Nasyr-Kort administrative district. Nasyr-Kort administrative district Famous natives and residents

Nasyr-Kort (or Nasyrkort) is the name of a once large village near Nazran, which today has become part of this city.

History of the village of Nasyr-Kort

There is no reliable information about the history of the village of Nasyr-Kort, but it is known that people have lived in this place since ancient times. This is confirmed by the fact that to the southeast of the settlement there is the ancient burial mound of Abi-guv. The diameter of the mound is 31 m, height – 6 m. This is a sacred place for the Ingush. There is a legend: one ruler in ancient times marched with his army against the Ingush people to seize their land. According to ancient custom, two warriors were supposed to meet on the battlefield. The army of the defeated warrior was considered a loser. The Ingush brought the warrior Abi into battle, she won the battle with the enemy, and the enemy army was forced to retreat. In memory of this event, the Abi-guv mound was built. “Guv” translated from Ingush means “mound, hill.” Abi-guv has survived centuries and in recent years looks like a simple hill in the immediate vicinity of the Caucasus federal highway. However, the authorities of Ingushetia are going to develop this historical place, create a park for walking and a recreational area nearby. It is planned that a large exhibition complex will appear here.

Nasyr-Kort administrative district

In 1996, Nazran was enlarged at the expense of the villages closest to the city. So the village of Nasyr-Kort became part of one of the largest cities in Ingushetia. Nasyr-Kort administrative district is located in the southern part of Nazran. In the east it borders on the Gamurzievsky administrative district, in the north-west - on the Central, and in the north - on Altievsky. To the southwest of Nasyr-Kort there is the village of Mayskoy, which already belongs to North Ossetia. To the south of the district is the city of Magas.

The absolute majority of residents of Nasyr-Kort are Ingush, 99% of them here. There are only a few families of Chechens, Avars, Russians, Ossetians. Therefore, almost all village residents profess Islam.

The population of Nasyr-Kort has been declining in recent years. If in 2006 almost 25 thousand people lived in the administrative district, then by the beginning of 2016 there were already 22 thousand. However, in this part of Nazran there are a lot of young families and small children, and this gives reason to hope that Nasyr Court will grow. There is one kindergarten and four secondary schools in the village.

Nasyr-Kort has become the birthplace of many worthy people. For example, Vassan-Girey Dzhabagiev, a famous Ingush educator, political and public figure, sociologist and publicist, was born here. The famous Ingush writer, author of more than thirty books, Said Chakhkiev, comes from Nasyr-Kort. Another native of the village that Nasyr-Kort is proud of is the twice Hero of the Soviet Union, the talented commander YapontsAbadiev.

Nasyr-Kortsky

Coordinates

Geography

Located in the southern part of the city of Nazran. In the north it borders with the Altievsky administrative district, in the east with the Gamurzievsky administrative district, and in the northwest with the Central District.

Also, to the southeast is the village of Ekazhevo, to the south is the city of Magas, and to the southwest is the village of Mayskoye (North Ossetia).

Story

Population

Population
2002 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
24 107 ↗ 24 940 ↗ 25 223 ↗ 25 528 ↗ 25 900 ↘ 18 097 ↗ 18 138
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
↗ 19 379 ↗ 20 365 ↗ 21 264 ↗ 22 090 ↗ 22 743

Notable natives and residents

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Notes

  1. . Retrieved August 8, 2016. .
  2. . .
  3. . Retrieved October 17, 2013. .
  4. . Retrieved August 23, 2014. .
  5. . Retrieved May 31, 2014. .
  6. . Retrieved November 16, 2013. .
  7. . Retrieved August 2, 2014. .
  8. . Retrieved August 6, 2015. .
  9. . From the book by A. U. Malsagov and Kh. V. Turkaev “Writers of Soviet Checheno-Ingushetia.” 1969

Links

  • DEMO PROFILE - Administration of Nasyr-Kort a/o]

