Alatyr. History and sights of the city


Alatyr city (Chuvash Republic)

Alatyr
, a city of republican subordination in Russia, the administrative center of the Alatyr district of the Chuvash Republic, within the Alatyr deanery of the Alatyr diocese. Located in the Middle Volga region, on the left bank of the Sura River, at the confluence of the Alatyr River. Railway station of the Kazan branch of the Gorky Railway. Population - 35,298 people.

  • On the map: Yandex.Map, Google map

Founded in 1552 by decree of Ivan IV the Terrible during his campaign against Kazan as a fortified point to protect the borders of the Moscow state at the mouth of the Alatyr River;
name after the river. The original form of the hydronym is Mordovian Ratorley; etymology has not been established. According to legend, Alatyr arose on the site where the royal camp was located.

Built to protect against the Kazan Tatars, Alatyr had been ruled by voivodes since the 16th century and was considered an important stronghold in the Volga region. In the 18th century it lost its military significance and became a trade and craft center.

In 1708, a suburb of Kazan, Alatyr was assigned to the Kazan province, from 1714 - in the Nizhny Novgorod province, from 1717 again in the Kazan province, from 1719 - the center of the province in the Nizhny Novgorod province. Since 1780 - the district town of Alatyr of the Simbirsk governorship (since 1796 - Simbirsk province).

In 1856, in the district town of Alatyr, Simbirsk province, there were 14 churches, 1,122 houses, 50 shops.

The economic importance of Alatyr increased due to the construction of the Moscow-Kazan railway. In August 1891, work began near the city, and on August 29, 1893, labor traffic was opened on the Sviyazhsk-Alatyr section.

The city has a memorial zone with stone mansions of the late 19th - early 20th centuries, local history and art museums. Arboretum. Alatyr branch of Chuvash State University named after. I.N. Ulyanov.

In the Alatyr region, grains, legumes, fodder crops, and potatoes are grown. They raise cattle (meat and dairy) and pigs. Deposits of peat, clay, sand, etc.

Religion

From 1912 to 1934, there was the Alatyr Vicariate of the Simbirsk (then Ulyanovsk) diocese.

On December 24, 2004, the Alatyr See was restored as the Cheboksary Vicariate. As of 2012, the vicar was located in Cheboksary.

On October 4, 2012, an independent diocese was re-established. At the same time, it was included in the newly established Chuvash Metropolis.

The Saints

  • sschmch. Nikolai Rozov, archpriest, served in Alatyr district in 1904-1906 and from 1918 to 1922
  • sschmch. Herman (Kokkel), bishop, lived in the city in 1925-1926
  • sschmch. Ilya Izmailov, priest, executed in Alatyr on September 17, 1937
  • sschmch. Dimitry Voskresensky, archpriest, native and pastor of the Alatyr district, died on May 22, 1938 in the Alatyr forced labor colony
  • prmch. Ignatius (Lebedev), schiarchim., died on September 11, 1938 in the Alatyr camp
  • sschmch. Vasily Pokrovsky, archpriest, served in the city since 1931, was shot on December 26, 1941 in the vicinity of Alatyr
  • sschmch. Emilian Kireev, priest, served in the city, shot on December 26, 1941 in the vicinity of Alatyr
  • sschmch. Mikhail Samsonov, archpriest, died on January 28, 1942 in the Alatyr correctional labor colony
  • prmts. Tamara (Satsi), abbot, died on May 1, 1942 in the Alatyr correctional labor colony

Monasteries

  • Trinity (male)
  • Nikolaevsky Kiev-Nikolsky (female)

Temples

  • Faith, Hope, Love and Sofia (invalid)
  • Resurrection of Christ
  • Exaltation of the Holy Cross
  • “The Sign”, icons of the Mother of God
  • Iakov Alfeeva
  • Iveron Icon of the Mother of God
  • John the Warrior
  • John the Baptist
  • Kazan Icon of the Mother of God
  • “Unexpected Joy”, icons of the Mother of God
  • New Martyrs and Confessors of the Russian Church, chapel
  • Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Cathedral
  • Nativity of Christ
  • Stephen the First Martyr (inactive)
  • Dormition of the Blessed Virgin Mary (invalid)

