Byaroza District
Byaroza District (Belarusian language: Бярозаўскі раён) is an administrative subdivision of the Brest Region of Belarus with the center in Byaroza. The district is located in northwestern Polesia.
The district was formed in 1940 after the Soviet annection of West Belarus.
In 1958–1967 the Byaroza hydroelectric power station was built. The town of Byelaazyorsk is built for the power station workers in 1958.
There are two biological reserves in the district, near villages Sporava and Buslouka.
Demographics
At the time of the Belarus Census (2009), Byaroza District had a population of 66,988. Of these, 90.8% were of Belarusian, 5.7% Russian, 1.8% Ukrainian and 1.0% Polish ethnicity. 61.7% spoke Belarusian and 36.2% Russian as their native language.
Economics
There are industry enterprises in the rayon producing agricultural products, ceramics, construction materials, textiles.
An important railway branch connecting region center Brest and capital Minsk goes through the Byaroza district. Main railway stations in the rajon are Byaroza-Kartuzskaya, Bronnaya Hara, Byelaazyorsk.
Places of interest
- Orthodox Charniachauskaja church of St. Nicholas (1725)
- Carthusian monastery ruins, Byaroza
- Old Pyeski mansion, 19th century
- Roman Catholic Church of St. Virgin Mary, Sihnievichy (1795)
- Chernoye Lake (tenth the largest lake in Belarus) [1]
References
- ↑ "Main characteristics of the largest lakes of Belarus". Land of Ancestors. Data of the Research Laboratory for Lake Study of the Belarus State University. 2011. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
External links
|
Coordinates: 52°31′58″N 24°58′39″E / 52.53278°N 24.97750°E