An excerpt characterizing the Nasyr-Kort administrative district

“You shaved the adjutant seriously,” a voice was heard from behind.
Prince Andrei saw that the officer was in that drunken fit of causeless rage in which people do not remember what they say. He saw that his intercession for the doctor’s wife in the wagon was filled with what he feared most in the world, what is called ridicule [ridiculous], but his instinct said something else. Before the officer had time to finish his last words, Prince Andrei, his face disfigured from rage, rode up to him and raised his whip:
- Please let me in!
The officer waved his hand and hurriedly drove away.
“It’s all from them, from the staff, it’s all a mess,” he grumbled. - Do as you please.
Prince Andrei hastily, without raising his eyes, rode away from the doctor's wife, who called him a savior, and, recalling with disgust the smallest details of this humiliating scene, galloped further to the village where, as he was told, the commander-in-chief was located.
Having entered the village, he got off his horse and went to the first house with the intention of resting at least for a minute, eating something and bringing into clarity all these offensive thoughts that tormented him. “This is a crowd of scoundrels, not an army,” he thought, approaching the window of the first house, when a familiar voice called him by name.
He looked back. Nesvitsky’s handsome face poked out from a small window. Nesvitsky, chewing something with his juicy mouth and waving his arms, called him to him.
- Bolkonsky, Bolkonsky! Don't you hear, or what? “Go quickly,” he shouted.
Entering the house, Prince Andrei saw Nesvitsky and another adjutant eating something. They hastily turned to Bolkonsky asking if he knew anything new. On their faces, so familiar to him, Prince Andrei read an expression of anxiety and concern. This expression was especially noticeable on Nesvitsky’s always laughing face.
-Where is the commander-in-chief? – asked Bolkonsky.
“Here, in that house,” answered the adjutant.
- Well, is it true that there is peace and surrender? – asked Nesvitsky.
- I'm asking you. I don’t know anything except that I got to you by force.
- What about us, brother? Horror! “I’m sorry, brother, they laughed at Mak, but it’s even worse for us,” Nesvitsky said. - Well, sit down and eat something.
“Now, prince, you won’t find any carts or anything, and your Peter, God knows where,” said another adjutant.
-Where is the main apartment?
– We’ll spend the night in Tsnaim.
“And I loaded everything I needed onto two horses,” said Nesvitsky, “and they made me excellent packs.” At least escape through the Bohemian mountains. It's bad, brother. Are you really unwell, why are you shuddering like that? - Nesvitsky asked, noticing how Prince Andrei twitched, as if from touching a Leyden jar.
“Nothing,” answered Prince Andrei.
At that moment he remembered his recent clash with the doctor’s wife and the Furshtat officer.
-What is the commander-in-chief doing here? - he asked.
“I don’t understand anything,” said Nesvitsky.
“All I understand is that everything is disgusting, disgusting and disgusting,” said Prince Andrei and went to the house where the commander-in-chief stood.
Passing by Kutuzov's carriage, the tortured horses of the retinue and the Cossacks speaking loudly among themselves, Prince Andrei entered the entryway. Kutuzov himself, as Prince Andrei was told, was in the hut with Prince Bagration and Weyrother. Weyrother was an Austrian general who replaced the murdered Schmit. In the entryway little Kozlovsky was squatting in front of the clerk. The clerk on an inverted tub, turning up the cuffs of his uniform, hastily wrote. Kozlovsky’s face was exhausted - he, apparently, had not slept at night either. He looked at Prince Andrei and did not even nod his head to him.
– Second line... Wrote it? - he continued, dictating to the clerk, - Kiev Grenadier, Podolsk...
“You won’t have time, your honor,” the clerk answered disrespectfully and angrily, looking back at Kozlovsky.
At that time, Kutuzov’s animatedly dissatisfied voice was heard from behind the door, interrupted by another, unfamiliar voice. By the sound of these voices, by the inattention with which Kozlovsky looked at him, by the irreverence of the exhausted clerk, by the fact that the clerk and Kozlovsky were sitting so close to the commander-in-chief on the floor near the tub, and by the fact that the Cossacks holding the horses laughed loudly under window of the house - from all this, Prince Andrei felt that something important and unfortunate was about to happen.
Prince Andrei urgently turned to Kozlovsky with questions.
“Now, prince,” said Kozlovsky. – Disposition to Bagration.
-What about capitulation?
- There is none; orders for battle have been made.
Prince Andrei headed towards the door from behind which voices were heard. But just as he wanted to open the door, the voices in the room fell silent, the door opened of its own accord, and Kutuzov, with his aquiline nose on his plump face, appeared on the threshold.
Prince Andrei stood directly opposite Kutuzov; but from the expression of the commander-in-chief’s only seeing eye it was clear that thought and concern occupied him so much that it seemed to obscure his vision. He looked directly at the face of his adjutant and did not recognize him.