Educational establishments

  • Alatyr Theological School (inactive)

Map

Alatyr: maps

Alatyr: photo from space (Google Maps) Alatyr: photo from space (Microsoft Virtual Earth)

Alatyr.
Nearest cities. Distances in km. on the map (in brackets along roads) + direction. Using the hyperlink in the distance , you can get the route (information courtesy of the AutoTransInfo website)
1Ardatov22 (24)IN
2Surskoe (Ulyanovsk region)41 (62)YU
3Poretskoe42 (52)NW
4Atyashevo (Republic of Mordovia)43 (65)SW
5Dubenki (Republic of Mordovia)49 (91)YU
6Ibresi57 (175)NE
7Shemursha59 (256)IN
8Sechenovo (Nizhny Novgorod region)60 (92)NW
9Staroe Drozhzhanoe (Republic of Tatarstan)63 (268)IN
10Shygyrdan65 ()IN
11Bolshoye Ignatovo (Republic of Mordovia)67 (216)Z
12Komsomolsky (Republic of Mordovia)67 (91)SW
13Batyrevo70 (236)IN
14Chamzinka (Republic of Mordovia)71 (97)SW
15Shumerlya73 (96)WITH
16Vurnars75 (150)WITH
17Karsun (Ulyanovsk region)76 (105)YU
18Komsomolskoe76 (213)NE
19Bolshoye Boldino (Nizhny Novgorod region)82 (167)Z
20Bolshie Berezniki (Republic of Mordovia)84 (127)SW
21Urazovka (Nizhny Novgorod region)86 (120)NW
22Kemlya (Republic of Mordovia)87 (172)Z
23Pilna (Nizhny Novgorod region)88 (131)NW
24Romodanovo (Republic of Mordovia)92 (138)SW
25Kanash94 (182)NE
26Veshkaima (Ulyanovsk region)95 (125)YU
27Bolshoye Nagatkino (Ulyanovsk region)96 (222)SE
28Red Chetai97 (126)WITH
29Yalchiki97 (237)IN
30Alikovo98 (155)WITH

a brief description of

Located in the Middle Volga region, on the left bank of the river. Sura, at the confluence of the river. Alatyr. Railway station.

Territory (sq. km): 42

Information about the city of Alatyr on the Russian Wikipedia site

Historical sketch

Founded in 1552 by decree of Ivan IV the Terrible during his campaign against Kazan as a fortified point to protect the borders of the Moscow state at the mouth of the river. Alatyr; name after the river. The original form of the hydronym is Mordovian Ratorley; etymology has not been established.

According to legend, Alatyr arose on the site where the royal camp was located.

Built for protection against the Kazan Tatars, Alatyr has been built since the 16th century. was governed by voivodes and was considered an important stronghold in the Volga region. In the 18th century lost its military significance and became a trade and craft center.

In 1708, a suburb of Kazan, Alatyr was assigned to the Kazan province, in 1714-17. in the Nizhny Novgorod province, from 1717 again in the Kazan province, from 1719 the center of the province in the Nizhny Novgorod province. Since 1780, the district town of Alatyr of the Simbirsk governorship (since 1796 - Simbirsk province).

In 1856, in the district town of Alatyr, Simbirsk province, there were 14 churches, 1,122 houses, 50 shops.

The economic importance of Alatyr increased due to the construction of the Moscow-Kazan railway (1893). In August 1891, work began near the city, and on August 29, 1893, labor traffic was opened on the Sviyazhsk-Alatyr section.

