates: 55°12′39″N 34°17′28″E / 55.2107°N 34.2912°E / 55.2107; 34.2912
Vyazma
Вязьма
كنيسة الصعود، في ڤيازما
كنيسة الصعود، في ڤيازما
علم Vyazma
درع Vyazma
Location of Vyazma
Vyazma is located in روسيا
Vyazma
Vyazma
Location of Vyazma
Vyazma is located in روسيا
Vyazma
Vyazma
Vyazma (روسيا)
الإحداثيات: 55°12′39″N 34°17′28″E / 55.2107°N 34.2912°E / 55.2107; 34.2912
البلدروسيا
الكيان الاتحاديSmolensk Oblast[1]
Administrative districtVyazemsky District[1]
Urban settlementVyazemskoye[1]
First mentioned1230[2]
المساحة
 • الإجمالي48٫58 كم² (18٫76 ميل²)
المنسوب
240 m (790 ft)
التعداد
 • الإجمالي57٬101
 • Estimate 
(2018)
52٬506 (−8%)
 • الترتيب288th in 2010
 • الكثافة1٬200/km2 (3٬000/sq mi)
 • Capital ofVyazemsky District[1], Vyazemskoye Urban Settlement[1]
 • Municipal districtVyazemsky Municipal District[4]
 • Urban settlementVyazemskoye Urban Settlement[4]
 • Capital ofVyazemsky Municipal District[4], Vyazemskoye Urban Settlement[5]
منطقة التوقيتUTC+ ([6])
Postal code(s)[7]
215110, 215111, 215113, 215116, 215118, 215119, 215125, 215129, 215169
Dialing code(s)+7 48131
OKTMO ID66605101001
الموقع الإلكترونيwww.mgorv.ru

ڤيازما ( Vyazma ؛ روسية: Вя́зьма) هي بلدة و المركز الإداري of Vyazemsky District in Smolensk Oblast, Russia, located on the Vyazma River, about halfway between Smolensk, the administrative center of the oblast, and Mozhaysk. Throughout its turbulent history, it defended western approaches to Moscow. Population: 57,101 (تعداد 2010);[3] 57,545 (تعداد 2002);[8] 59,022 (تعداد 1989);[9] 44,000 (1970).

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تاريخ ونُصُب العصور الوسطى

Spasskaya tower is the only tower left of the medieval Vyazma Kremlin.
Hodegetria church is one of three major three-tented churches in the world, the other two being in Uglich and Moscow.

أول ذِكر لڤيازما كان في تأريخ من العام 1230،[2] although it is believed to be much older than that. The town was named after the river, whose name was from Russian word "вязь" (vyaz'), meaning "bog" or "swamp".[10] At the time, the town belonged to a lateral branch of the Rurikid House of Smolensk, and carried on a lively trade with Narva on the Gulf of Finland.[11] In 1403, the local princes were expelled by Lithuanians to Moscow, where they took the name of Princes Vyazemsky. The most notable among them were Pyotr Vyazemsky, an intimate friend of the poet Alexander Pushkin and a poet himself, and Sophie Viazemski, a French writer, for a time married to Jean-Luc Godard.

In 1494, Vyazma was captured by the Grand Duchy of Moscow and turned into a fortress, of which but a single tower remains. Two important abbeys were embellished with stone churches, including a rare three-tented church dedicated to Our Lady of Smolensk (Hodegetria) and consecrated in 1638 after Polish occupation between 1611 and 1634. A barbican church of the same abbey dates back to 1656, and the town's cathedral was completed by 1676. Other churches are designed mostly in baroque style.


معارك ڤيازما

الحروب الناپليونية

Vyazma monument commemorating the Russian victory over Napoleon.
An illustration by Leonid Pasternak for War and Peace, showing Napoleon near Vyazma

During the French invasion of Russia in 1812, there was a battle between the retreating French army (up to 37,000 troops) and the Russian army (25,000 men) near Vyazma on October 22, 1812. The vanguard of the Russian army under the command of Lieutenant General Mikhail Miloradovich and a Cossack unit of General Matvey Platov attacked the rearguard corps of Marshal Louis-Nicolas Davout east of Vyazma and cut off his retreat. Owing to the intervention of Eugène de Beauharnais and Józef Poniatowski, Davout managed to break through the Russian army's encirclement.

