Berdiansk

Berdiansk (Ukrainian: Бердянськ, IPA: [berˈdʲɑnʲsʲk]; Russian: Бердянск, IPA: [bʲɪrˈdʲansk]) is a port city in Zaporizhzhia Oblast, south-eastern Ukraine. It is on the northern coast of the Sea of Azov, which is connected to the Black Sea. It serves as the administrative center of Berdiansk Raion. The city is named after the Berda River's Berdianska Spit, at the foot of which it is located.[1] Its population is 106,311 (2022 estimate).[2]

Berdiansk
Бердянськ
Berdyansk
Berdiansk is located in Zaporizhzhia Oblast
Berdiansk
Berdiansk
Location of Berdiansk
Berdiansk is located in Ukraine
Berdiansk
Berdiansk
Berdiansk (Ukraine)
Coordinates: 46°45′20″N 36°47′20″E
Country Ukraine
Oblast Zaporizhzhia Oblast
Raion Berdiansk Raion
Founded1673
City rights1827
Government
  MayorOleksandr Svidlo
Area
  Total82.65 km2 (31.91 sq mi)
Elevation
10 m (30 ft)
Population
 (2022)
  Total106,311
  Density1,300/km2 (3,300/sq mi)
Postal code
71100-71127
Area code(+380) 6153
Vehicle registrationAP/08
ClimateCfa
Websitebmr.gov.ua

Berdiansk is home to a safari zoo, water park, museums, health resorts with mud baths and climatic treatments, and numerous water sport activities.

Since 27 February 2022, Berdiansk has been under Russian military occupation.

Name

Its original name was "Kutur-Ogly". The city name changed to "Novo-Nogaisk" in 1830 ("New Nogaisk") (see Nogai). The present name was given to the city in 1841 by special decree of Nicholas I and named after the nearby Berda River.

Between 1939 and 1958 the city was known as "Osypenko", so named after Hero of the Soviet Union Polina Osipenko.[3] This name has now been given to the nearby village Osypenko, where Polina Osipenko was born.

The name of Berdiansk has also been written Berdianske (Ukrainian: Бердянське),[4] According to 1928 Kharkiv Orthography.[5]

History

19th century

In the 19th century, the Russian Imperial government began to plan to build a seaport in the Northern Azov region. In 1824, Count Mikhail Vorontsov, Governor-General of the Caucasus Viceroyalty, sent an expedition to the Azov Sea. Its task was to find a place to build a new seaport to assist in the defense of Russia's southern borders. Initially, the place for a future port was implied in the village of Obetochnoe that belonged to Count Orlov-Denisov, near the town of Nogaisk founded in 1821.[6]

In the autumn of 1824, Captain Nikolai Kritsky, the expedition supervisor reported on several prospective sites; the best being a place closed off from the sea by the Berdianska Spit. In an official report to Vorontsov, Kritsky wrote: "the quality of Berdiansk Spit surpasses that of Obytichna Spit; you can build a landing stage and port on it unless you concede to Sevastopol...".[7]

In 1820s, the place of the future Berdiansk was just a small settlement of fishers with a few huts[8] In 1825, merchant Nikolay Kobozev built a private wooden quay which was opened with a ceremony on July 1, 1830.[9][10] Only by 12 January 1835, a state-owned quay had been built.[9]

In 1833, Kobozev set up a wooden post to function as a navigation beacon. In 1836, the first foreign ship entered the port of Berdiansk.[6] A modern stone lighthouse was built under the leadership of the Italian merchant Carlo Tomasini in 1838.[6] It is a 23-metre (75 ft) octahedral whitestone tower with an orange stripe in the middle. The beacon fires protected sailing ships and was first seen in 1840. Almost half a century later, in 1883, the oil lamps were replaced by electric lights. The old beacon was refurbished and upgraded with newer equipment.

In 1841 the settlement at Berdiansk Bay received city status. Grigory Chernyaev (1787—1868) was appointed the city governor (gradonachalnik) and the head of Berdiansk sea port.[11] Chernyaev, an officer from landed gentry, took part in the Battle of Borodino. After the defeat of Napoleon he was appointed a comendant of Valenciennes.[11] Mikhail Vorontsov knew him from France, when the former was the commander of the Russian expedition forces.[11]

The son of the Nogaisk merchant who owned fisheries at Berdiansk Bay, Nikolay Kobozev, was elected the first mayor of the city in 1841. During his term, the small township turned into a flourishing city with a large number of foreign companies' offices and active international trade. He built the first stone houses in the town and the famous Winter Theater, destroyed during World War II.

