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Minsk

Minsk (Belarusian: Мінск [mʲinsk]; Russian: Минск) is the capital and the largest city of Belarus, located on the Svislach and the now subterranean Niamiha rivers. As the capital, Minsk has a special administrative status in Belarus and is the administrative centre of Minsk Region (voblast) and Minsk District (raion). As of January 2021, its population was 2 million,[6] making Minsk the 11th most populous city in Europe. Minsk is one of the administrative capitals of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU).

Minsk
Мінск  · Минск
Clockwise from top: Minsk business district (Pobediteley Avenue), the Church of Sts. Peter and Paul, Railway Station Square, the Red Church, National Opera and Ballet Theatre, and Minsk City Hall
Interactive map of Minsk
Location within Belarus
Location within Europe
Coordinates: 53°54′N 27°34′E / 53.900°N 27.567°E / 53.900; 27.567Coordinates: 53°54′N 27°34′E / 53.900°N 27.567°E / 53.900; 27.567
CountryBelarus
First mentioned1067
Government
 • ChairmanVladimir Kukharev[1]
Area
 • Capital city409.53 km2 (158.12 sq mi)
 • Metro
2,352.5 km2 (908.3 sq mi)
Elevation
280.6 m (920.6 ft)
Population
 (1 January 2021[3])
 • Capital city1,996,553
 • Density4,876/km2 (12,630/sq mi)
 • Metro
2,256,263[2]
 • Metro density959/km2 (2,480/sq mi)
Gross Regional Product
 • TotalBr 58.9 billion
(€21.6 billion)
 • Per capitaBr 29,500
(€10,800)
Time zoneUTC+3 (MSK[5])
Postal Code
220001-220141
Area code+375 17
ISO 3166 codeBY-HM
License plate7
Websitewww.minsk.gov.by

First mentioned in 1067, Minsk became the capital of the Principality of Minsk before being annexed by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1242. It received town privileges in 1499.[7] From 1569, it was the capital of the Minsk Voivodeship, an administrative division of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. It was part of the territories annexed by the Russian Empire in 1793, as a consequence of the Second Partition of Poland. From 1919 to 1991, after the Russian Revolution, Minsk was the capital of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, a republic of the Soviet Union. Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Minsk became the capital of the newly independent Republic of Belarus.

Etymology and historical names

 
Independence Square in the centre of Minsk

The Old East Slavic name of the town was Мѣньскъ (i.e. Měnsk < Early Proto-Slavic or Late Indo-European Mēnĭskŭ), derived from a river name Měn (< Mēnŭ). The resulting[clarification needed] form of the name, Minsk (spelled either Минскъ or Мѣнскъ), was taken over both in Russian (modern spelling: Минск) and Polish (Mińsk), and under the influence of Russian this form also became official in Belarusian. The direct continuation of the name in Belarusian is Miensk (Менск, IPA: [ˈmʲɛnsk]),[8] which some Belarusian-speakers continue to use as their preferred name for the city.[9]

When Belarus was under Polish rule, the names Mińsk Litewski ("Minsk of Lithuania") and Mińsk Białoruski ("Minsk of Belarus") were used to differentiate this place name from Mińsk Mazowiecki 'Minsk in Masovia'. In modern Polish, Mińsk without an attribute usually refers to the city in Belarus, which is about 50 times bigger than Mińsk Mazowiecki; (cf. Brest-Litovsk and Brześć Kujawski for a similar case).[10]

History

Early history

 
The Saviour Church, built under the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1577, is part of an archaeological preservation in Zaslavl, 23 km (14 mi) northwest of Minsk.

The area of today's Minsk was settled by Lithuanians in the 9th and 10th centuries AD.[11] The Svislach River valley was the settlement boundary between two early East Slavic tribes – the Krivichs and Dregovichs. By 980, the area was incorporated into the early medieval Principality of Polotsk, one of the earliest East Slavic principalities of Kievan Rus'. Minsk was first mentioned in the name form Měneskъ (Мѣнескъ) in the Primary Chronicle for the year 1067 in association with the Battle on the River Nemiga.[12] 1067 is now widely accepted as the founding year of Minsk. City authorities consider the date of 3 March 1067 to be the exact founding date of the city,[13] though the town (by then fortified by wooden walls) had certainly existed for some time by then. The origin of the name is unknown but there are several theories.[14]

In the early 12th century, the Principality of Polotsk disintegrated into smaller fiefs. The Principality of Minsk was established by one of the Polotsk dynasty princes. In 1129, the Principality of Minsk was annexed by Kiev, the dominant principality of Kievan Rus'; however in 1146 the Polotsk dynasty regained control of the principality. By 1150, Minsk rivalled Polotsk as the major city in the former Principality of Polotsk. The princes of Minsk and Polotsk were engaged in years of struggle trying to unite all lands previously under the rule of Polotsk.[15]

Late Middle Ages

 
Minsk in 1772
 
The Church of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul, built in the early 17th century, is the oldest existing building in the city.

