Ryazan Oblast
Ryazan Oblast is a federal subject of Russia. Its administrative center is the types of [inhabited localities in Russia|city] of Ryazan, which is also the oblast's largest city.
Geography
Ryazan Oblast borders Vladimir Oblast, Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, the Republic of Mordovia, Penza Oblast, Tambov Oblast, Lipetsk Oblast, Tula Oblast, and Moscow Oblast.In terms of physical geography, Ryazan Oblast lies in the central part of the Russian Plain between the Central Russian and Volga uplands. The terrain is flat, with the highest point of no more than 300 m above sea level. Soils are podzolic and boggy on the left bank of the Oka, changing southward to more fertile podzolic and leached black-earths.
Hydrography
Most of Ryazan Oblast lies within the Volga basin, with the Oka the principal river of the area.History
Human occupation of the area of the Ryazan Oblast dates from at least the Upper Paleolithic period. East Slavs, Volga Finnic, Tatar tribes inhabited the area and merged into an ethnos, a process virtually completed by the 13th century CE. In 830 the Ryazan area became part of Rus' Khaganate.Later the Ryazan area became part of the Kievan Rus' political system and came under the domination of the Principality of Chernigov. The Principality of Ryazan operated as a separate entity from 1097 to 1521, when the area became part of the Grand Duchy of Moscow, though with the Qasim Khanate district retaining some autonomy until the 1550s.
The Ryazan Governorate became separate from the Moscow Governorate in 1796.
Soviet Union
Ryazan Oblast was formed out of the Moscow and Voronezh oblasts in 1937. It took its present form in 1954 when some of its southern districts were ceded to the newly established Lipetsk Oblast. Also in 1954, it was ceded parts of southern Moscow Oblast and no border changes happened afterward.Economy
Soviet Union
In the post-war period of the Soviet Union recovery in the wake of growing competition between USSR and US several ambitious plans severely undermined the economic stability of the region. In Ryazan Oblast, at the behest of central government led by Nikita Khrushchev, a regional administration ordered slaughter of livestock in a futile attempt to boost productivity rates. Because of series of misjudgement and overestimations these plans resulted in disastrous failure which is known today as Ryazan miracle.Modern
Ryazan Oblast is a part of the Central economic region. The oblast is economically favorable due to the water and land routes that pass through it and provide stable domestic and foreign economic ties. It is considered both an industrial and agricultural Oblast. The agriculture in the region is represented by livestock farming and plants cultivation. Livestock farming specializes in raising and fattening cattle and breeding pigs, sheep, and poultry. Beekeeping is also well developed in the region.Transportation
- Solotchinskoye peat [narrow gauge railway] is located in Ryazansky District
- Mesherskoye peat narrow gauge railway is located in Klepikovsky District
Demographics
Population:Vital statistics for 2024:
- Births: 6,376
- Deaths: 16,555
1.12 children per woman
Life expectancy :
Total — 68.61 years
Ethnic composition :
- Russians - 95.1%
- Ukrainians - 0.8%
- Armenians - 0.5%
- Mordvins - 0.5%
- Tatars - 0.5%
- Azeris - 0.4%
- Uzbeks - 0.3%
- Others - 1.9%
- 74,419 people were registered from administrative databases, and could not declare an ethnicity. It is estimated that the proportion of ethnicities in this group is the same as that of the declared group.
Religion
According to a 2012 survey 63% of the population of Ryazan Oblast adheres to the Russian Orthodox Church, 3% are unaffiliated generic Christians, 1% are Orthodox Christian believers without belonging to church or belonging to non-Russian Orthodox churches, 1% are Muslims, and 1% are adherents of the Rodnovery movement. In addition, 15% of the population declares to be "spiritual but not religious", 9% is atheist, and 7% follows other religions or did not give an answer to the question.Tourism
- , an 18th century mansion built by wealthy local trader and farmer.
Notable people
Arts
- Alexander Alexandrov, composer
- Yuri Bykov, filmmaker
- Erast Garin, comic actor
- Alexander Genis, writer, broadcaster and cultural critic
- Yuri Kholopov, musicologist, music theorist, doctor of arts, and professor of the Moscow Conservatoire
- Maximilian Kravkov, writer
- Andrei Mironov, painter
- Konstantin Paustovsky, writer
- Alexander Pirogov, bass opera singer
- Yakov Polonsky, writer
- Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin, satirist
- Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, writer
- Sergei Yesenin, poet
- Semen Zhivago, historical painter
Athletics
- Anton Belov, professional ice hockey defenceman
- Olga Kaliturina, high jumper
- Maria Kalmykova, basketball player
- Yuri Kuleshov, professional football defensive midfielder
- Irina Meleshina, long jumper
- Ivan Nifontov, judoka
- Sergei Panov, basketball player
- Konstantin Selyavin, former Russian professional football player
- Kirill Sosunov, long jumper
- Alexandra Trusova, figure skater
Engineering and science
- Andrey Arkhangelsky, geologist
- Victor Balykin, Russian physicist
- Vladimir Gulevich, biochemist
- Aleksei Kozhevnikov, neurologist and psychiatrist
- Nikolai Kravkov, pharmacologist
- Sergey P. Kravkov, soil scientist
- Sergey V. Kravkov, psychologist and psychophysiologist
- Andrey Markov, mathematician
- Ivan Michurin, biologist
- Sergey Nepobedimy, designer of rocket weaponry
- Ivan Pavlov, physiologist
- Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, engineer
Others
- Dmitry Andreikin, chess grandmaster
- Roman Putin, businessman