Chonhar

Chonhar (Ukrainian: Чонгар), transliterated sometimes as Chongar (Russian: Чонгар), is a village on the Chonhar Peninsula, within the swampy region of Syvash, in Henichesk Raion, Kherson Oblast. The village is a seat of the Chonhar rural community (silrada). It belongs to Henichesk urban hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine.[1] The village is just north of Chonhar Strait, which is part of the boundary between Kherson Oblast and Crimea.

Chonhar
Чонгар
Village
Abandoned café "Chonhar", near the old road bridge
Abandoned café "Chonhar", near the old road bridge
Chonhar is located in Kherson Oblast
Chonhar
Chonhar
Location of Chonhar
Chonhar is located in Crimea
Chonhar
Chonhar
Chonhar (Crimea)
Chonhar is located in Ukraine
Chonhar
Chonhar
Chonhar (Ukraine)
Coordinates: 46°01′51″N 34°32′45″E
Country Ukraine
OblastKherson
RaionHenichesk
Population
 (2001)
  Total1,431

Geography

The village is on the Chonhar Peninsula in Kherson Oblast. It is just north of Chonhar Strait, a shallow waterway that separates the peninsula and mainland Ukraine from the isthmus of Crimea. Highway M18/E105 runs through the eastern end of the village and crosses a bridge over Chonhar Strait, parallel to an older, unused road bridge. The Chonhar bridge is one of three main hard surface routes to and from Crimea. The NovooleksiivkaDzhankoi railway line runs through the eastern end of the village, then on to Syvash village and over a bridge across the sea to Crimea.

History

Russian military checkpoint in 2014

On 27 February 2014, during the 2014 Crimean crisis, Berkut (special police) of Crimea occupied the checkpoint near Chonhar and neighbouring territory.[2] After Russia annexed Crimea, the area became a de facto border patrolled by Berkut and Russian troops.[3][4] By 27 December 2014 Russian forces had fully withdrawn from the Chonhar peninsula.[4][5]

The Highway M18/E105 bridge over Chonhar Strait was damaged on 22 June 2023, during the Russian invasion of Ukraine, in an apparent Ukrainian missile strike.[6]

See also

References

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