Minsk escaped the Mongol invasion of Rus in 1237–1239. In 1242, Minsk became a part of the expanding Grand Duchy of Lithuania. It joined peacefully and local elites enjoyed high rank in the society of the Grand Duchy. In 1413, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Kingdom of Poland entered into a union. Minsk became the centre of Minsk Voivodship (province). In 1441, as Grand Duke of Lithuania, Casimir IV included Minsk in a list of cities enjoying certain privileges, and in 1499, during the reign of his son, Alexander I Jagiellon, Minsk received town privileges under Magdeburg law. In 1569, after the Union of Lublin, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland merged into a single state, the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.[16]

By the middle of the 16th century, Minsk was an important economic and cultural centre in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. It was also an important centre for the Eastern Orthodox Church. Following the Union of Brest, both the Eastern Catholic Churches and the Roman Catholic Church increased in influence.[citation needed]

In 1655, Minsk was conquered by troops of Tsar Alexei of Russia.[17] Russians governed the city until 1660 when it was regained by John II Casimir, Grand Duke of Lithuania and King of Poland. By the end of the Polish-Russian War, Minsk had only about 2,000 residents and just 300 houses. The second wave of devastation occurred during the Great Northern War, when Minsk was occupied in 1708 and 1709 by the army of Charles XII of Sweden and then by the army of Peter the Great.[citation needed] The last decades of the Polish rule involved decline or very slow development, since Minsk had become a small provincial town of little economic or military significance.[citation needed]

Russian rule

 
Orthodox church of St. Mary Magdalene (built in 1847)

Minsk was annexed by Russia in 1793 as a consequence of the Second Partition of Poland.[18][19] In 1796, it became the centre of the Minsk Governorate. All of the initial street names were replaced by Russian names, though the spelling of the city's name remained unchanged. It was briefly occupied by the Grande Armée during French invasion of Russia in 1812.[20]

Throughout the 19th century, the city continued to grow and significantly improve. In the 1830s, major streets and squares of Minsk were cobbled and paved. A first public library was opened in 1836, and a fire brigade was put into operation in 1837. In 1838, the first local newspaper, Minskiye gubernskiye vedomosti ("Minsk province news") went into circulation. The first theatre was established in 1844. By 1860, Minsk was an important trading city with a population of 27,000. There was a construction boom that led to the building of 2 and 3-story brick and stone houses in Upper Town.[21][22]

Minsk's development was boosted by improvements in transportation. In 1846, the Moscow-Warsaw road was laid through Minsk. In 1871, a railway link between Moscow and Warsaw ran via Minsk, and in 1873, a new railway from Romny in Ukraine to the Baltic Sea port of Libava (Liepāja) was also constructed. Thus Minsk became an important rail junction and a manufacturing hub. A municipal water supply was introduced in 1872, the telephone in 1890, the horse tram in 1892, and the first power generator in 1894. By 1900, Minsk had 58 factories employing 3,000 workers. The city also boasted theatres, cinemas, newspapers, schools and colleges, as well as numerous monasteries, churches, synagogues, and a mosque. According to the 1897 Russian census, the city had 91,494 inhabitants, with some 47,561 Jews constituting more than half of the city population.[21][23]

20th century

 
The Jesuit Collegium in 1912
 
Belarusian national flag over the building of the People's Secretariat of the Belarusian People's Republic
 
Meeting in the Kurapaty woods, 1989, where between 1937 and 1941 from 30,000 to 250,000 Belarusian intelligentsia members were murdered by the NKVD during the Great Purge