Nasyr-Kort administrative district of Nazran(Ingush. “Nasar-Kort”) - the former village of Nasyr-Kort in the Nazran district of the Republic of Ingushetia. Nowadays it is one of 4 administrative districts of the city of Nazran.
  • 1 Geography
  • 2 History
  • 3 Population
  • 4 Notable natives and residents
  • 5 Notes
  • 6 Links

Geography

Located in the southern part of the city of Nazran. In the north it borders with the Altievsky administrative district, in the east - with the Gamurzievsky administrative district, in the north-west - with the Central.

Also, to the southeast is the village of Ekazhevo, to the south is the city of Magas, and to the southwest is the village of Mayskoye (North Ossetia).

Story

Population

5000 10 000 15 000 20 000 25 000 30 000 2002 2010 2015

Notable natives and residents

  • Abadiev, Yaponts Arskievich - Soviet commander. Cavalry officer, guard lieutenant colonel, first commander of the 255th separate Chechen-Ingush cavalry regiment, as well as commander of the 126th regiment of the 28th cavalry division, 297th and 278th cavalry regiments of the 115th Kabardino-Balkarian division. He was twice nominated for the title of Hero of the Soviet Union - in 1942 and 1943.
  • Dzhabagiev, Vassan-Girey Izhievich - an outstanding Ingush educator.
  • Chakhkiev, Said Idrisovich - famous Ingush writer, poet, playwright, film playwright and fabulist, children's writer and translator, publicist and public figure. People's writer of Checheno-Ingushetia, diploma winner of the All-Union Literary Competition named after N. Ostrovsky, prominent public figure, member of the Writers' Union and the Union of Journalists of Russia. He is the author of more than thirty books.
  • Taziev, Ali Musaevich - terrorist, active participant in the separatist movement in the North Caucasus in the 1990s - 2000s, Ingush field commander, since 2007 - commander (supreme amir) of the armed forces of the self-proclaimed "Caucasian Emirate", head of the "Vilayata Galgayche" "(territorial-administrative unit of the "Caucasian Emirate"), head of the military committee of the State Defense Committee-Majlisul Shura. According to the websites of Chechen militants, Taziev (Amir Akhmed) was second in the leadership hierarchy of the Caucasus Emirate after Doku Umarov.
  • Chumakov, Khamzat - public and religious figure, imam of the Nasyr-Kort central mosque.

Notes

  1. 1 2 Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2015. Retrieved August 6, 2015. Archived from the original on August 6, 2015.
  2. Charter of the municipal formation "Urban district of the city of Nazran". Approved by City Council Decision No. 5/22-1 dated December 24, 2009.
  3. All-Russian population census 2002. Volume. 1, table 4. Population of Russia, federal districts, constituent entities of the Russian Federation, districts, urban settlements, rural settlements - regional centers and rural settlements with a population of 3 thousand or more. Archived from the original on February 3, 2012.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Population of the Republic of Ingushetia by settlements 2006-2012. Retrieved October 17, 2013. Archived from the original on October 17, 2013.
  5. 1 2 Population estimate 2010-2013. Retrieved August 23, 2014. Archived from the original on August 23, 2014.
  6. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities. Table 35. Estimated resident population as of January 1, 2012. Retrieved May 31, 2014. Archived from the original on May 31, 2014.
  7. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2013. - M.: Federal State Statistics Service Rosstat, 2013. - 528 p. (Table 33. Population of urban districts, municipal districts, urban and rural settlements, urban settlements, rural settlements). Retrieved November 16, 2013. Archived from the original on November 16, 2013.
  8. Table 33. Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2014. Retrieved August 2, 2014. Archived from the original on August 2, 2014.
  9. Ingush.RU - Heroes of Ingushetia
  10. Chakhkiev Said Idrisovich. From the book by A. U. Malsagov and Kh. V. Turkaev “Writers of Soviet Checheno-Ingushetia.” 1969
  11. LIFE: The mystery of the militant Magas is revealed

Links

  • Nasyr Court village, Russia, Ingush Republic - Mobile Yandex.Map
  • Postal codes of Nasyr-Kort
  • Post office with. Nasyr-Court, Nazran. post offices of Nazran, post office of Nazran, post offices of Nazran, post office, telegraph, post office of the village. Nasyr-Kort, in Nazran
  • Toponymy of the word Nasyr-Kort
  • DEMO PROFILE - Administration of Nasyr-Kort a/o