CRIMEA

krīmēˈə, Rus. and Ukr. Krym, peninsula and autonomous republic (1991 est. pop. 2,363,000), c.10,000 sq mi (25,900 sq km), extreme SE Ukraine, linked with the mainland by the Perekop Isthmus. The peninsula is bounded on the S and W by the Black Sea. The eastern tip of the Crimea is the Kerch peninsula, separated from the Taman peninsula (a projection of the mainland) by the Kerch Strait, which connects the Black Sea with the Sea of Azov. Simferopol is the capital of the Crimean autonmous republic. Other major cities include Sevastopol (an municipality with the status of an oblast), Kerch, Feodosiya, Yalta, and Yevpatoriya.

Along the Crimea's northeast shore are a series of shallow, stagnant, but mineral-rich lagoons, known collectively as the Sivash or Putrid Sea, which are linked to the Sea of Azov by the Arabatskaya Strelka. The northern part of the Crimea is a semiarid steppe, drained by a few streams; this region supports fine wheat, corn, and barley crops. In the south rises the Crimean or Yaila Range (Yaltinskaya Yaila), with its extensive meadows and forests. The tallest peak rises to c.5,000 ft (1,520 m). In the Crimean Range is a major astronomical observatory. Protected by steep mountain slopes, the Black Sea littoral, once called the "Soviet Riviera," has a subtropical climate and numerous resorts, notably at Yalta and Sochi. During the years of Soviet rule, the resorts and dachas of the Crimean coast served as the prime perquisites of the politically loyal. In this region are vineyards and fruit orchards; fishing, mining, and the production of essential oils are also important. Heavy industry in the Crimea includes plants producing machinery, chemicals, and building materials.

Some 70% of the Crimea's population are ethnic Russians; the rest are mainly Ukrainians. Since 1989 there has also been a movement back to the area of native Tatars who had been exiled to central Asia in the Stalin era. There are also smaller minorities of ethnic Armenians, Greeks, Bulgarians, and Germans.

History

Known in ancient times as Tauris, the peninsula was the home of the Cimmerian people, called the Tauri. Expelled from the steppe by the Scythians in the 7th cent. b.c., they founded (5th cent. b.c.) the kingdom of Cimmerian Bosporus, which later came under Greek influence. Ionian and Dorian Greeks began to colonize the coast in the 6th cent., and the peninsula became the major source of wheat for ancient Greece. In the 1st cent. b.c., the kingdom of Pontus began to rule the Greek part of the peninsula, which became a Roman protectorate in the 1st cent. a.d. During the next millennium the area was overrun by Ostrogoths, Huns, Khazars, Cumans, and in 1239, by the Mongols of the Golden Horde. Meanwhile, the southern shore was mostly under Byzantine control from the 6th to the 12th cent.

Trade relations were established (11th–13th cent.) with Kievan Rus, and in the 13th cent. Genoa founded prosperous coastal commercial settlements. After Timur's destruction of the Golden Horde, the Tatars established (1475) an independent khanate in N and central Crimea. In the late 15th cent. both the khanate and the southern coastal towns were conquered by the Ottoman Empire; the Turks called the peninsula Crimea. Although they became Turkish vassals, the Crimean Tatars were powerful rulers who became the scourge of Ukraine and Poland, exacted tribute from the Russian czars, and raided Moscow as late as 1572.

Russian armies first invaded the Crimea in 1736. Empress Catherine II forced Turkey to recognize the khanate's independence in 1774, and in 1783 she annexed it outright; the annexation was confirmed by the Treaty of Jassy (1792). Many Tatars, with their Muslim religion and Turkic language, emigrated to Turkey, while Russians, Ukrainians, Bulgarians, Germans, Armenians, and Greeks settled in the Crimea. During the Crimean War (1853–56), parts of the remaining Tatar population were resettled in the interior of Russia.