In the early years of the 20th century, Minsk was a major centre for the worker's movement in Belarus. The 1st Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party, the forerunner to the Bolsheviks and eventually the CPSU, was held there in 1898. It was also one of the major centres of the Belarusian national revival, alongside Vilnius. However, the First World War significantly affected the development of Minsk. By 1915, Minsk was a battlefront city. Some factories were closed down, and residents began evacuating to the east. Minsk became the headquarters of the Western Front of the Russian army and also housed military hospitals and military supply bases.[citation needed]

The Russian Revolution had an immediate effect in Minsk. A Workers' Soviet was established in Minsk in October 1917, drawing much of its support from disaffected soldiers and workers. After the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, German forces occupied Minsk on 21 February 1918.[24] On 25 March 1918, Minsk was proclaimed the capital of the Belarusian People's Republic. The republic was short-lived; in December 1918, Minsk was taken over by the Red Army. In January 1919 Minsk was proclaimed the capital of the Belorussian SSR, though later in 1919 (see Operation Minsk) and again in 1920, the city was controlled by the Second Polish Republic during the course of the Polish-Bolshevik War between 8 August 1919 and 11 July 1920 and again between 14 October 1920 and 19 March 1921. Under the terms of the Peace of Riga, Minsk was handed back to the Russian SFSR and became the capital of the Belorussian SSR, one of the founding republics of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.[citation needed]

A programme of reconstruction and development was begun in 1922. By 1924, there were 29 factories in operation; schools, museums, theatres and libraries were also established. Throughout the 1920s and the 1930s, Minsk saw rapid development with dozens of new factories being built and new schools, colleges, higher education establishments, hospitals, theatres and cinemas being opened. During this period, Minsk was also a centre for the development of Belarusian language and culture.[25]

 
Children during the German bombing of Minsk on 24 June 1941

Before the Second World War, Minsk had a population of 300,000 people, but this had fallen to around 50,000 by 1944. The Germans captured Minsk in the Battle of Białystok–Minsk, as part of Operation Barbarossa; after it had been devastated by the Luftwaffe. However, some factories, museums, and tens of thousands of civilians had been evacuated to the east. The Germans designated Minsk the administrative centre of Generalbezirk Weißruthenien. Communists and sympathisers were killed or imprisoned, both locally and after being transported to Germany. Homes were requisitioned to house invading German forces. Thousands starved as food was seized by the German Army and paid work was scarce. Minsk was the site of one of the largest Nazi-run ghettos in the Second World War, temporarily housing over 100,000 Jews (see Minsk Ghetto). Some anti-Soviet residents of Minsk, who hoped that Belarus could regain independence, did support the Germans, especially at the beginning of the occupation, but by 1942, Minsk had become a major centre of the Soviet partisan resistance movement against the invasion, in what is known as the German-Soviet War. For this role, Minsk was awarded the title Hero City in 1974.[26]

 
War memorial in Victory Square, Minsk
 
German troops marching through Minsk

Minsk was recaptured by Soviet troops on 3 July 1944 in Minsk Offensive as part of Operation Bagration. The city was the centre of German resistance to the Soviet advance and saw heavy fighting during the first half of 1944. Factories, municipal buildings, power stations, bridges, most roads, and 80% of the houses were reduced to rubble. In 1944, Minsk's population was reduced to a mere 50,000.[27]

 
Railway Station Square, an example of Stalinist Minsk architecture

The historical centre was replaced in the 1940s and 1950s by Stalinist architecture, which favoured grand buildings, broad avenues and wide squares. Subsequently, the city grew rapidly as a result of massive industrialisation. Since the 1960s Minsk's population has also grown apace, reaching 1 million in 1972 and 1.5 million in 1986. Construction of Minsk Metro began on 16 June 1977, and the system was opened to the public on 30 June 1984, becoming the ninth metro system in the Soviet Union. The rapid population growth was primarily driven by mass migration of young, unskilled workers from rural areas of Belarus, as well as by migration of skilled workers from other parts of the Soviet Union.[citation needed][28] To house the expanding population, Minsk spread beyond its historical boundaries. Its surrounding villages were absorbed and rebuilt as mikroraions, districts of high-density apartment housing.[29]

Recent developments

 
Independence Avenue (Initial part of avenue candidates for inclusion in World Heritage Site)