In 1842, Berdiansk became the district center. On 31 January 1845, the first coat of arms of Berdiansk was created. At the top, on a green background, is a silver Nogai nomadic tent together with a black plow; this denotes the semi-nomadic life lived in the Nogais and farming work done by local residents. In the bottom part, on a blue background, sits a black anchor to symbolize the district's affinity with the sea. By this time the customs outpost was already opened. Some foreign marine grain purchasing representatives (negotiators) moved their offices to Berdiansk from Mariupol and Odesa.

20th century

During the Ukrainian War of Independence, Berdiansk fell under the control of the Makhnovshchina, becoming one of the key centres for the Ukrainian anarchist movement.[12]

Jews in Berdiansk were annihilated during the German occupation of Ukraine in 1941 and 1942.[13]

During the Soviet period Berdiansk was a powerful industrial centre. There were machine factories of all types, an oil refinery, a fiberglass factory, cable factory, ferroconcrete combine, factory of materials handling equipment, provisions factory, a bread-baking complex, milk plant, a meat-packing plant, a considerable quantity of construction and mounting organizations, commodity railway station and the sea trading port.

21st century

Following the completion of the Crimea Bridge, and amidst hostile Ukrainian-Russian relations, the Ukrainian seaport authority stated in November 2018 that in Berdiansk year on year shipping had dropped 50%.[14] They said that this was due to ships not getting permission from Russia to pass through the Kerch strait.[14] Russia denied any disruption to Ukrainian shipping.[14]

On 27 February 2022, three days after the Russian invasion of Ukraine began, Berdiansk was captured by the Russian Army following the Battle of Berdiansk during the Southern Ukraine offensive of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[15] Many local people protested the occupation in the streets, singing the Ukrainian national anthem.[16] The Russian navy Alligator-class landing ship Saratov was sunk in the port of Berdiansk by a Ukrainian attack on 24 March 2022.[17]

On 6 September 2022 Artem Bardin, the city's Russian-imposed commandant, was attacked and seriously injured near the administration building,[18] and died later that day.[19]

A series of explosions was reported at Russian-occupied Berdiansk air base on 8 December 2022.[20][21]

Berdiansk Airport is located nearby.

Development

The city developed and grew, though construction was random and haphazard. In the center, private residences for the nobility, merchants, priests were built, as well as office accommodation. Suburbs arose in the outskirts of Berdiansk, such as Sailor, German, Soldier (Liska), Dog beam Havrylivka, and Near and Far Majority.

In April 1862 Tsar Alexander II with assistance from Mayor N. Kobozev confirmed the city district plan for Berdiansk. In the plan, the streets were straight and led to the sea. This layout has remained to the present day in the central part of the city. It was forbidden to build houses above the second floor. Fine buildings decorate Berdiansk: the Winter Theatre, City Hall, the hotel "Bristol" (now House of Culture factory "Pivdenhidromash"), male classical school (now the main building of the Pedagogical Institute), Ascension Cathedral, the Lutheran Church, and more.

In Berdiansk the main employer was still the seaport, and on March 24, 1869, the breakwater was commissioned. This stone construction is 640 metres (2,100 feet) long with two port lights on the ends – pointers to the harbor, located at a distance of 859 metres (2,818 feet) from the shore. The increasing importance of the port was mentioned in 1867 in a commemorative book on the Taurian province: "Already there is no doubt, that for all the Azov coast the Berdiansk port will be the Odessa of the Black Sea coast".

In 1876 as part of the defense of Sevastopol, rear admiral P. P. Schmidt was appointed Town Governor and Port Chief. Being a progressive man, he did much to promote the development of both port and city. Soon there were small industrial enterprises and banks opening in the city. John Greaves' factory manufacturing harvesters became well known across Europe.[22][23] A farming machine factory was opened by Schröder and Matias. There was the rope-making factory of Venz and Yanzen, Selstrem's candle-wax works, Litsmen sausage factory, Fetter's brewery, Klavdin macaroni factory, and Ediger's printing house. The Italians constructed the city power station. By this time, two daily newspapers, three libraries and four bookshops were established. The city had running water and electric light illumination.