However, the French army's attempts to hold the heights near Vyazma and the town itself were unsuccessful. By the evening of October 22, Russians seized Vyazma, which had been set on fire by the French. The French lost 6,000 men during the battle; 2,500 soldiers were taken prisoners. The Russians lost around 2,000 men.

Vyazma in 1910

الحرب العالمية الثانية

In 1941, during World War II, Vyazma was the scene of a battle of encirclement. The Soviet 16th, 19th, 20th and 24th armies were surrounded West of the town by the Third and Fourth Panzer Armies.

Vyazma was occupied by German forces between 7 October 1941 and 12 March 1943. In October 1941, 11 Jews were shot in the town and two were hanged. In December 1941, 117 Jews were killed in a mass execution perpetrated by the Einsatzgruppe B.[12]

The town was heavily damaged in the fighting, then rebuilt after the war. U.S. journalist Quentin Reynolds, of Collier's Weekly, visited Vyazma shortly after the German withdrawal in 1943 and gave an account of the destruction in his book The Curtain Rises (1944), in which he stated that the town's population was reduced from 60,000 to 716, with only three buildings remaining. The Nazis also established two concentration camps in the town, Dulag 184 and Dulag 230. About 80,000 people died there and were buried in mass graves. The victims included Jews, political officers, and POWs.[13]

The transfer camp (Dulag No. 184) was established in October 1941 and lasted until March 1943, when the city was liberated by Soviet troops. The camp housed prisoners who had been captured by German soldiers, in particular, conscripted from Zubtsovsky, Rzhevsky, Nelidovsky and other districts of the Tver region, natives of the Smolensk and Arkhangelsk regions, who were reported missing, as well as volunteer militias from Moscow. Prisoners were often not fed or given water. In the winter of 1941-1942, the death rate in the camp was up to 300 people per day. According to SMERSH, there are 5,500 people on the list of dead from wounds in the camp. There are 40 (according to other data - 45) ditches measuring 4×100 meters, in an area equal to about four football fields, where, according to various data, 70 to 80,000 people are buried. As of 2009, the graves house gardens, garages of local residents, a machine-building plant and the Vyazemsky meat-processing plant, in the building of which the camp was housed.

In another transit prison in Vyazma (Dulag No. 230) in October 1941, during an inspection conducted by an officer, Abver found 200 Jews and 50 to 60 politruks, a few days later another 40 Jews and 6-8 politruks were found there. They were all shot. In December, 117 Jews were identified and executed at a POW camp in Vyazma.

According to the memoirs of the future Soviet historian, Mikhail Markovich Sheinman, who was in German captivity at the time:

In early October 1941, near Vyazma, the sector in which I served was surrounded. We immediately found ourselves in the Germans' rear. On 12 October, I was shot in the leg while attacking. From November 1941 to 12 February 1942, I was in the Vyazma "hospital" for prisoners of war. People were placed in dilapidated buildings without roofs, windows, or doors. Often many of those who went to bed did not wake up - they froze. In Vyazma, exhausted, ragged, barely clad people - Soviet prisoners of war - the Germans drove to unbearably hard work. Few people got into the "hospital" - most of them died in the camp.

In Vyazma, the hospital was housed in dilapidated, abandoned houses, on the outskirts of the city in the ruins of the oil factory buildings. The cabins were always cold and dark. The wounded lay on the bare floor. There wasn't even straw for bedding. t was not until the end of my stay in Vyazma that bunks were built in the houses, but on them the sick lay without straw, on bare boards. There were no medicines. The lice in the hospital was incredible. I never had a bath in the three and a half months of my stay in Vyazma.[14]

In honor of the defenders of the Fatherland, a memorial complex has been erected on the Moscow-Minsk highway outside the city. In 2009, in the vicinity of Vyazma, where the battles took place in 1941, a memorial named "The Virgin Field" was opened. The burial ground, where tens of thousands of people died in the death camp, is buried in the territory of the existing meat-processing plant, now marked chapel in memory of the dead prisoners of war.