Throughout the 1990s, after the fall of Communism, the city continued to change. As the capital of a newly independent country, Minsk quickly acquired the attributes of a major city. Embassies were opened, and a number of Soviet administrative buildings became government centres. During the early and mid-1990s, Minsk was hit by an economic crisis and many development projects were halted, resulting in high unemployment and underemployment. Since the late 1990s, there have been improvements in transport and infrastructure, and a housing boom has been underway since 2002. On the outskirts of Minsk, new mikroraions of residential development have been built. Metro lines have been extended, and the road system (including the Minsk BeltWay) has been improved. In recent years Minsk has been continuously decentralizing,[30] with a third line of the Minsk Metro opening in 2020. More development is planned for several areas outside the city centre, while the future of the older neighborhoods is still unclear.[30]

Geography

 
Minsk satellite photo, 2019

Minsk is located on the southeastern slope of the Minsk Hills, a region of rolling hills running from the southwest (upper reaches of the river Nioman) to the northeast[31]– that is, to Lukomskaye Lake in northwestern Belarus. The average altitude above sea level is 220 metres (720 ft). The physical geography of Minsk was shaped over the two most recent ice ages. The Svislach River, which flows across the city from the northwest to the southeast, is in the urstromtal, an ancient river valley formed by water flowing from melting ice sheets at the end of the last Ice Age. There are six smaller rivers within the city limits, all part of the Black Sea basin.

Minsk is in the area of mixed forests typical of most of Belarus. Pinewood and mixed forests border the edge of the city, especially in the north and east. Some of the forests were preserved as parks (for instance, the Chelyuskinites Park) as the city grew.

The city was initially built on the hills, which allowed for defensive fortifications, and the western parts of the city are the most hilly.

In 5 km from the northwestern edge of city lies large Zaslawskaye reservoir, often called the Minsk sea. It is the second largest reservoir in Belarus, constructed in 1956.[32]

Climate

Minsk has a warm summer humid continental climate (Köppen Dfb) though unpredictable many a times, owing to its location between the strong influence of the moist air of the Atlantic Ocean and the dry air of the Eurasian landmass. Its weather is unstable and tends to change relatively often. The average January temperature is −4.2 °C (24.4 °F), while the average July temperature is 19.1 °C (66.4 °F). The lowest temperature was recorded on 17 January 1940, at −39.1 °C (−38 °F) and the warmest on 8 August 2015 at 35.8 °C (96 °F). Fog is frequent, especially in the autumn and spring. Minsk receives annual precipitation of 686 millimetres (27.0 in), of which one third falls during the cold period (as snow and rain) and two-thirds in the warm period. Throughout the year, most winds are westerly and northwesterly, bringing cool and moist air from the Atlantic.

 
Panorama to the center of Minsk
Climate data for Minsk (1991–2020, extremes 1887–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 10.3
(50.5)
13.6
(56.5)
18.9
(66.0)
28.8
(83.8)
30.9
(87.6)
35.8
(96.4)
35.0
(95.0)
35.8
(96.4)
31.0
(87.8)
24.7
(76.5)
16.0
(60.8)
11.1
(52.0)
35.8
(96.4)
Average high °C (°F) −2
(28)
−0.8
(30.6)
4.5
(40.1)
12.8
(55.0)
18.9
(66.0)
22.4
(72.3)
24.3
(75.7)
23.6
(74.5)
17.5
(63.5)
10.3
(50.5)
3.6
(38.5)
−0.6
(30.9)
11.2
(52.2)
Daily mean °C (°F) −4.2
(24.4)
−3.6
(25.5)
0.7
(33.3)
7.6
(45.7)
13.4
(56.1)
17.1
(62.8)
19.1
(66.4)
18.2
(64.8)
12.7
(54.9)
6.7
(44.1)
1.4
(34.5)
−2.6
(27.3)
7.2
(45.0)
Average low °C (°F) −6.3
(20.7)
−6
(21)
−2.6
(27.3)
2.9
(37.2)
8.3
(46.9)
12.2
(54.0)
14.4
(57.9)
13.4
(56.1)
8.7
(47.7)
3.8
(38.8)
−0.5
(31.1)
−4.5
(23.9)
3.7
(38.7)
Record low °C (°F) −39.1
(−38.4)
−35.1
(−31.2)
−30.5
(−22.9)
−18.4
(−1.1)
−5
(23)
0.0
(32.0)
4.3
(39.7)
1.7
(35.1)
−4.7
(23.5)
−12.9
(8.8)
−20.4
(−4.7)
−30.6
(−23.1)
−39.1
(−38.4)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 47
(1.9)
40
(1.6)
41
(1.6)
43
(1.7)
66
(2.6)
79
(3.1)
97
(3.8)
71
(2.8)
51
(2.0)
55
(2.2)
49
(1.9)
47
(1.9)
686
(27.0)
Average extreme snow depth cm (inches) 11
(4.3)
16
(6.3)
13
(5.1)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
2
(0.8)
6
(2.4)
16
(6.3)
Average rainy days 11 9 11 13 18 19 18 15 18 18 17 13 180
Average snowy days 24 21 15 4 0.3 0 0 0 0.04 3 13 22 102
Average relative humidity (%) 86 83 77 67 66 70 71 72 79 82 88 88 77
Mean monthly sunshine hours 44 66 134 181 257 273 269 242 165 97 36 27 1,790
Percent possible sunshine 18 24 37 43 52 54 53 53 43 30 14 12 40
Source 1: Pogoda.ru.net[33]
Source 2: Belarus Department of Hydrometeorology (sun data from 1938, 1940, and 1945–2000)[34]