Municipal indicators

Index2001
Demography
Number of births, per 1000 population6.6
Number of deaths, per 1000 population17.8
Natural increase (decrease), per 1000 population-11.2
Standard of living of the population and social sphere
Average monthly nominal accrued wages, rub.1493
Average housing area per inhabitant (at the end of the year), sq.m.19
Number of preschool institutions, pcs.10
Number of children in preschool institutions, thousand people1.4
Number of daytime educational institutions (at the beginning of the school year), pcs.11
Number of students in daytime educational institutions, thousand people5.3
Number of doctors, people.150
Number of nursing staff, people.506
Number of hospital institutions, pcs.4
Number of hospital beds, thousand units0.5
Number of medical outpatient clinics, pcs.6
Capacity of medical outpatient clinics, visits per shift, thousand units.1.4
Economy, industry
Number of enterprises and organizations (at the end of the year), pcs.402
Construction
Volume of work performed by type of activity “Construction” (until 2004 - volume of work performed under construction contracts), million rubles.12.4
Commissioning of residential buildings, thousand sq.m. of total area14.5
Commissioning of residential buildings, apartments201
Commissioning of preschool institutions, places0
Commissioning of educational institutions, places0
Commissioning of hospital facilities, beds0
Commissioning of outpatient clinics, visits per shift0
Transport
Number of bus routes (in intracity traffic), pcs.4
Number of passengers transported by buses per year (in intracity traffic), million people.9.3
Connection
Number of residential telephone sets of the city public telephone network, thousand units.7.3
Trade and services to the population
Retail trade turnover (in actual prices), million rubles.92.7
Retail trade turnover (in actual prices), per capita, rub.2014.3
Public catering turnover (in actual prices), million rubles.3.4
Volume of paid services to the population (in actual prices), million rubles.22.4
Volume of paid services to the population (in actual prices), per capita, rub.486.3
Volume of household services to the population (in actual prices), million rubles.1.5
Volume of household services to the population (in actual prices), per capita, rub.32.6
Investments
Investments in fixed assets (in actual prices), million rubles.51.5
Share of investments in fixed assets financed from budgetary funds in the total volume of investments, %34.1

Data sources:

  1. Regions of Russia. Main characteristics of the constituent entities of the Russian Federation: statistical collection. Goskomstat of Russia. - M:, 2003.

Economy

JSC: "Electroavtomat", "Electropribor", electromechanical "Lisma", low-temperature refrigerators, mechanical, "Alba" (production of pianos), "Furniture Factory". Enterprises of footwear, textile, food industries.

In the Alatyr region, grains, legumes, fodder crops, and potatoes are grown. They raise cattle (meat and dairy) and pigs.

Deposits of peat, clay, sand, etc.

Main enterprises

ELECTRICAL INDUSTRY

JSC ""
249800, Chuvash Republic - Chuvashia, Alatyr, sq.
October Revolution, 23 Offers:
telephone sets, plastic products

JSC "Electroavtomat"

249800, Chuvash Republic - Chuvashia, Alatyr, st.
B. Khmelnitsky, 19a Offers:
sensors, switches, microswitches, buttons, fuses, automotive power supplies

Culture, science, education

Local history and art museums.

Arboretum.

The sculptor S.D. spent his childhood and youth in Alatyr. Erzya (Nefedov), shipbuilder A.N. Krylov (monuments were erected, memorial houses-museums were opened), gunsmith designer Sudaev, etc.

Universities of the city

Alatyr branch of Chuvash State University named after.
I.N. Ulyanova 429820, Chuvash Republic - Chuvashia, Alatyr, Moskovskaya st., 30

Museums, galleries, exhibition halls

Alatyr Museum of Local Lore 429820, Chuvash Republic - Chuvashia, Alatyr, sq.
October Revolution, 8 Telephone(s): (83531) 225-40 Alatyr Art Museum 429800, Chuvash Republic - Chuvashia, Alatyr, sq. October Revolution, 14

Architecture, sights

15 cathedrals and churches, incl. John the Baptist (1703), Nativity of the Virgin Mary (1747). Active monasteries: Holy Trinity Monastery (founded in 1584) and Kiev-Nicholas Novodevichy Women's Monastery (founded in 1634).

Memorial area with stone mansions from the late 19th - early 20th centuries.

