Nalchik
Nalchik is the capital city of Kabardino-Balkaria, Russia, situated at an altitude of in the foothills of the Caucasus Mountains; about northwest of Beslan. It covers an area of. Population:
History
The territory of modern-day Nalchik was formerly known as Sloboda. The modern city dates from the early 19th century when the expanding Russian Empire built a fort there in 1818.In 1838, a Russian military settlement was founded in the city, and after the Russian Revolution of 1917, in the year 1921, Nalchik was given the status of administrative center of Kabardin Autonomous Oblast. During the Russian Empire, the settlement was the administrative capital of the Nalchiksky Okrug of the Terek Oblast.
The word "Nalchik" literally means "small horseshoe" in Kabardian and Karachay-Balkar. It is a diminutive of na'l, a common Middle Eastern word for "horseshoe", possibly from the ancient Scythian, 'nalak'. The city of Nalchik was named this way because of how it is shaped as surrounded by the mountains of the land, and the Nalchik River is named after the city it runs across.
During World War II, on 2 November 1942, Nalchik was occupied by Romanian mountain troops under the command of Brigadier General Ioan Dumitrache, its capture earning the Romanian General the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross. The city was heavily damaged during the conflict. General Dumitrache went to great length ordering his troops to protect local population during the time Nalchik was occupied by Romanian forces. Professor A. N. Dainaco, the Mayor of Nalchik at that time, thanked General Dumitrache for liberating the city. Although he was accused of war crimes, General Dumitrache was fully exonerated after the war by a joint Soviet and Romanian judicial commission.
In 1990, there was a 6.0 magnitude earthquake in Nalchik.
With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Nalchik and the Kabardino- Balkaria region become a federal republic of Russia.
In 1999 the remains of Kazym Mechiyev, who died in exile in 1945, were reburied in Nalchik.
On October 13, 2005, Nalchik was attacked by a large group of Yarmuk Jamaat militants led by Shamil Basayev and Anzor Astemirov. Buildings associated with the Russian security forces were targeted, killing at least 14 civilians and wounding 115. Thirty-five policemen died in the fighting. Eighty-nine militants, including their leader Ilias Gorchkhanov, were killed, and another fifty-nine arrested.
Administrative and municipal status
Within the framework of administrative divisions, it is, together with four rural localities, incorporated as the city of republic significance of Nalchik—an administrative unit with the status equal to that of the districts. As a municipal division, the city of republic significance of Nalchik is incorporated as Nalchik Urban Okrug.Ethnic groups
The population of the city in 2021 included the following breakdown by ethnicity:- Kabardians
- Russians
- Balkars
- Cherkess
- Ossetians
- others
- Kabardians
- Russians
- Balkars
- Ossetians
- Ukrainians
Economy and education
Nalchik is home to the following facilities of higher education:
- Kabardino-Balkarian State University
- North Caucasian State Institute of Arts
- Kabardino-Balkarian State Agricultural Academy
Climate
Sports
is an association football club based in Nalchik, playing in the Russian Premier League. The 2008 World Women's Chess Championship has also been held in Nalchik on August 28–September 18, 2008.Notable people
- Khadzhimurat Akkayev, Olympic weightlifter
- Astemir Apanasov, Circassian singer, musician, composer, and actor
- Rustam Bakov, former Russian footballer
- Viktor Belenko, Soviet pilot who defected with a MiG-25, landing in Hakodate, Japan
- Dima Bilan, singer
- Felix Frankl, Austrian and Soviet mathematician, physicist and aerodynamics
- Lyalya Chyornaya, actress
- Andre Geim, Soviet, British and Netherlands physicist; Nobel laureate
- Vladislav Goldin, basketball player, currently playing US college basketball at the University of Michigan
- Mark Ifraimov, Israeli former member of the Knesset and Deputy Mayor of Sderot
- Muhadin Kishev, Soviet and Spanish artist
- Andrei Kolkoutine painter
- Alim Kouliev, actor, theater director
- Azamat Kuliev, painter
- Eldar Kuliev, film director, screenwriter
- Katya Lel, singer
- Alexander Litvinenko, ex-FSB officer turned anti-Putin activist, poisoned with polonium-210 and died 2006.
- Leo Mol, Soviet and Canadian artist and sculptor
- Nikolay Pavlov, professional footballer
- Albert Sarkisyan, former Armenian professional footballer
- Yuri Temirkanov, orchestra conductor
- Mikhail Zalikhanov, academician of Russian Academy of Sciences
Twin towns and sister cities
- Amman, Jordan
- Kayseri, Turkey
- Vladikavkaz, Russia
- Reno, Nevada, United States