Ecological situation

The ecological situation is monitored by Republican Centre of Radioactive and Environmental Control.[35]

 
The Svislač River in autumn

During 2003–2008 the overall weight of contaminants increased from 186,000 to 247,400 tons.[35] The change from gas as industrial fuel to mazut for financial reasons has worsened the ecological situation.[35] However, the majority of overall air pollution is produced by cars.[35] Belarusian traffic police DAI every year hold operation "Clean Air" to prevent the use of cars with extremely polluting engines.[36] Sometimes the maximum normative concentration of formaldehyde and ammonia in air is exceeded in Zavodski District.[35] Other major contaminants are Chromium-VI and nitrogen dioxide.[35] Zavodski, Partyzanski and Leninski districts, which are located in the southeastern part of Minsk, are the most polluted areas in the city.[37]

Demographics

 
City of Minsk population pyramid in 2022
 
Apartment buildings in Minsk
 
Minsk agglomeration from space

Population growth

Historical population
YearPop.±%
14505,000—    
165410,000+100.0%
16672,000−80.0%
17907,000+250.0%
181111,000+57.1%
18133,500−68.2%
186027,000+671.4%
189791,000+237.0%
1917134,500+47.8%
1941300,000+123.0%
194450,000−83.3%
1951306,913+513.8%
1956438,709+42.9%
1961580,833+32.4%
1966758,319+30.6%
1971966,515+27.5%
19761,161,999+20.2%
19811,350,492+16.2%
19861,515,745+12.2%
19911,624,724+7.2%
20011,714,949+5.6%
20111,868,657+9.0%
20212,038,822+9.1%
20221,996,553−2.1%
Population size may be affected by changes in administrative divisions.

Ethnic groups

During its first centuries, Minsk was a city with a predominantly Early East Slavic population (the forefathers of modern-day Belarusians). After the 1569 Polish–Lithuanian union, the city became a destination for migrating Poles (who worked as administrators, clergy, teachers and soldiers) and Jews (Ashkenazim, who worked in the retail trade and as craftsmen, as other opportunities were prohibited by discrimination laws). During the last centuries of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, many Minsk residents became polonised, adopting the language of the dominant Poles and assimilating to its culture.[citation needed]

After the second partition of Poland-Lithuania in 1793, Minsk and its larger region became part of the Russian Empire. The Russians dominated the city's culture as had the Poles in the earlier centuries.[citation needed]

At the time of the 1897 census under the Russian Empire, Jews were the largest ethnic group in Minsk, at 52% of the population, with 47,500 of the 91,000 residents.[38] Other substantial ethnic groups were Russians (25.5%), Poles (11.4%) and Belarusians (9%). The latter figure may be not accurate, as some local Belarusians were likely counted as Russians. A small traditional community of Lipka Tatars had been living in Minsk for centuries.[39][40]

Between the 1880s and 1930s, many Jews, as well as peasants from other backgrounds, emigrated from the city to the United States as part of a Belarusian diaspora.[citation needed]