In 1899 Berdiansk was linked up to the railway. At the beginning of the 20th century the city population numbered 26,500. There were about ten orthodox temples, two Jewish and one Karaite synagogue, boys and girls grammar schools, nautical classes, a city college and some credit institutions. In addition to an extensive export trade in mainly grain and flour,[24] Berdiansk conducted large amounts of inland trade. It became a substantial distributive market for goods received over a wide area. By the beginnings of the 20th century, Berdiansk had become a merchant trading port with well developed industry, strongly influenced by its infrastructure. In 1915 a French consul, and the vice-consuls of the UK, Greece, Denmark, Spain, Italy, Sweden, and Norway, were in Berdiansk.[25]

Geography

Beach on the Sea of Azov in Berdiansk

Berdiansk is located in a steppe zone that defines its varieties of flora and fauna. The climate on the Azov coast is unique: the summers are hot and dry, the winters are mild and warm. The main natural feature is the end of the Berdianska spit. The spit flora is quite diverse. Here one can find more than 300 different kinds of plants. Some of them are documented in the Red Book (e.g. Carex colchica, Eryngium maritimum, Glycyrrhiza glabra). The vegetation is mostly made up of plants with powerful root systems.

In spite of the fact that the spit is a populous territory, it exhibits a wide variety of fauna. Here it is possible to see hares, hedgehogs, martens, foxes, weasels and steppe cats. There also are: geese, sandpipers, swans, herons, ducks, magpies, seagulls, cormorants, warblers, lapwings, red-breasted geese and mute swans. Their numbers swell during the migration season. The islands of Big Dzendzik and Small Dzendzik, small islands in the Astapih's archipelago, contain most of the birds.

Sea water temperatures off Berdiansk are higher than the Black Sea coast of the Crimea and the Caucasus. Already in May, the water warms up to 22 °C (72 °F), and in June it can reach 30 °C (86 °F). In the sea there are more than 70 fish species amongst them great sturgeon, Russian sturgeon, starred sturgeon, Azov turbot, haarder, mullets, kilka, anchovy, sea roach, shemaya and various species of gobies. There are predators too, pike perch and sterlet. The phytoplankton consists of diatomaceous, peridinium and cyanobacteria algae. At the bottom of the sea are large quantity of molluscs, such as cockles, sendesmiya, mussels and myas. They form an important food source for the fish. In coastal waters there are also dolphins.

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
186010,100    
189726,500+162.4%
192626,400−0.4%
193952,000+97.0%
195965,000+25.0%
1970100,000+53.8%
2001121,000+21.0%

Note: Historical population record is taken out of Encyclopedia of Ukraine.[26]

According to the 1897 census, Jews made up 12.9% of the total population.[13]

Culture

In the city of Berdiansk, there are several art museums, Schmidt's Museum, Museum of World War II and Berdiansk History Museum. It is a host city to more than ten festivals a year. The list includes:

  • the Azov Summer Ukrainian Journalism Festival
  • the Brigantine Film Festival
  • the Berdiansk Jazz Festival
  • the Hilarious by the Dark Blue Sea Comedy Festival
  • the Top-Top Children's Talent Festival
  • the Starfall Children's Pop Music Festival
  • Berdiansk Folk and Religious Music Festival
  • the Heat of the Sun Festival
  • the Azov Sails Televised Children's Talent Festival
  • the Rock'n'roll Slavic Soul Festival,
  • the Beer Festival

Monuments

Main pedestrian street of Berdiansk and monument to Mikhail Vorontsov
Flowerbeds in downtown Berdiansk
Roman Catholic Church of St. Mary in Berdiansk

Along with monuments to Alexander Pushkin and Pyotr Schmidt there are monuments to the goby-supporter, the sanitary technician, the boy-fisherman, an envious toad, and the children of lieutenant Schmidt. The armchair of desires is also popular. It is said if one sits down on it and thinks of a desire then it will come true. These unusual monuments are being restored on Azov avenue.

Tourism

Berdiansk Ferris wheel

The status of the city has gradually changed from an Industrial centre to more of a tourist centre. Today Berdiansk is the main resort city on the Azov coast. Its population numbers about 130,000, and during the resort season this figure rises to about 600 thousand. The leisure facilities are highly developed and successfully compete with resorts on the Black Sea Coast and the Crimea. There are a large number of sanatoriums and resorts where it is possible to take medical and restorative courses for "health improvement".

