Sultan-Boçala / Krymka (Q716208)

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a village in the Dzhankoy District of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea
  • Sultan Boçala
  • Султан-Бочала
  • Sultan-Bochala
  • Раппа Султан-Бочай
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Sultan-Boçala / Krymka
a village in the Dzhankoy District of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea
  • Sultan Boçala
  • Султан-Бочала
  • Sultan-Bochala
  • Раппа Султан-Бочай

Statements

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19 April 1783Gregorian
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45°42'5.000"N, 34°11'24.000"E
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Botschala, (Sultan-Botschala-Chutor), Krim/ Dshankoj (Kirchspiel Hochheim), (15 km westl. von Dshankoj; Einw.: 66 (1911)
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According to the "Memorial Book of the Tavria Province for 1867" , the village was abandoned by the inhabitants in 1860-1864, due to the emigration of Crimean Tatars, especially massive after the Crimean War of 1853-1856, to Turkey and remained in ruins. [...] According to the encyclopedic dictionary "Germans of Russia" , the German Lutheran village of Rappa was founded in 1903. In 1911, 66 people lived on the farm, in the Statistical Directory of the Tavria Province 1915 in the Bohemian Volost of the Perekop County, Rappa Sultan-Bochai economy is listed with a population of 102 people. [...] According to the List of Settlements of the Crimean ASSR according to the All-Union Census of December 17, 1926 , the Sultan-Bochai hamlet, with a population of 99 people, of whom 17 were Germans, was part of the Pavlovsk Village Council of Dzhankoy district. [...] on August 18, 1941, the Crimean Germans were evicted, first to the Stavropol Territory, and then to Siberia and northern Kazakhstan. [...] in September 1944, the first new settlers arrived in the region (27 families) from Kamianets-Podilska and Kyiv region, and in the early 1950s, a second wave of immigrants from different regions of Ukraine came. By decree of the Presidium of the Verkhovna Rada of the RSFSR dated May 18, 1948, the settlement of the state farm Byi-Su-Kovcha was merged with Sultan Bochala and renamed Krymka.

Identifiers

121181801
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