After the Bolshevik Revolution (1917) an independent Crimean republic was proclaimed; but the region was soon occupied by German forces and then became a refuge for the White Army. In 1921 a Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was created; Tatars then constituted about 25% of the population. During World War II, German invaders took the Crimea after an eight-month siege. Accused by the Soviet government of collaborating with the Germans, the Crimean Tatars were forcibly removed from their homeland after the war and resettled in distant parts of the Asian USSR. The republic itself was dissolved (1945) and made into a region of the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic; in 1954 it was transferred to Ukraine. In 1989, some of the Tatars began to return from their exile in Siberia.

In 1991, President Mikhail Gorbachev was vacationing in Crimea at the time of the August Coup. Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russia and Ukraine engaged in negotiations over the possession of Crimea and the disposition of the former Soviet fleet based in the Black Sea. In 1992 there was an abortive attempt by the Russian-dominated Crimean government to declare independence. Elected Crimea's first president in 1994, Yuri Meshkov called for the rejoining of the Crimea with Russia. In 1995, Crimea's government was placed under national control and Meshkov was ousted, but its assembly was retained. An accord the same year between Ukraine and Russia called for the division of the Black Sea fleet, and in 1997 it was agreed that Russia would be allowed to base its portion of the fleet there for 20 years.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Crimea  - 4190 results

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ENGLAND AND THE NEAR EAST THE CRIMEA -ii- National Portrait Gallery VISCOUNT...1853 . ENGLAND, AND THE NEAR EAST THE CRIMEA BY HAROLD TEMPERLEY, F.B.A. PROFESSOR...This volume has the sub-title of the Crimea, because every episode of the period...
TATARS OF THE CRIMEA CENTRAL ASIA BOOK SERIES Duke University...Durham and London 1988 TATARS OF THE CRIMEA Their Struggle for Survival Original...Cataloging-in-Publication Data Tatars of the Crimea. Central Asia book series Based on a...
...the Muslim peoples of Anatolia, the Crimea, the Balkans, and the Caucasus had suffered...a sizeable minority. It included the Crimea and its hinterlands, most of the Caucasus...fate had overcome the Muslims of the Crimea, the northern Caucasus, and Russian...
...VIII EUGENIE DE MONTIJO 98 IX THE NEW REGIME 104 X THE CRIMEA 117 117 XI FRANCE AND THE DICTATORSHIP 155 XII ITALIAN...
...Steppe; The Carpathian Mountains; The Crimean Mountains; The Caucasian Mountains...Southern Ukraine; The Sub caucasus; The Crimea; The Kholm Area and Podlachia; Galicia...Brotherhood of SS. Cyril and Methodius; The Crimean War 1853-6...
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journal articles on: Crimea  - 227 results

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Florence Nightingale: Letters from the Crimea, 1854-1856 by Mary Ann Bradford...Florence Nightingale: Letters from the Crimea, 1854-1856. Edited by Sue M. Goldie...my duty," Florence Nightingale in the Crimean War, 1854-1856 (1987), which was originally...
...Analysis of Two Ethnic Minorities in Crimea. by Karina Korostelina...compromise for two ethnic minorities in the Crimea. Context of the Research In the context where the research took place, Crimea in Ukraine, the ethnic minority groups...
Managed Cares Crimea: Medical Necessity, Therapeutic Benefit...of medical necessity as managed cares "Crimea"--and not only because health plans have...it from time to time. An oddity of the Crimean War was that nobody much cared about capturing...
...Black Nurse Who Became a Heroine of the Crimea, was published only weeks later, and in...contemporary discourse continues in the Crimean sections of the text, where Seacoles sentimentalizations...that when Seacole finally arrives in the Crimean war zone, the "womans work" in which she...
...Chloroform by British Army Surgeons during the Crimean War by Henry Connor Medical Opinion...which were later to be realized during the Crimean War, have been italicized in the following...embarkation, at Varna in Bulgaria, for the Crimea, Dr John Hall, the Principal Medical Officer...
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magazine articles on: Crimea  - 225 results