On the Berdianska spit there are about: 7 sanatoriums, 17 children's and sports establishments, 45 recreation centres and boarding houses that receive up to 15 thousand visitors. There is also the biggest Aquapark in Europe, the Kyiv dolphinarium, a safari zoo, and a lot of pleasure and cultural establishments. Gradually Berdiansk is evolving into a modern European city. In 2001 it received first place in an All-Ukrainian competition for best city beautification.

In the pedestrian area of Azov Avenue, the Seaside square and Berdiansk quays it is possible to travel on trishaws, a small steam locomotive and on real horses. On all beaches there are entertainments such as: riding on rubber bananas and tablets, water bicycles and motorcycles, slides and trampolines, and sailing. There is also nightlife, with many bars and restaurants located directly on the sea coast.

Economy

Berdiansk port

One of the main enterprises is the sea trading port, with clients from all over the world. It carries out metal processing, scrap metal, grain, coal, ore, clay, sunflower-seed oil, industrial oils, mineral oil, and pig-iron. There is a complex for processing fertilizers and mineral oil, the container terminal, and a railway depot. Tracks and roads approach all moorings, and all are equipped with electric cranes. Depth in port water area is 8.4 metres (28 feet).

Berdiansk is also an important fisheries centre which is an integral part of the city's food industry. There is also a scientific organisation which does fish research in reservoirs of the Azov basin. It determines stock levels and calculates the annual volumes of withdrawal of such valuable food fish as sturgeon, pike perch, haarder, Azov turbot, Azov gobies, and flounder.[27]

Industry

During the Soviet period Berdiansk was a powerful industrial centre. There were machine factories of all types, an oil refinery, a fiberglass factory, cable factory, ferroconcrete combine, factory of materials handling equipment, provisions factory, a bread-baking complex, milk plant, a meat-packing plant, a considerable quantity of construction and mounting organizations, commodity railway station and the sea trading port. However, in the early independence years the majority of the large industrial enterprises ceased or were reorganised into smaller private concerns.

Chemical and the petroleum-refining industry is represented by two big enterprises: "AZMOL," and the Berdiansk state fiberglass factory, plus two small enterprises: Limited Liability Company "Fibreglass" and Closed Corporation "Bertie." Public corporation "AZMOL" is engaged in the manufacture of lubricants and packaging, and the development of new products using energy-efficient technologies. Transfer to municipal ownership of the city biological sewage treatment plant is planned.

Education

Pedagogical University

As well as the state comprehensive schools there are private lyceums and gymnasiums, as well as branches of other high schools and professional colleges. There is the Berdiansk State Pedagogical University and the University of Management and Business. In the Schmidt park there is the Berdiansk musical school, and nearby, almost on the coast, an art school. A subject of pride in Berdiansk is the Centre of Children's and Youthful Creativity, numbering a large quantity of study groups and ensembles.

According to Ben Eklof in Russian Peasant Schools, education in Berdiansk was badly disrupted in the 1870s when the schools director, a government inspector, 'ran amok' and had to be removed from his post.

Notable people

Twin towns – sister cities

Berdiansk is twinned with:[29]

