词条 | Ushakovskoye, Chukotka Autonomous Okrug |
释义 |
|en_name=Ushakovskoye |ru_name=Ушаковское |image_skyline=Ushakowskoje 2 2013-07-28.jpg |image_caption= |coordinates = {{coord|70|58|51|N|178|29|27|W|display=inline,title}} |image_map= |map_caption= |map_label_position=left |image_coa= |coa_caption= |image_flag= |flag_caption= |anthem= |anthem_ref= |holiday= |holiday_ref= |federal_subject=Chukotka Autonomous Okrug |federal_subject_ref= |adm_data_as_of= |adm_district_jur= |adm_district_jur_ref= |adm_inhabloc_jur= |adm_inhabloc_jur_ref= |adm_citydistrict_jur= |adm_citydistrict_type= |adm_citydistrict_jur_ref= |adm_selsoviet_jur= |adm_selsoviet_type= |adm_selsoviet_jur_ref= |capital_of= |capital_of_ref= |adm_ctr_of= |adm_ctr_of_ref= |inhabloc_cat= |inhabloc_cat_ref= |inhabloc_type= |inhabloc_type_ref= |mun_data_as_of= |mun_district_jur= |mun_district_jur_ref= |urban_okrug_jur= |urban_okrug_jur_ref= |urban_settlement_jur= |urban_settlement_jur_ref= |rural_settlement_jur= |rural_settlement_jur_ref= |intra_settlement_territory= |intra_settlement_territory_ref= |mun_admctr_of= |mun_admctr_of_ref= |leader_title= |leader_title_ref= |leader_name= |leader_name_ref= |representative_body= |representative_body_ref= |area_of_what= |area_as_of= |area_km2= |area_km2_ref= |pop_2002census=0 |pop_2002census_rank= |pop_2002census_ref=[1] |pop_density= |pop_density_as_of= |pop_density_ref= |pop_latest= |pop_latest_date= |pop_latest_ref= |established_date=1926 |established_title= |established_date_ref=[2] |current_cat_date= |current_cat_date_ref= |prev_name1= |prev_name1_date= |prev_name1_ref= |prev_name2= |prev_name2_date= |prev_name2_ref= |prev_name3= |prev_name3_date= |prev_name3_ref= |prev_name4= |prev_name4_date= |prev_name4_ref= |prev_name5= |prev_name5_date= |prev_name5_ref= |abolished_date= |abolished_date_ref= |postal_codes= |postal_codes_ref= |dialing_codes= |dialing_codes_ref= |website= |website_ref= |date=May 2010 }} Ushakovskoye ({{lang-ru|Ушаковское}}) was a rural locality (a selo) on the south east coast of Wrangel Island, Shmidtovsky District in the Russian Arctic that was deserted in 2003. Ushakovskoye was named after the explorer and founder of the polar station in Rogers Bay, Georgy Ushakov, who discovered a number of new islands in the Russian arctic. The settlement was founded as part of an attempt by Russia to assert sovereignty over the island following attempts by British and Canadian parties to claim the island and in 1935 was the scene of a grisly murder by the local Governor. The whole area experiences a severe, almost year-round arctic climate, with temperatures rarely above freezing. HistoryEarly settlementAlthough Ushakovskoye was to become the main settlement on the island, it was not the first time that attempts had been made to settle the island. From the late 19th century, Canada and the United States were interested in Wrangel Island, and both attempted to claim the island, despite the fact that Russia had claimed it in 1911.[2] During the Russian Civil War, the countries intensified their efforts. In 1921, an expedition financed by Vilhjalmur Stefansson and led by Canadian Allan Crawford attempted to settle a small party to claim the island for Canada, on behalf of Great Britain, with Stefansson stating that, "We want to have Wrangel Island for the development of [British] air routes, so that it will be the home base for airships and airplanes in the same way as the Falkland Islands provide a base for our ships and cruisers".[3] However, conditions were not favourable, with a lack of hunting available once the expedition members ran out of rations forcing the majority of the party to flee across the Chukchi Sea, leaving party member Ada Blackjack as a castaway on the island for two years.[4] In 1922, the Canadian Prime Minister, William Lyon Mackenzie King officially announced the Canadian claim that Wrangel Island was British territory.[2] In 1923, in the Bay of Rogers, an American expedition landed to claim the island. Russian settlementIn response, in 1924, the Soviet Union sent the gunboat {{ship||Red October|gunboat|6}}; the crew stopped the activities of American firms and Stefensson, declaring the island to be Soviet territory. The Soviet Government, in 1926, declared its sovereignty over the island; and, to confirm this, Ushakovskoye was founded by Georgy Ushakov's expedition on August 14, 1926. Ushakov had stopped off in Provideniya Bay and had brought with him several Inuit families from the village of Ureliki[5] The initial population of the settlement included Chukchi and Russian families, totalling about 60 people[6] In 1928, the first child, PI Pavlov, was born in the village.