الوضع الإداري والبلدي

Within the framework of administrative divisions, Vyazma serves as the administrative center of Vyazemsky District.[1] As an administrative division, it is incorporated within Vyazemsky District as Vyazemskoye Urban Settlement.[1] As a municipal division, this administrative unit also has urban settlement status and is a part of Vyazemsky Municipal District.[4]

الاقتصاد

The town's main industries are engineering, leather working, graphite products, and flax textiles.

النقل

Esh 4290 0-10-0 steam locomotive outside the Vyazma railway station.

Vyazma is a major railway junction, with connecting trains من موسكو, St. Petersburg, كالوگا و بريانسك. It is also located near the main M1 Highway بين موسكو و منسك.

البلدة يخدمها مطار ڤيازما.


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التعليم

In terms of education Vyazma has branches of the Moscow State Industrial University, the Smolensk Humanitarian University, the International Academy of Tourism (WF RMAT), and the Moscow State University of Technology and Management, as well as the Vyazemsky Polytechnic College.

الرياضة

The town association football club, FK Vyazma, plays in the Amateur football league.

The town is known for the aviation-squadron Vyazma Russ which flies in Aero L-39 Albatros jet aircraft.

أشخاص بارزون

المراجع

الهامش

  1. ^ أ ب ت ث ج ح خ د ذ Resolution #261
  2. ^ أ ب Энциклопедия Города России. Moscow: Большая Российская Энциклопедия. 2003. p. 99. ISBN 5-7107-7399-9.
  3. ^ أ ب Russian Federal State Statistics Service (2011). "Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года. Том 1". Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года (2010 All-Russia Population Census) (in Russian). Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved June 29, 2012. {{cite web}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help); Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  4. ^ أ ب ت ث Law #130-z
  5. ^ قالب:OKTMO reference
  6. ^ "Об исчислении времени". Официальный интернет-портал правовой информации (in Russian). 3 June 2011. Retrieved 19 January 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  7. ^ Почта России. Информационно-вычислительный центр ОАСУ РПО. (Russian Post). Поиск объектов почтовой связи (Postal Objects Search) (in روسية)
  8. ^ Федеральная служба государственной статистики (Federal State Statistics Service) (2004-05-21). "Численность населения России, субъектов Российской Федерации в составе федеральных округов, районов, городских поселений, сельских населённых пунктов – районных центров и сельских населённых пунктов с населением 3 тысячи и более человек[[Category:Articles containing روسية-language text]] (Population of Russia, its federal districts, federal subjects, districts, urban localities, rural localities—administrative centers, and rural localities with population of over 3,000)". Всероссийская перепись населения 2002 года (All-Russia Population Census of 2002) (in Russian). Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved 2008-07-25. {{cite web}}: URL–wikilink conflict (help)CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  9. ^ "Всесоюзная перепись населения 1989 г. Численность наличного населения союзных и автономных республик, автономных областей и округов, краёв, областей, районов, городских поселений и сёл-райцентров.[[Category:Articles containing روسية-language text]] (All Union Population Census of 1989. Present population of union and autonomous republics, autonomous oblasts and okrugs, krais, oblasts, districts, urban settlements, and villages serving as district administrative centers.)". Всесоюзная перепись населения 1989 года (All-Union Population Census of 1989) (in Russian). Demoscope Weekly (website of the Institute of Demographics of the State University—Higher School of Economics. 1989. Retrieved 2007-12-13. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help); URL–wikilink conflict (help)CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  10. ^ Е. М. Поспелов. "Географические названия мира". Москва, 1998, стр. 108.
  11. ^  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Vyazma" . دائرة المعارف البريطانية. Vol. 28 (eleventh ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 222. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  12. ^ "Vyazma | Smolensk - YAHAD - IN UNUM".
  13. ^ "И.Эренбург, В.Гроссман, ЧЕРНАЯ КНИГА" (in الروسية).
  14. ^ "Освенцим. Рассказ бывшего военнопленного М. Шейнмана. | Сивокоз Кузьма Захарович. Сайт памяти Auschwitz" [The story of former prisoner of war M. Sheinman; Sivokoz Kuzma Zakharovich. Auschwitz Memorial site] (in الروسية).

المصادر

للاستزادة

وصلات خارجية

قالب:Smolensk Oblast