References

  1. "Berdyansk city, Ukraine travel guide". ukrainetrek.com. Retrieved 2016-12-17.
  2. 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.
  3. Helena Krasowska,The Polish Minority in South-Eastern Ukraine, pub Institute of Slavic Studies, Polish Academy of Sciences, 2017, ISBN 978-83-64031-65-6, p. 52.
  4. "Index", Concise Encyclopedia Ukraine, vol. II, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1969-01-31, p. 922, doi:10.3138/9781442673199-015, ISBN 9781442673199, retrieved 2023-07-04
  5. "Heohrafichni nazvy" [Geographical names]. Ukrainskyi pravopys [Ukrainian Orthography] (PDF) (in Ukrainian) (1st ed.). Kharkiv: Ukrainian State Publisher, USRR National Commissariat of Education. 1929. p. 76. Назви міст кінчаються на -ське, -цьке (а не -ськ, -цьк) [Names of cities end in -ske, -tske (and not -sk, -tsk)]
  6. Порт при сей косе...
  7. "History:: Berdyansk City Council – Official". bmr.gov.ua. Archived from the original on 2016-12-20. Retrieved 2016-12-17.
  8. Население. Известные личности. Династии.Энциклопедия Бердянска. — С. 122-123. Archived 2018-08-05 at the Wayback Machine
  9. Сукач Г. О том, когда же начинается история Бердянского морского порта, и об уроках истории, которые так ничему и не научили Archived 2018-07-04 at the Wayback Machine (11.12.2017).
  10. Helena Krasowska,The Polish Minority in South-Eastern Ukraine, pub Institute of Slavic Studies, Polish Academy of Sciences, 2017, ISBN 978-83-64031-65-6; p. 52.
  11. "Газета "Город" - Первый градоначальник Бердянска был одним из героев Отечественной войны 1812 года". gorod-online.net. Archived from the original on 2017-11-28. Retrieved 2018-09-25.
  12. Chop, Volodymyr; Chop, Igor (2007). «Вольный Бердянск»: місто в період анархістського соціального експерименту (1918 – 1921 роки) ["Free Berdiansk": a city during the period of anarchist social experiment (1918-1921)] (PDF) (in Ukrainian). Zaporizhzhia: RA "Tandem - U". pp. 3–4. ISBN 978-966-7482-85-5. Роль Бердянська в махновській історії унікальна. Місто мало надзвичайно важливе стратегічне значення для махновської республіки, «вільної батьківщини анархії» [The role of Berdiansk in the Makhnovist history is unique. The city was of extreme importance for the Makhnovist Republic, the "free homeland of anarchy."]
  13. "Berdyansk". Encyclopaedia Judaica.
  14. 'Danger never went away': Ukrainian cities feel cornered by Russia, The Guardian (30 November 2018).
  15. Yulia Zakharchenko (February 28, 2022). "Бердянськ захопили бойовики, у Харкові та Сумах – тиша: Арестович про ситуацію в Україні". Fakty i Kommentarii. Archived from the original on February 28, 2022. Retrieved February 28, 2022.
  16. "Ukrainian civilians sing their national anthem to Russian Soldiers in occupied Berdyansk". The Independent. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
  17. "General Staff update: Not Orsk but Saratov landing ship destroyed at Berdiansk Port". Ukrinform. 25 March 2022. Retrieved 25 March 2022.
  18. "Another Russia-Imposed Official Attacked In Occupied Area Of Ukraine". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 6 September 2022.
  19. https://liveuamap.com/en/2022/6-september-ria-novosti-says-the-commandant-of-berdyansk
  20. "Series of explosions reported at air base in occupied Berdiansk, Zaporizhzhia Oblast". The Kyiv Independent. 8 December 2022.
  21. "Ukrainian Special Forces Blow Up Russian Army Airbase In Berdyansk". Charter'97 - News from Belarus. 8 December 2022.
  22. Lyman Igor, Konstantinova Victoria, Danchenko Eugene. British Consul and Industrialist John Edward Greaves (Berdyansk, 2017), 200 p.
  23. Lyman Igor, Konstantinova Victoria. British Vice-Consul in Berdyansk John Edward Greaves, Scriptorium nostrum (2016, № 2 (5)), pages 86-108
  24. Victoria Konstantinova, Igor Lyman and Ignatova Anastasiya. European Vector of the Northern Azov in the Imperial Period: British Consular Reports about Italian Shipping (Berdyansk: Tkachuk O.V., 2016), 184 p.
  25. Igor Lyman, Victoria Konstantinova. The Ukrainian South as Viewed by Consuls of the British Empire (Nineteenth - Early Twentieth Centuries). Volume 1: British Consuls in the Port City of Berdyansk (Kyiv, 2018), 630 p.
  26. "Berdiansk". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com.
  27. "Welcome to Azov Center YugNIRO! - Azov Center YugNIRO". 18 July 2010. Archived from the original on 18 July 2010.
  28. Hernández, Javier C. (13 March 2022). "On a Stage 5,000 Miles Away, He Sings for His Family in Ukraine". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 15 March 2022. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  29. "Партнерські зв'язки". bmr.gov.ua (in Ukrainian). Berdyansk. Archived from the original on 2022-02-27. Retrieved 2020-04-01.

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