Shymkent
Template:Infobox settlement Shymkent (Template:Lang-kz, شىمكەنت), known until 1993 as Chimkent<ref>Template:Cite EB1911</ref> (Template:Lang-uz, چىمكېنت; Template:Lang-ru), is the capital city of South Kazakhstan Region, the most densely populated region in Kazakhstan. It is the third most populous city in Kazakhstan behind Almaty and Astana with an estimated population of 629,600 in 2011.<ref name="Est-2011-02-01"/> A major railroad junction on the Turkestan-Siberia Railway, the city is also a notable cultural centre, with an international airport. Shymkent is situated Template:Convert west of Almaty and Template:Convert to the north of Tashkent, Uzbekistan. Template:Kz-census2009 Template:Kz-census1999
Contents
History
Shymkent was founded in the twelfth century<ref>Peoples of central Asia. By Lawrence Krader. Published by Indiana University, 1971</ref> as a caravanserai to protect the Silk Road town of Sayram, 10 km to the east. Shymkent grew as a market center for trade between Turkic nomads and the settled Sogdians. It was destroyed several times: by Genghis Khan, soldiers from the southern Khanates, and by nomad attacks. In the early 19th century it became part of the khanate of Kokand. It was captured by the Russians in 1864.<ref>http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/111610/Shymkent</ref> It was renamed Chernyaev in 1914 and renamed Shymkent in 1924. Following the Russian conquest, Shymkent was a city of trade between nomadic Turks and sedentary Turks, and was famous for its kumis.<ref>Through Russian central Asia. By Stephen Graham. Published by The Macmillan Company, 1916</ref>
There was a gulag located near Shymkent, and many Russian-speaking people came to the area via imprisonment.<ref>The Gulag Archipelago, 1918–1956: an experiment in literary investigation. By Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn, H. T. Willetts, Thomas P. Whitney. Published by Westview Press, 1997</ref>
The name Chimkent comes from two Uzbek words chim,meaning turf and kent (or kand), meaning city. Together, Chimkand or Chimkent for "city in the grass/turf."
After Kazakhstan gained independence, the city was renamed Shymkent in 1993 as part of the government’s campaign to apply Kazakh names to cities. The formal spelling of Шымкент (Shymkent) as codified in Kazakhstan’s Constitution goes against the original Uzbek spelling rules of never having the letter "ы" follow the letter "ш". As a result, the new name Шымкент (Shymkent) is used only in Kazakhstan, while other countries continue to use the original spelling Чимкент (Chimkent).
In January 2015 Shymkent officials sent a request to UNESCO to be recognized as an ancient city.<ref name=Shymkent>Template:Cite web</ref>
Geography
Climate
Shymkent features a borderline Mediterranean (Köppen Csa)/Dry-Summer Continental Climate (Dsa) climate, not unlike Eastern Washington or Northern Idaho but with much hotter summers. Shymkent features hot, relatively dry summers and cold winters. Winters here are noticeably warmer than in more northerly cities like Almaty and Astana, with the mean monthly temperature during the city’s coldest month (January) averaging around Template:Convert. Shymkent averages just under Template:Convert of precipitation annually.
Demographics
- Kazakhs 64.76%
- Russians 14.52%
- Uzbeks 13.70%
- Tatars 1.54%
- Others 5.48% (Ukrainians 0.54%, Koreans 1.00%)<ref>www.stat.kz</ref>
According to the census of 2011, the city had 637,800 inhabitants.<ref>http://www.ontustik.stat.kz/rus/index.php</ref>
Economy
Formerly dominated by lead mining, industrial growth began in the 1930s.
A lead smelter was opened in Shymkent in 1934<ref name=AlJ>People & Power (TV programme), Al Jazeeera English, Robin Forestier, 20 February 2014</ref> or 1938.<ref>The USSR. By John C. Dewdney. Published by Dawson, 1976</ref> It supplied a major part of the USSR's metals needs, copper as well as lead and others, including three-quarters of all bullets fired by the Red Army. Smelting continued until 2008, causing extreme levels of pollution (lead, cadmium et al.) in the surrounding ground, and then controversially restarted in 2010, briefly, under a major UK-listed company, Kazakhmys.<ref name=AlJ/>
The city also has industries producing refined zinc, processed karakul pelts, textiles, foodstuffs, and pharmaceuticals. Also, the city has a medium-sized refinery, which is owned and operated by PetroKazakhstan.
Main sights
A bicycle-sharing system, Shymkent-bike, allows you to reach all main sights.
- Ordabasy circle, site of Friday Mosque and MIG Memorial
- Regional Studies and History Museum
- Victory Park
- Central Park
- Museum of Repression
- Afghan War Memorial
- Arboretum
- Nauryz/Navruz Holiday Celebrations over Spring Solstice
- [Square]
- Mega Shopping Center
Sport
- FC Ordabasy - Superleague side
- BIIK Kazygurt - women's football team
In popular culture
In Command & Conquer: Generals, Shymkent is the starting point of the GLA counterattack by destroying the Chinese presence and a local hydroelectric dam to flood out the Chinese outposts in the riverside.
Twin cities
City | Country | Year |
---|---|---|
Stevenage | Template:Flagicon United Kingdom | |
İzmir | Template:Flagicon Turkey | |
Adana | Template:Flagicon Turkey | |
Mogilev | Template:Flagicon Belarus | |
Grosseto | Template:Flagicon Italy | |
Pattaya | Template:Flagicon Thailand | |
Khujand | Template:Flagicon Tajikistan |
Gallery
- Shymkent.JPG
View of the crossroads of Tauke-khan Avenue and Kunaev Bulevard from "Mega Center Shymkent" shopping mall
- Shymkent.jpeg
View on shopping mall in Shymkent, called ЦУМ in the Russian/Soviet style
- Shymkent5.jpg
Fountains near the Central Department store (ЦУМ)
- Shymkent6.jpg
Al-Farabi st., the view of the local Medical Academy
- Shymkent7.jpg
Turkestan st. (улица Туркестанская)
- KazakhMountains.jpg
Mountains on the outskirts of Shymkent
References
External links
Template:Commons category Template:Wikivoyage
Template:South Kazakhstan Region Template:Cities of Kazakhstan