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Kakhovka (Ukrainian: Каховка, pronounced [kɐˈxɔu̯kɐ]) is a port city on the Dnieper River in Kakhovka Raion, Kherson Oblast, of southern Ukraine. It hosts the administration of the Kakhovka urban hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine.[1] It had a population of 34,749 (2022 estimate).[2]
Kakhovka
Каховка | |
---|---|
Coordinates: 46°47′52″N 33°28′30″E / 46.79778°N 33.47500°E | |
Country | Ukraine |
Oblast | Kherson Oblast |
Raion | Kakhovka Raion |
Hromada | Kakhovka urban hromada |
Founded | 1492 |
Population (2022) | |
• Total | 34,749 |
Postal code | 74800 |
Area code | +380 5536 |
Climate | Dfa |
Website | http://www.kakhovka.ks.ua |
It is home to the KZEZO (Electro-Welding Equipment Plant) and the Tavria Games festival.
Administrative status
editIn 1972, the Verkhovna Rada of the Ukrainian SSR gave the city the rank of city of oblast significance within Kherson Oblast. Until 18 July 2020, Kakhovka served as the administrative center of Kakhovka Raion though it did not belong to the raion. In July 2020, as part of the administrative reform of Ukraine, which reduced the number of raions of Kherson Oblast to five, the city of Kakhovka was merged into Kakhovka Raion. Simultaneously, the raion center was moved to Nova Kakhovka.
History
editThe settlement was first established in 1492 by Mengli I Giray as İslâm Kermen (Islam-fortress), while locally became known as Aslan city (Aslan-horod). The fortress was situated next to one of the Dnieper crossings, Tavan crossing. The fortress was razed to the ground in 1695 during the Muscovites Azov campaigns led by Boris Sheremetiev and assisted by Hetman of Zaporizhian Host Ivan Mazepa.
Soon after the annexation of Crimea by the Russian Empire, in 1791 the Russian Colonel D.M. Kulikovsky built in place of former Crimean fortress the trade town of Kakhovka. It was named in honor of the Taurida Oblast governor Vasiliy Kakhovsky. In 1848 the town obtained city rights. In the 1870s–90s the town was renowned for having a huge population of low-income contractors (batraki). According to N.J. Tjezjakov, a Russian economist, between 20,000 and 40,000 batraki would gather in the city at the one time, 80% of them males.
In December 1918, by the decision of the administration of the Dnipro povit (uyezd), Kakhovka was declared a city. In August 1920, during the final push in the Russian Civil War to drive the Whites under Wrangel out of the Crimea, Ieronim Uborevich established a bridgehead as part of the Northern Taurida Operation at Kakhovka, which became the site of fierce battles, which Evan Mawdsley described as "probably the closest the Civil War came to world war trench fighting."[3]
During World War II, Kakhovka was captured by the Wehrmacht on August 30, 1941, as part of Operation Barbarossa. The Germans operated a Nazi prison in the town.[4] It was retaken by the 4th Ukrainian Front during the Melitopol Offensive in the Battle of the Dnieper on November 2, 1943.
The city was captured on 24 February 2022 by Russian troops during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. They later pushed on to Mykolaiv, searching for way to cross the Southern Bug river.[5][6]
City leaders
edit01.1989 - 08.1994 - Anatoliy Korsun - chairman of the executive committee of the City Council;
09.1994 - 04.1998 - Viktor Semenovych Gashenko - Chairman of the City Council;
04–12.1998 - Serhii Shkarupa - Mayor of the city;
01–11.1999 - Leonid Marchuk - First Deputy Mayor, Acting Mayor;
12.1999 - 04.2006 - Leonid Marchuk - Mayor;
04.2006 - 10.2015 - Oleksandr Petrovych Karasevych - Mayor;
06.11.2015 - 26.10.2020 - Andrii Andriiovych Dyachenko - Mayor;
21.11.2020 - Vitalii Anatoliiovych Nemerets - Mayor.
Economy
editToday, Kakhovka is one of the industrial centres of the Kherson Oblast. The leader of industrial production is the Kakhovka Electric Welding Equipment Plant, a joint-stock company. Before the Russian occupation of the city in 2022, the plant produced modern electric welding equipment that was supplied to almost 80 countries, and on 24 December 2022, its premises were damaged by Russian mortar fire.
The industrial face of the city is also shaped by the Experimental Mechanical Plant, which specialises in the production of experimental machinery and equipment for the processing and food industries, the Silhospahrehat plant for the repair of diesel engines and the production of spare parts for agricultural machinery, and the flagship of the food industry, Chumak PrJSC.
The Kakhovka branch of Cargill is one of Ukraine's largest sunflower oil processing plants. In 2008-2009, Mykolaiv-based Sudnoservice built a powerful grain and oilseed storage facility in the city. The city ranks first in Ukraine in terms of foreign investment per capita.
In total, the city has more than 550 enterprises of various forms of ownership, including small businesses. This economic complex employs three quarters of the city's working population. In the total volume of production, works performed and services rendered, one fifth of the city's industrial enterprises, almost 60 per cent of small and medium-sized enterprises and businesses, about 10 per cent of service enterprises, more than 10 per cent of trade enterprises and more than 5 per cent of construction organisations contribute.