Population by year (thousands of inhabitants)
18567.7198946.6200642.4201536.1
189712.2199247.7200742.3201635.6
193122.7199647.2200842.2201735.3
193929.8199847.1201041.6201834.8
195940.1200046.5201138.2201934.2
196743200146.2201237.5202033.8
197043.5200343.2201337.0202133.0
197945.3200542.7201436.6

Literature

  1. Boguslavsky V.V.
    Slavic encyclopedia. Kievan Rus - Muscovy: in 2 volumes. T. 1. M.: Olma-Press, 2005. p. 13
  2. Pospelov E.M.
    Geographical names of the world: Toponymic dictionary: About 5000 units. M.: Russian dictionaries, Astrel Publishing House LLC, AST Publishing House LLC, 2001. p. 28
  3. Ch.
    ed. Gorkin A.P. Geography of Russia: encyclopedic dictionary. M.: Great Russian Encyclopedia, 1998. p. 21
  4. Ch.
    ed. Lappo G.M. Cities of Russia: encyclopedia. M.: Great Russian Encyclopedia, 1994. p. 16

Content

  • 1 Geography
  • 2 Coat of arms and flag of the city
  • 3 History
  • 4 Demographics
  • 5 Architecture and landmarks 5.1 Orthodox churches and monasteries
  • 5.2 Residential and public buildings
  • 5.3 Industrial architecture
  • 6 Orthodox Alatyr
  • 7 Education
      7.1 Secondary vocational education
  • 7.2 Primary vocational education
  • 7.3 General educational institutions
  • 8 Economics
  • 9 Transport
  • 10 Famous Citizens
  • 11 See also
  • 12 Sources
  • 13 Links
  • History[edit | edit code]

    The official founding date of the city is 1552 - the time of the first mention of Alatyr in the Patriarchal (Nikonov) chronicle:

    And the sovereign taught him to think with his brother, with Prince Vladimir Andreevich and with the boyars and with all the governors, how to go to Kazan and to which places; and the sovereign ordered them to go in two, with room for the people, and for the sovereign himself to go to Volodymer and Murom, and the governor to let him go to Rezan and Meshchera, and to go to the Field behind Alatar.
    [2]

    This text is one of the fragments of the description of the last (third) campaign of Ivan IV to Kazan, which ended with the conquest of the Kazan Khanate.

    The mention of Alatyr along with other cities allowed historians to suggest that by that time the city already existed. In particular, in the “Geographical Lexicon” of F. A. Polunin, information is provided indicating that Alatyr was founded back in the 13th century, during the reign of Yuri Vsevolodovich Vladimirsky, as a fort on the site of a Mordovian village, which was moved by John IV in the 16th century to a new, more convenient place for the fortress [3].

    Disagreements among historians also arise when, in reality, the Russian army led by the Tsar passed through the territory of the present city. Thus, one of the researchers of the history of the Sur region, V.M. Shishkin, believes that Alatyr could have been founded by Ivan Vasilyevich during not the last, but the first Kazan campaign (that is, in 1547-1548) [4]

    The only unconditional and indisputable fact is that a settlement on the site of the modern city existed long before it was mentioned in Russian chronicles. This is confirmed by the found remains of an ancient settlement (presumably belonging to one of the Mordovian tribes), and archaeological finds (including those from the 12th century), and the name of the Erzyan settlement Sandulei preserved in the toponymy of Alatyr (Erzya - Syangley, “Fork of the River”).

    One way or another, no later than 1552 (according to V. E. Krasovsky - August 4, 1552 [5]) Tsar John Vasilyevich approached the high bank of the Sura at the confluence of the Alatyr River with his army and “... ordered immediately at yourself... to build a city of logs and strengthen it according to all the rules of the then serfdom, calling it by the name of the river - Alatyr" [5]. It was from this time that the history of the city of Alatyr began as a Russian military, cultural and religious outpost on the eastern borders of the Moscow state.