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...Once-Forgotten Jamaican Who Nursed Soldiers in the Crimea Has Become a Symbol of Black Pride. but...black nurse who became a heroine of the Crimea Jane Robinson Constable Robinson, 233pp...Jamaican woman who nursed soldiers in the Crimean war will be celebrated in a programme...
...Admire the Most, the Times Man in the Crimea, W.H. Russell. by Martin Bell...Russells despatches filtered back to the Crimea, having not been greatly appreciated back...operationally dangerous. After the death in the Crimea of Lord Raglan, the new commander-in-chief...
...Black Nurse Who Became a Heroine of the Crimea. by Nick Smith Mary Seacole...black nurse who became a heroine of the Crimea by Jane Robinson, Constable, hb, pp233...home to her new role as a nurse in the Crimean War. Once ashore, Mary was quickly at...
...Never Came: Mary Seacole after the Crimea: Helen Rappaport on Queen Victoria, Florence Nightingale and the Post-Crimean War Reputation of the Woman Recently...made their weary journey home from the Crimea at the end of hostilities, there were...
...Nightingales influence on medical care in the Crimea and the US Civil War. by Susan...referring to the appalling conditions of the Crimean War, `that the public will learn that...in hand as far as medical care in the Crimea was concerned, Chenerys revelations helped...
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newspaper articles on: Crimea  - 325 results

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...brings no dividends to Black Sea fleet: Crimea suffers in transition to civilian economy by Nickolai Kralev CRIMEA, Ukraine - After 30 years of service...exercise has brought to the once-Russian Crimean peninsula two U.S. ships that landed...
...How the Celebrated Black Nurse of the Crimea Aroused the Ire of Florence Nightingale...Black Nurse Who Became a Heroine of the Crimea by Jane Robinson (Constable pounds...a West Indian nurse who served in the Crimea, was recently voted the "Greatest Black...
Nightingale, the Grievance Nurser; the Crimea as Career Opportunity: Laura Fraser as...enough to know that Nightingale went to the Crimea, shone a lamp on the wounded, reformed...during which newspaper reports from the Crimea galvanised British public opinion with...
Charge of the Download Brigade Hits Crimea. Byline: By Claire Hill Western Mail When Welsh band Crimea announced they would be giving their second...When the pair moved to London they started Crimea and were signed to Warner Brothers in the...
Films: Crimea and Passion. Byline: MARK ADAMS KOKTEBEL (12A) THE STARS: Gleb...take his 11-year-old son (Igor Chernevich) on a journey to Koktebel in the Crimea where he hopes his sister will help raise his son. As they have no money...
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encyclopedia articles on: Crimea  - 66 results

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CRIMEA krime , Rus. and Ukr. Krym, peninsula and autonomous...on the S and W by the Black Sea. The eastern tip of the Crimea is the Kerch peninsula, separated from the Taman peninsula...with the Sea of Azov. Simferopol is the capital of the Crimean autonmous republic. Other major cities include Sevastopol...
...23 km) wide, S Ukraine, connecting the Crimea with the Ukrainian mainland. It separates...1944 the Germans were routed out of the Crimea north of the isthmus. The isthmus was transferred with the Crimea to the Ukrainian SSR (now Ukraine) in...
...1989 pop. 174,000), in Ukraine, in the Crimea. It lies on the Kerch Strait of the Black...part of the Kingdom of Bosporus (see Crimea ). It was conquered (c.110 b.c.) by Mithradates...Cherkio and was conquered (1475) by the Crimean Tatars, who called it Cherzeti. It was...
...city (1989 pop. 109,000), S Ukraine, in the Crimea. It is a Black Sea port, a rail hub, and a vacation...annexed Yevpatoriya along with the rest of the Crimea in 1783, and during the Crimean War it was occupied (1854) by British, French...
...yol t , Rus. yal t , city (1989 pop. 89,000), S Ukraine, in S Crimea, on the Black Sea. Picturesquely situated near the seashore...of an ancient Greek colony. It is the largest resort in the Crimea , with numerous hotels, sanatoriums, and tourist and rest homes...
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