[3] During the first three years, a hydrometeorological station was established on the island. The settlers established themselves on the island and few chose to return to the mainland after their first posting ended in 1929. Indeed, so successful was the initial settlement that resulted in the founding of Ushakovskoye, that a second village, Zvyozdny, literally, Star, was founded some 30 km west of Ushakovskoye on the shores of Somnitelnaya Bay.[7] Zvyozdny would later become linked with Russian airbase at Cape Hawaii and would become the landing point for supplies delivered to the island from Mys Shmidta as well as mail, which would be delivered to Ushakovskoye along the dirt track which links the two settlements.[8] MurderThe establishment of the Russian claim and the settlement was also not without its troubles when, in September 1934, a new governor, Konstantin Semenchuk, previously posted to Iran, took office to supervise the attempts by the Russians to turn the tundra into a vegetable garden for all Russia, allegedly announcing the commencement of his time in office by gathering the people of Ushakovskoye together and informing them that, "Up here I am everything. I have all the rights, up to shooting people!"[9] Due to the isolated nature of the settlement, it was only in the winter of 1935, over a year after Semenchuk's arrival, that suspicions were first aroused when Otto Schmidt received a communication from Semenchuk requesting additional medical assistance to deal with an outbreak of typhoid and scurvy, despite there having been no previous outbreaks of typhoid being reported in the arctic.[9] This radio message, swiftly followed by the news that hitherto loyal party member Mrs Wolfson, the doctor's wife, was being returned to the mainland as a result of counter-revolutionary activities, resulted in dispatching of a GPU agent to investigate.[9] The agent amassed a large quantity of evidence against Semenchuk including the murder of the doctor, rape of local Inuit women and assault against the local Inuit men and charges of banditry, a more serious charge simply than murder, were brought against Semenchuk.[9] The case was deemed so important as an example to dissuade other rural governors from lapsing into autocracy that Chief Public Prosecutor André Vishinsky took personal charge of the trial and, despite allegedly presenting signs of insanity during the trial, Semenchuk was convicted and sentenced to death by firing squad.[9] Modern historyThe settlement grew and developed, until at the end of 1970 it had a school, club, shop, post office, hospital, helipad, a modest museum of natural history, an underground repository in the permafrost for storing meat, a temporary corral (for the slaughter of reindeer), the polar station "Rogers Bay" airport for An-2, Mi-2, Mi-6 and Mi-8 aircraft, fuel storage and bulk storage of coal, library and a communal bath.[10] Electricity was supplied to the homes.[3] The airbase at Cape Hawaii closed in the 1970s and the settlement of Zvyozdny was abandoned, but for a handful of Chukchi hunters, in the 1980s. In 1984, a monument to Georgy Ushakov was erected in the settlement by the Geographical Society of the USSR,[11] and the population of the settlement had grown to around 180 people.[10] From the early 1990s, subsidies were reduced and in 1994 the last supply ship brought provisions and fuel to the settlement. Afterwards, cargo and mail were carried by helicopter.[7] People began to leave Ushakovskoye and in 1997 it was decided to resettle the inhabitants at Mys Shmidta. The last resident of Ushakovskoye, Vasilina Alpaun, was killed by a polar bear on October 13, 2003 not far from her home.