Argayash National Okrug

(Redirected from Argayash Canton)

55°29′N 60°53′E / 55.483°N 60.883°E / 55.483; 60.883

Argayash National Okrug
Аргаяшский национальный округ
Arƣajaş milli okrugь
Autonomous Okrug of the Soviet Union
1934
CapitalArgayash
Area 
• 1933
6,772 km2 (2,615 sq mi)
Population 
• 1933
88,900
History 
• Argayash Canton of the Bashkir ASSR established
15 November 1917
• Established
17 January 1934
• Disestablished
17 November 1934
Political subdivisions2 raions

The Argayash National Okrug (Russian: Аргая́шский национа́льный о́круг Argajašskij nacional'nyj okrug; Bashkir: Арғаяш милли округы Arğayaş milli okrugı; Bashkir Uniform Turkic Alphabet: [Arƣajaş milli okrugь] Error: {{Lang}}: Non-latn text (pos 20)/Latn script subtag mismatch (help)[a]) was a national okrug for the Bashkirs of the Chelyabinsk Oblast of the RSFSR in the Soviet Union. It existed from January to November 1934.

History

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On 15 November 1917, Trans-Ural Bashkiria was added to the nascent Bashkurdistan by decision of the Bashkir Central Soviet as Argayash Canton. Although an exclave surrounded by the RSFSR proper, this canton existed as an administrative and territorial unit of the Bashkir Autonomous Socialist Soviet Republic until 1930. In that year, the cantonal system of administration was eliminated and the former Argayash Canton was organized as two raions, Argayash and Kunashak, while remaining a part of the Bashkir ASSR.

On 17 January 1934, the Ural Oblast of the RSFSR which surrounded the former Argayash Canton was disbanded by the All-Russian Central Executive Committee and divided into three new oblasts, one of which was Chelyabinsk Oblast. On the same day, the area was transferred to this new oblast as the Argayash National Okrug.[1]

Later that year, on 17 November 1934, the All-Russian Central Executive Committee liquidated the national okrug and the area was thenceforth administered as a normal part of Chelyabinsk Oblast. There was some popular interest in reviving the okrug in the Argayash and Kunashak areas of the oblast in the late 1980s and early 1990s, but no official action was taken and the area remains a part of Chelyabinsk Oblast, now a part of the Russian Federation.

Notes

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  1. ^ The Bashkir language used the Uniform Turkic Alphabet from 1930 until 1938.

References

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  1. ^ "Постановление ВЦИК от 17 января 1934 года «О разделении Уральской области»". Archived from the original on 2015-07-22. Retrieved 2015-10-01. (in Russian)