Mazyr
Mazyr Belarusian: Мазы́р | ||
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Mazyr | ||
Coordinates: 52°03′N 29°15′E / 52.050°N 29.250°E | ||
Country | Belarus | |
Region | Gomel Region | |
Mentioned | 1155 | |
Area | ||
• Total | 44.1381 km2 (17.0418 sq mi) | |
Elevation | 160 m (520 ft) | |
Population (2009)[1] | ||
• Total | 108,792 | |
• Density | 2,500/km2 (6,400/sq mi) | |
Time zone | FET (UTC+3) | |
Postal code | 247760 | |
Area code(s) | +375 2363 | |
License plate | 3 | |
Website | www.mymozyr.info |
Mozyr or Mazyr (Belarusian: Мазы́р, pronounced [maˈzɨr]) is a city in Gomel Region of Belarus on the Pripyat River about 210 kilometres (130 miles) east of Pinsk and 100 kilometres (62 miles) northwest of Chernobyl and is located at approximately 52°03′N 29°15′E / 52.050°N 29.250°E. The population is 111,770 (2004 estimate). The total urban area including Kalinkavichy across the river has a population of 150,000. Mozyr is known as a center of oil refining, machine building, and food processing in Belarus. It is home to one of the largest oil refineries in Belarus, pumping out 18 million metric tons per year. The Druzhba pipeline carries crude oil from Russia splitting in two at Mazyr. One pipeline branch is directed into Poland and the other one to Ukraine.
Overview
The right bank of the Pripyat River, where the city is located, is elevated above the left bank at substantial heights (up to 80 metres (262 feet)). The overfall of surface of that scale is assumed to be a consequence of a glaciation: the Pripyat River is running right along the edge where an ancient glacier was located. Since both banks of the river are sandy, the right bank is cut through by a number of great ravines (more than 2.5 km (1.6 mi) length, up to 200 metres (656 feet) width). The city is also located on the ravines, so its streets look much like streets of a mountain town. One of the ravines is proclaimed a reserve. Some of the nearby ravines are currently also equipped with ski lifts and transformed into skiing winter resorts.
Mazyr once had a sizable Jewish population. During World War II, many Jews were executed by the Nazis in Mazyr. There are several memorials devoted to this in the modern city. As with other Soviet cities, during approximately the last 15 years of the Communist control, a large proportion of the remaining Jews have relocated abroad, mostly to Israel and USA.
In 1986, the city suffered from heavy radioactive fallout from the Chernobyl accident.
History
Mazyr is one of the oldest cities of historical Ruthenia. First mentioned in the mid-12th century as part of Duchy of Vladimir, and then the Duchy of Kiev. In the 13th century it was conquered by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Initially a small settlement, in the 15th century it was donated to Duke Michael Glinski, who converted it into a town. The city received town rights (Magdeburg Law) first from king Stefan Batory in 1577 and then from king Sigismund III of Poland in 1609. Despite having been destroyed by Russian forces twice (in 1525 and 1654), the city continued to grow and following the Union of Lublin it became a major administrative and trade centre, as well as a seat of a powiat ("county" office and court). In 1648 there was a conflict during the Khmelnytsky Uprising. Between 1723 and 1726 the Jesuits created a school in Mozyr under auspice of the Academy of Vilna. Following the suppression of the order in 1773 the school was secularised and continued to exist as a gymnasium. Among its most famous graduates are Edward Piekarski (linguist) and Władysław Mazurkiewicz (physician).
In 1793, following the Partitions of Poland, the town was annexed by Russia and its town rights were again confirmed in 1795. In the 19th century the town grew rapidly, mostly because of the Russian Pale of Settlement policy that allowed Jews to settle only in the lands once held by the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. Because of that Mozyr grew to over 10 thousand inhabitants by the end of the century, most of them Jewish.
During the Polish-Soviet War of 1920 the town was captured by the Polish Army in the so-called Mozyr Operation. Polish 9th Infantry Division captured the city in a swift and daring manoeuvre that earned its commanding officer, Col. Władysław Sikorski (later Prime Minister of Poland) a promotion to general. In the course of the war the town was briefly recaptured by the Bolshevists, but in the aftermath of the battle of Warsaw it was again recaptured by the Polish forces of Gen. Stanisław Bułak-Bałachowicz, who proclaimed a short-lived Belarusian People's Republic on November 12, 1920. However, in the Riga Peace Treaty it was assigned to Soviet Russia and became part of the Byelorussian SSR. Since 1938 the town was a seat of Polesie region, however in 1954 it lost that status and was administratively attached to the region of Gomel.
Population
Year | Jewish population | Total Population | % Jewish | Notes |
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1897 | 5631 | 8076 | 69.73% | Russian Census of 1897 |
1927 | ~6000 | 14300 | 42% | Soviet Census of 1927[2] |
1939 | 6307 | 17500 | 36.04% | Jewish population just before World War II[3] |
1970 | 4300 | 48000 | 8.96% | Soviet Census of 1970. Population fell due to Holocaust and migration to bigger cities as Minsk, Moscow and Leningrad after WWII [4] |
1979 | 3600 | 105882 | 3.40% | Soviet Census of 1979. Jewish population fell due to emigration of Soviet Jews to Israel and USA[4] |
1989 | 3200 | 128000 | 2.50% | Soviet Census of 1989. Jewish population fell due to emigration of Soviet Jews to Israel and USA[4] |
1999 | 565 | 114000 | 0.50% | Jewish population fell due to emigration of Soviet Jews to Israel and USA[4] |
2004 | <500 | 111500 | 0.45% |
Educational Center
- I.P. Shamyakin State Pedagogical University
- State Politehnikum(Technical Colledge)
- Medical Colledge
- Music Colledge
- Art School
- State Litsey
- Gomel State School of Olimpic Reserve
International Festival 'Hey, Rocknem!'
Mozyr is a capital of a modern rock music of Gomel region, where since 2003 International Festival of Music is organized. There are Oil Refining Plant, brewery 'Речицкое пиво', multimedia company 'Fotolux' and Minsk newspaper 'Znamya Yunosti' (Russian:Знамя Юности)among sponsors of the Festival. Up to forty rock bands take stage in what become major cultural event. Local band Otrazhenie (Reflection), a pioneer and a leader of the Belorussian Hard Rock is a constant participant and a contributor to the festival.
International relations
Twin towns – Sister cities
Mazyr is twinned with:
- Chojnice Poland
Notable residents
- George de Mohrenschildt - geologist and friend of Lee Harvey Oswald
- Isaac Don Levine was born there
- Zbigniew Morsztyn - Polish nobleman of Leliwa coat of arms, poet of the Baroque era, soldier, member of the Polish Brethren, Miecznik of Mozyr. Cousin and co-worker of Jan Andrzej Morsztyn.
- Ksenia Sitnik - singer and winner of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2005
References
- ↑ World Gazetteer Archived May 22, 2013 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Belarys.by site about Mozyr
- ↑ Jewishgen.org Ghettos of Gomel district
- 1 2 3 4 Jewish Heritage Research Group in Belarus.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mazyr. |
- Satellite photo of Mazyr (from Google Maps). Ravines can be seen very clearly.
- Mazyr town at Radzima.org
- FC Slavia-Mozyr Official Site - www.slaviya.info
- FC Slavia - www.slavia-mozyr.com
- Сайт горада Мазыр
- Cities of Belarus:Mozyr
- International Festival 'Hey, Rocknem!'
- The murder of the Jews of Mazyr during World War II, at Yad Vashem website.
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Coordinates: 52°03′N 29°16′E / 52.050°N 29.267°E