[12] WeatherWith a tundra climate (Köppen climate classification ET), Ushakovskoye experiences harsh weather almost all year round, and with temperatures only struggling above freezing for a few brief summer months, with temperatures often below freezing from September all the way through to the following June. {{Weather box |location=Ushakovskoye |metric first=yes |single line=yes |Jan record high C = 1.5 |Feb record high C = -0.2 |Mar record high C = 0.2 |Apr record high C = 2.2 |May record high C = 9.6 |Jun record high C = 17.4 |Jul record high C = 18.2 |Aug record high C = 16.7 |Sep record high C = 11.9 |Oct record high C = 5.3 |Nov record high C = 1.8 |Dec record high C = 2.0 |Jan high C = -19.3 |Feb high C = -21.0 |Mar high C = -19.3 |Apr high C = -13.1 |May high C = -3.9 |Jun high C = 3.1 |Jul high C = 5.5 |Aug high C = 4.7 |Sep high C = 1.2 |Oct high C = -5.0 |Nov high C = -11.6 |Dec high C = -17.8 |Jan mean C = -23.0 |Feb mean C = -24.7 |Mar mean C = -23.2 |Apr mean C = -17.0 |May mean C = -6.7 |Jun mean C = 0.6 |Jul mean C = 2.7 |Aug mean C = 2.3 |Sep mean C = -0.8 |Oct mean C = -7.2 |Nov mean C = -14.4 |Dec mean C = -21.0 |Jan low C = -26.7 |Feb low C = -28.4 |Mar low C = -27.1 |Apr low C = -20.9 |May low C = -9.5 |Jun low C = -1.4 |Jul low C = 0.7 |Aug low C = 0.5 |Sep low C = -2.6 |Oct low C = -9.7 |Nov low C = -17.5 |Dec low C = -24.3 |Jan record low C = -42.0 |Feb record low C = -44.6 |Mar record low C = -45.0 |Apr record low C = -38.2 |May record low C = -31.5 |Jun record low C = -12.3 |Jul record low C = -4.9 |Aug record low C = -6.5 |Sep record low C = -21.4 |Oct record low C = -29.8 |Nov record low C = -34.9 |Dec record low C = -49.7 |Jan precipitation mm = 12.5 |Feb precipitation mm = 10.9 |Mar precipitation mm = 8.7 |Apr precipitation mm = 7.2 |May precipitation mm = 8.1 |Jun precipitation mm = 11.4 |Jul precipitation mm = 23.3 |Aug precipitation mm = 26.7 |Sep precipitation mm = 19.9 |Oct precipitation mm = 15.1 |Nov precipitation mm = 13.6 |Dec precipitation mm = 10.9 |unit precipitation days = 0.1 mm |Jan precipitation days = 12.4 |Feb precipitation days = 10.4 |Mar precipitation days = 9.4 |Apr precipitation days = 9.5 |May precipitation days = 14.3 |Jun precipitation days = 10.0 |Jul precipitation days = 10.3 |Aug precipitation days = 14.5 |Sep precipitation days = 16.0 |Oct precipitation days = 18.7 |Nov precipitation days = 14.6 |Dec precipitation days = 12.6 |Jan humidity = 77.9 |Feb humidity = 80.1 |Mar humidity = 80.2 |Apr humidity = 81.6 |May humidity = 84.6 |Jun humidity = 87.1 |Jul humidity = 86.8 |Aug humidity = 89.3 |Sep humidity = 87.2 |Oct humidity = 81.7 |Nov humidity = 78.7 |Dec humidity = 79.6 |Jan sun = 3.1 |Feb sun = 44.8 |Mar sun = 176.7 |Apr sun = 279.0 |May sun = 155.0 |Jun sun = 252.0 |Jul sun = 238.7 |Aug sun = 133.3 |Sep sun = 84.0 |Oct sun = 46.5 |Nov sun = 3.0 |Dec sun = 0.0 |source 1 = climatebase.ru[13] }} See also
References1. ^{{ru-pop-ref|2002Census}} 2. ^1 Northeastern Border Control, Coastguard and FSB Newsletter, July 1st 2006 3. ^1 2 S. Vinogradov, New Settlers on Wrangel Island, Politizdat, 1981 4. ^Niven, Jennifer, 2003, Ada Blackjack: A True Story Of Survival In The Arctic. Hyperion Books, New York, New York. 431 pp. 5. ^1 Petit Fute, Chukotka, p.137 6. ^Russian sources identify the Russian families as "G. A. Ushakova, J. M. Pavlova, N. Savenko, Skurikhina, Taiana, Tagyu, DMOs, Etui, Nnoko, Kivyana, Pal, Anyalika, Analko". 7. ^1 {{Cite web |url=http://www.mnr.gov.ru/old_site/part/?pid=887 |title=Ministry of Natural Resources of the Russian Federation - History and development of Wrangel Island |access-date=2005-02-27 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050227080916/http://www.mnr.gov.ru/old_site/part/?pid=887 |archive-date=2005-02-27 |dead-url=yes |df= }} 8. ^E. Sashenkov, Chukotka Airmail, Philately USSR, No. 11 - 1982. 9. ^1 2 3 4 Anonymous, Crazy Governor, 1936. Time Magazine, vol. XXVI, no. 22, pp. ??-??. (June 1, 1936). 10. ^1 Brief history of the settlement by former inhabitant Vasily Prydatko-Dolin 11. ^vvv.ru, 100 anniversary of the birth of George Alekseevich Ushakov 12. ^centralasia.ru Polar bear gnawed the last person on Wrangel Island 13. ^{{cite web|title=Ushakovskiy, Russia|url=http://climatebase.ru/station/21982/?lang=en|publisher=Climatebase.ru|accessdate=22 January 2013}} External links
4 : Rural localities in Chukotka Autonomous Okrug|Populated places of Arctic Russia|Chukchi Sea|Former populated places in Russia |
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