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  • 21 Aug, 2019

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Prigorodny District, North Ossetia

Prigorodny District (Russian: При́городный райо́н, romanizedPrigorodny Raion; Ossetian: Горæтгæроны район, romanized: Gorætgærony Rajon; Ingush: ГӀалме Шахьар, romanized: Ghalme Shaꜧar) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the eight in the Republic of North Ossetia–Alania, Russia. It is located in the east of the republic. The area of the district is 1,460 square kilometers (560 sq mi). Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Oktyabrskoye.

History

Report of the Executive Committee of the Ingush Autonomous Oblast for the years 1924-1925 showing the Ingush making up no less than 98,9% of the population of the Prigodorodny District.

One of the oldest centers of settlement of the Ingush on the plane is the Tarskoye Valley, the name of which derives from the villagers of Tärsh in the Armkhi Gorge. According to Georgian geographer Vakhushti Bagrationi, the Ingush village Angusht had already existed in the 17th century in the Tarskoye Valley. The exonym “Ingush” originated from this village.

As a result of the policy of the government of the Russian Empire in the North Caucasus, aimed at deporting the highlanders from part of the plains and foothill settlements, a strip was created on the lands that previously belonged to the Ingush, which was a line of Cossack villages, the Sunzha Line, dividing the plain from mountainous Ingushetia. In the middle of the 19th century, the Ingush were evicted from a number of villages located on the territory of the present-day Prigorodny district, after which the Cossack stanitsa Tarskaya was built on the site of the village Angusht. The same happened on other Ingush lands: on the site of the village Akhki-Yurt appeared the Sunzhenskaya stanitsa; on the site of the village Tauzen-Yurt — the Vorontsovsko-Dashkovskaya stanitsa; on the site of the village Akh-Borze — the Assinovskaya stanitsa, on the site of the village Mahmad-Khithe — the Voznesenskaya stanitsa; on the site of the village Alkhaste — the Feldmarshalskaya stanitsa; on the site of the village Ghazhara-Yurt — the Nesterovskaya stanitsa; on the site of the village Ildarkha-Ghala — the Karabulakskaya stanitsa; on the site of the village Ebarg-Yurt — the Troitskaya stanitsa; on the site of the village Sholkhi — the Tarskiy khutor, as well as the Sleptsovskaya, Datikhskaya, Mikhailovksya and Galashevskaya stanitsa's.

After decades of hostilities and skirmishes between the Cossack settlers and Ingush, the civil war of the early 20th century, in which the majority of the Ingush took up arms against the White Army during the Russian Revolution, became the main reason that the Cossack population from the above villages had to be deported, after which many of the occupied villages and lands were returned to the Ingush.

Until 1944, the eastern part of the modern Prigorodny District of was part of the Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. On March 7, 1944, after the deportation of Chechens and Ingush to Kazakhstan and Central Asia, the territory was included in the North Ossetian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. At the same time, the mountainous part of this territory (the southern region of present-day Ingushetia) was transferred to the Georgian SSR. On November 24, 1956, the Presidium of the Central Committee of the CPSU adopted a resolution on the restoration of the national autonomy of the Chechen and Ingush peoples, but the Prigorodny district remained part of North Ossetia.

Unlike the rest of the republic where Ossetians account for the majority of the population, the district has a significant Ingush population. The district in its eastern part is still considered a troublesome zone of the republic due to the high tensions between the Ingush and Ossetians.

Demographics

Ethnic groups according to the 1939 national census of the USSR:

Nationality Population %
Ingush 28,132 83,35 %
Russians 3,549 10,51 %
Chechens 412 1,22 %
Ukrainians 398 1,18 %
Georgians 397 1,18 %
Ossetians 297 0,88 %
Tatars 108 0,32 %
Other 460 1,36 %
Total 33,753 100%


Ethnic groups according to the 2010 Russian census:

Nationality Population %
Ossetians 72,921 67,11 %
Ingush 23,254 21,40 %
Russians 9,436 8,68 %
Georgians 858 0,79 %
Armenians 569 0,52 %
Other 953 0,88 %
Unknown 674 0,62 %
Total 108,665 100%
Historical population of Prigorodny District, North Ossetia–Alania
Year193919701989200220102023
Population33,75365,50675,017102,990108,665101 234

Gallery

Architectural complex of crypt burial grounds (ancient necropolis). Dargavs.
Crypt burial grounds (16-17 centuries). "Town of the dead" (ninety-five tombs)
Tower guard Alikovich: the territory of "the Town of the Dead"
Karmadon. The section of the gorge after the descent of the Kolka glacier
Karmadon. Narrowing of the gorge walls
Karmadon. Traces of the glacier's descent on the walls of the gorge
Karmadon. Traces of the collapse of the Kolka glacier on the walls of the gorge
Karmadon. The area of the rehabilitated road in the gorge
The upper part of the crypt burial Grounds (16-17 centuries) against the mountains
Dargavs. Dawn. Crypt burial ground

Notable people

  • Issa Kodzoev (1938-), Ingush politician, writer, poet, playwright