    Together with Yadrin, Vasilsursk and Kurmysh (currently a village on the other side of the Sura, in the Nizhny Novgorod region), these forts became conductors of the military-administrative influence of Nizhny Novgorod - the arm of the young Russian state, facing the east, to the lands of the “mountain Cheremis”. Mountain Cheremis, that is, local Chuvash and right-bank Mari, in turn, a year before the capture of Kazan, were accepted “under the arm” of Ivan Vasilyevich, and this, according to historians, decided the fate of the Kazan Khanate. So, the 450th anniversary of Chuvashia’s entry into Russia, celebrated in June 2001, the 450th anniversary of Alatyr in 2002 and the 450th anniversary of the capture of Kazan are very closely related.

    Alatyr. Simbirskaya street. Photo beginning XX century

    After Russian Simbirsk, founded on the site of the Bulgar Senber (in Chuvash the city is still called “Chěmpěr”), became a large administrative center, the Mountain Side (almost the territory of modern Chuvashia), “hanging” between Nizhny and Kazan, found itself “stretched” between the vertices of the triangle - Simbirsk, Nizhny Novgorod, Kazan. Its southern regions, as well as the south of the lower Posurye with Alatyr (that is, the southern part of the Alatyr province), transferred from Kazan to Nizhny and back, in 1780 went to the Simbirsk governorship (then the province). In the same year, Alatyr became a city. By the way, most of Chuvashia, at least culturally, was oriented toward Simbirsk in the 19th century (the influence of N. Novgorod did not go further than Yadrin, and Kazan was a Tatar and Islamic center). The national Chuvash intelligentsia grew up in Simbirsk, therefore, this city is the birthplace of the modern Chuvash national identity. In this regard, Alatyr, a city of two monasteries, a large missionary center (focused on the Chuvash and Mordovians), became a cultural outpost of Simbirsk.

    The Soviet government made its own adjustments to the situation: the young national autonomies “cultivated” their own political, economic and cultural centers. This is how Cheboksary and Saransk arose. Accordingly, the triple periphery, which included all of present-day Chuvashia, half of Mordovia, the southeast of the Nizhny Novgorod and northwestern Ulyanovsk regions, ceased to exist. A relic of this territory is the common periphery of four cities (Nizhny Novgorod, Cheboksary, Ulyanovsk, Saransk) with a center in Alatyr, the intersection of different economic zones of influence, historical, cultural regions and national areas. From here to Saransk 145 km, to Ulyanovsk 160 km, to Cheboksary 185 km.

    The administrative-territorial delineation carried out in the 1920s led to the elimination of such peripheral territories. Parts of the Alatyr district, with which the city still has close ties, were transferred to Nizhny Novgorod, Saransk and Ulyanovsk, but Alatyr itself - a Russian city on Mordovian lands (many Russians here are assimilated Mordovians) - after some hesitation, completely disregarding the opinion of the population and despite the protests of the Alatyr executive committee and the Ulyanovsk provincial executive committee, on September 7, 1925 it was transferred to Chuvashia.

    Coat of arms and flag of the city[edit | edit code]

    Main article

    :
    Coat of arms and flag of Alatyr
    The coat of arms of the city was approved by the Decree of Empress Catherine II on December 22, 1780 and represents “Three golden quivers filled with arrows in a red field, as a sign that the inhabitants of these places knew how to use this weapon with praise.” Restored as the official symbol of the city by the decision of the Assembly of Deputies of the city of Alatyr dated May 29, 2009.

    Initially, at the top of the coat of arms of 1780 there was a column with a crown - the coat of arms of the Simbirsk province. There was also a Soviet version of the coat of arms (1979) and various modifications of the pre-revolutionary one, which were actively used in the 1990s - 2000s.

    The city flag is “a rectangular panel with a width to length ratio of 2:3, reproducing the composition of the coat of arms of the city of Alatyr in red and yellow colors”[1].