Small and medium-sized businesses are gaining ground in Kakhovka. It currently concentrates more than 60 per cent of its assets in working capital. This is three times more than large enterprises. Small and medium-sized businesses are developing dynamically, exploring the market space and creating jobs for the city's population.
Business structures annually attract over UAH 12 million and over USD 2 million in foreign investments to develop production. Such enterprises as Petroplast, Metaldizayn, Stav, Paritet, Tornadoplast, Globart, May, Khimtekhnologiya, and OPENTEK are consistently supplying the market with products, increasing their output and expanding their product range, the latter of which was destroyed by Russian bombardment on 18 October 2023. The construction industry is represented by business structures and construction organisations. The most powerful of them are the joint-stock company Road Construction Department No. 12 and BudMayster LLC.
Demographics
editDistribution of the population by ethnic groups according to the 2001 Ukrainian census:[7]
Native languages according to the 2001 Ukrainian census:[8]
Transport
editThe M14E58 Odesa-Melitopol-Novoazovsk motorway runs along the southern outskirts of the city.
The cargo and passenger railway station Kakhovka of the Kherson Railway Directorate is located near the town of Tavriysk.
Education
editThere are 7 general secondary education institutions in the city (including two specialised ones with in-depth study of foreign languages) with almost 4,000 students.
More than 1,500 children are educated in eight pre-school institutions.
The out-of-school education system is represented by the Young Technicians' Station, the Young Naturalists' Station, the Children's Creativity Centre, the Children's and Youth Sports School and the Interschool Training and Production Complex.
Since 1969, the State Vocational Educational Institution "Kakhovka Vocational Lyceum of the Service Sector" has been operating in the city, training skilled workers in the professions of "Hairdresser", "Hairdresser-Makeup Artist", "Tailor", "Manicurist-Pedicurist". It ceased to exist in 2021.
Cultural influence
editThe 1935 film Three Friends (Три товарища) included the song "Kakhovka" (words by Mikhail Svetlov and music by Isaak Dunayevsky), which became very well known, especially the refrain "Мы мирные люди, но наш бронепоезд/ Стоит на запасном пути" ("We are peaceful people, but our armored train/ Stands [ready] on the siding"). Svetlov chose the site of the little-known Civil War battle for his song because he had grown up nearby and had known the town during the war.[9]
The Tavria Games are a popular open air music festival that take place in the town each year.[10]
Twin cities
editNotable people
edit- Alexander Spendiaryan, composer, born in Kakhovka.
- Olia Hercules, British-Ukrainian food writer, grew up in Kakhovka.[11]
- Sergei Pankejeff, aristocrat from Odesa.
- Vladimir Virchis, was a Ukrainian professional boxer.
The following are named after Kakhovka
editThe neighboring city of Nova Kakhovka.
Villages in Mykolaiv district of Odesa Oblast, Sandyktaus district of Akmola oblast (liquidated in 2000), Shcherbaktyn district of Pavlodar Region (Kazakhstan), Malokakhovka village of Kakhovka district of Kherson region.
Kakhovka and Kakhovska streets in a number of settlements in the former Soviet Union.
Kakhovskyi lane/road/entrance in a number of Ukrainian cities.
Kakhovske highway in Melitopol.
The Kakhovka railway station of the Odesa railway in Kherson Oblast.
2894 Kakhovka is an asteroid named after the town.
References
edit- ^ "Каховська міська громада" [Kakhovsk city community] (in Ukrainian). Портал об'єднаних громад України.
- ^ Чисельність наявного населення України на 1 січня 2022 [Number of Present Population of Ukraine, as of January 1, 2022] (PDF) (in Ukrainian and English). Kyiv: State Statistics Service of Ukraine. Archived (PDF) from the original on 4 July 2022.
- ^ Evan Mawdsley, The Russian Civil War, (Edinburgh: Birlinn, 2008), p. 268.
- ^ "Gefängnis Kachovka" [Kachovka prison]. Bundesarchiv.de (in German). Retrieved 18 September 2022.
- ^ "Миколаїв готується до кругової оборони: до міста прориваються 12 танків" [Mykolaiv is preparing for a circular defense: 12 tanks break through to the city]. 24tv (in Ukrainian). 24-Канал. 26 February 2022. Archived from the original on 26 February 2022. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
- ^ "Russian military enter Kakhovka in South-Eastern Ukraine". Sky News (in Ukrainian). 24 February 2022. Retrieved 9 October 2022.
- ^ "Національний склад міст".
- ^ "Рідні мови в об'єднаних територіальних громадах України".
- ^ "Песня о Каховке" [Song about Kakhovka]. Archived from the original on 2015-03-20. Retrieved 2011-01-31..
- ^ "The Tavria Games - Apr. 30, 2003". 30 April 2003.
- ^ Fox, Killian (28 December 2014). "Rising stars of 2015: chef Olia Hercules". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 December 2016.
External links
edit- The murder of the Jews of Kakhovka during World War II, at Yad Vashem website.