    Sources[edit | edit code]

    1. Decision of the Assembly of Deputies of Alatyr of the IV convocation dated May 29, 2009. No. 40/32-4 “On approval of the historical coat of arms and flag of the city of Alatyr of the Chuvash Republic”
    2. Complete collection of Russian chronicles. – T. XIII. – P. 191.
    3. Polunin F. A. “New and complete geographical dictionary of the Russian state or Lexicon...”. Ed. 2, part I, - M., 1788, p. 15
    4. Shishkin V. M. About Alatyr and the Alatyr people. Issue 2. - Cheboksary, 2006.
    5. ↑ a b Krasovsky V. E. Alatyr antiquity. Travel notes on archeology and history of the Alatyr region. - Simbirsk, 1899.

    Education[edit | edit code]

    Secondary vocational education[edit | edit code]

    • Alatyr Automobile and Highway College
    • Alatyr College of Railway Transport (branch of Samara State Transport University)
    • Alatyr Agricultural College

    Primary vocational education[edit | edit code]

    • RGOU NPO "Vocational School No. 3 of Alatyr"

    General educational institutions[edit | edit code]

    • List of schools in Alatyr

    Demographics[edit | edit code]

    The population of Alatyr changed as follows: in 1795, 2,830 people lived in the city, in 1825 - 3,565. After the construction of the Moscow-Kazan railway in 1893, which passed through Alatyr, the population of the city began to grow rapidly: in 1897 it amounted to 12,209 people, and by 1915 it doubled, reaching 25,144 people. and turning Alatyr into the largest city on the territory of modern Chuvashia (for comparison, the population of Cheboksary at the beginning of the 20th century was about 5,500 inhabitants).

    After 1917, the growth rate of the city's population decreased noticeably: in 1939 the number of residents was 29,800 people, in 1959 - 36,900 people, in 1979 - 45,300 people, in 1989 - 47,600 people. The crisis in the country led to the fact that since the beginning of the 1990s, the city's population began to decrease and, according to the 2002 census, amounted to 43,000 people.

    Famous townspeople[edit | edit code]

    • Anikin, Viktor Ivanovich - architect
    • Gorshenin, Konstantin Petrovich - 1st Prosecutor General of the USSR
    • Kikin, Pyotr Andreevich - Secretary of State of the Emperor, participant in the Patriotic War of 1812, author of the idea of ​​​​building the Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Moscow
    • Kochetov, Alexander Vasilievich - pilot, Hero of the Soviet Union
    • Krylov, Alexey Nikolaevich - shipbuilder, specialist in the field of mechanics, mathematician, academician of the USSR Academy of Sciences
    • Mazyrin, Viktor Aleksandrovich - architect, author of Arseny Morozov's mansion in Moscow, known as the House of Peoples' Friendship.
    • Sudaev, Alexey Ivanovich - Soviet weapons designer, major
    • Shestakov, Nikolai Yakovlevich - playwright
    • Shidlovsky, Andrey Borisovich - mathematician, Honored Scientist of the RSFSR, Honored Professor of Moscow State University
    • Nefedov (Erzya), Stepan Dmitrievich - Russian and Soviet sculptor

    Economics[edit | edit code]

    Attention!
    This article is not of satisfactory quality, but its subject should be covered in the Tradition.

    You can help the Project by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style. Thank you.

    Economically, the city began with fur trading, farming, and military service. In the 18th century, crafts and trade began to play a major role. And in the 19th century, Alatyr began to develop, specializing in servicing “controlled” territories, trade (an old merchant city) and processing timber that was rafted down the Alatyr River from local (East Mordovian) forests. At the end of the 19th century, the city became famous for fairs and agricultural exhibitions. And at the beginning of the 20th there were 24 factories and plants.

    File:Alatyr Most.jpg Alatyr. Crash on the Sindyachkin railway bridge. Photo beginning XX century.

    In 1893, a railway line from Ruzaevka to Sviyazhsk passed here (part of the road aimed at connecting Moscow with Kazan and further with the eastern parts of the country), depots and railway workshops were built (later a steam locomotive repair plant), which remained the only large industrial enterprise on the territory of modern Chuvashia up until the 1930s. The construction of the railway gave impetus to the active development of industry and trade and led to a significant increase in population.

    Before the war, the local industry developed on the old pre-revolutionary foundation, but in the 50-60s, an electromechanical plant was built here (causing irreparable damage to the historical one), on the basis of the former Central Repair Workshops (repair of forestry equipment). But such a high-tech industry did not receive further development. A paper mill was put into operation in 1965. However, since the late 1960s, “stagnation” in the development of the urban economy has become increasingly noticeable and the first signs of the beginning lag and decline of Alatyr against the background of other cities of the Chuvash Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic appear.

    Inattention to the problems of Alatyr and disrespect for its interests during the years of Soviet power led to the fact that by 1980 the largest and most developed city of the republic had become only the 4th largest in terms of population and economic importance. Alatyr developed at an extremely low pace: housing construction was financed on a residual basis, its volumes were significantly less than in other cities of Chuvashia, and did not even satisfy current needs; from 1970 to 1980, not a single new industrial enterprise was built, and existing production facilities were not expanded. Chronic underfunding of work on the improvement and development of urban infrastructure has led to a serious lag in Alatyr in this area (there are still very few paved roads in the city and there is no normal street lighting system).

    In 1976, a new master plan for Alatyr was developed. The previous one was drawn up in 1936, but was never implemented. The new master plan suffered the same fate: the planned industrial enterprises and modern residential areas with developed infrastructure were not built, the transport system was not developed, the necessary base was not created to increase the volume of construction, etc. Accordingly, the main point was not fulfilled The plan is to increase the city's population by more than 2 times by the year 2000 (that is, from 46,400 people on January 1, 1975 to 90,000 - 100,000 people in 2000). The problems that had accumulated over several decades worsened even more during the crisis of the 1990s, were replenished with new ones, and, for the most part, have not been resolved to this day.

    In the 90s, all enterprises were hit by a crisis. Naturally, ties with the military-industrial complex, high technology, and the general poverty of the republic had an impact. From 1999 to 2000, trends towards some improvement appeared. However, many enterprises were irretrievably lost (for example, furniture and music factories closed, shipping on the Sura ceased), and those that survived are experiencing difficulties of a systemic nature: lack of funds for the reconstruction of fixed assets, an acute shortage of qualified specialists and workers, low demand for products from high-tech industries and etc. A serious obstacle to development is also the fact that Alatyr has the lowest wage level in the republic.

    One of the main resources for the potential development of Alatyr is the education sector. The city has 11 schools, agricultural and road technical schools, and a railway transport technical school. In addition to the branch of the Chuvash State University, there are branches of the Moscow and St. Petersburg Humanitarian Institutes. In the 20-30s, there were many different educational institutions in Alatyr (institute of natural history, art and engraving school, teacher's institute, etc.). In the 40s, many of them were transferred to Cheboksary, some were closed, some still exist today. Before the revolution, the city had: a real school, men's and women's gymnasiums, and a religious school. There is a local history in the city of a “legendary nature”: a grenadier regiment was stationed here, and since then there has been a special breed of people here - the girls are the most beautiful, and the men are the most determined, at the moment, in all of Chuvashia. This once again characterizes the Alatyr people as a special local community, separate from everyone else. By the way, the main street of the city is Moskovskaya.

    Alatyr is a special city. The center of the actual Russian outback, of which few have survived, a unique geographical peripheral zone. Alatyr is a combination of strange, amazing and one-of-a-kind things. Advanced industry and active religious life, a remarkable natural and cultural landscape, a cultural, ethnic and historical reserve, a reserve of special local regional consciousness. This city is noble, rich, stubborn, stately, strong and at the same time quiet and cozy.

    2008 Volume of shipped goods of own production, work and services performed in-house by type of activity, manufacturing thousand rubles: 2.678 billion rubles.

    Rating
    ( 2 ratings, average 5 out of 5 )
    Did you like the article? Share with friends:
    For any suggestions regarding the site: [email protected]
    Для любых предложений по сайту: [email protected]