 
Jewish Holocaust memorial "The Pit" in Minsk

The high mortality of the First World War and the Second World War affected the demographics of the city, particularly the destruction of Jews under the Nazi occupation of the Second World War. Working through local populations, Germans instituted deportation of Jewish citizens to concentration camps, murdering most of them there. The Jewish community of Minsk suffered catastrophic losses in the Holocaust. From more than half the population of the city, the percentage of Jews dropped to less than 10% more than ten years after the war. After its limited population peaked in the 1970s, continuing anti-Semitism under the Soviet Union and increasing nationalism in Belarus caused most Jews to emigrate to Israel and western countries in the 1980s; by 1999, less than 1% of the population of Minsk was Jewish.[41]

In the first three decades of the post-war years, the most numerous new residents in Minsk were rural migrants from other parts of Belarus; the proportion of ethnic Belarusians increased markedly. Numerous skilled Russians and other migrants from other parts of the Soviet Union migrated for jobs in the growing manufacturing sector.[42] In 1959 Belarusians made up 63.3% of the city's residents. Other ethnic groups included Russians (22.8%), Jews (7.8%), Ukrainians (3.6%), Poles (1.1%) and Tatars (0.4%). Continued migration from rural Belarus in the 1960s and 1970s changed the ethnic composition further. By 1979 Belarusians made up 68.4% of the city's residents. Other ethnic groups included Russians (22.2%), Jews (3.4%), Ukrainians (3.4%), Poles (1.2%) and Tatars (0.2%).[42]

According to the 1989 census, 82% percent of Minsk residents have been born in Belarus. Of those, 43% have been born in Minsk and 39% – in other parts of Belarus. 6.2% of Minsk residents came from regions of western Belarus (Grodno and Brest Regions) and 13% – from eastern Belarus (Mogilev, Vitebsk and Gomel Regions). 21.4% of residents came from central Belarus (Minsk Region).[citation needed]

According to the 1999 census, Belarusians make up 79.3% of the city's residents. Other ethnic groups include Russians (15.7%), Ukrainians (2.4%), Poles (1.1%) and Jews (0.6%). The Russian and Ukrainian populations of Minsk peaked in the late 1980s (at 325,000 and 55,000 respectively). After the break-up of the Soviet Union many of them chose to move to their respective mother countries, although some families had been in Minsk for generations. Another factor in the shifting demographics of the city was the changing self-identification of Minsk residents of mixed ancestry – in independent Belarus they identify as Belarusians.[citation needed]

The Jewish population of Minsk peaked in the early 1970s at 50,000 according to official figures; independent estimates put the figure at between 100,000 and 120,000. Beginning in the 1980s, there has been mass-scale emigration to Israel, the US, and Germany. Today only about 10,000 Jews live in Minsk. The traditional minorities of Poles and Tatars have remained at much the same size (17,000 and 3,000 respectively). Rural Poles have migrated from the western part of Belarus to Minsk, and many Tatars have moved to Minsk from Tatarstan.[citation needed]

Some more recent ethnic minority communities have developed as a result of immigration. The most prominent are immigrants from the Caucasus countries – Armenians, Azerbaijanis and Georgians each numbering about 2,000 to 5,000. They began migrating to Minsk in the 1970s, and more immigrants have joined them since. Many work in the retail trade in open-air markets. A small but prominent Arab community has developed in Minsk, primarily represented by recent economic immigrants from Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Algeria, etc. (In many cases, they are graduates of Minsk universities who decide to settle in Belarus and bring over their families). A small community of Romani, numbering about 2,000, are settled in suburbs of north-western and southern Minsk.[citation needed]

Languages

 
Chinese signage, Minsk railway station (2018)

Throughout its history Minsk has been a city of many languages. Initially most of its residents spoke Ruthenian (which later developed into modern Belarusian). However, after 1569 the official language was Polish.[43] In the 19th-century Russian became the official language and by the end of that century it had become the language of administration, schools and newspapers. The Belarusian national revival increased interest in the Belarusian language – its use has grown since the 1890s, especially among the intelligentsia. In the 1920s and early 1930s Belarusian was the major language of Minsk, including use for administration and education (both secondary and tertiary). However, since the late 1930s Russian again began gaining dominance.[citation needed]

A short period of Belarusian national revival in the early 1990s saw a rise in the numbers of Belarusian speakers. However, in 1994 the newly elected president Alexander Lukashenko slowly reversed this trend. Most residents of Minsk now use Russian exclusively in their everyday lives at home and at work, although Belarusian is understood as well. Substantial numbers of recent migrants from the rural areas use Trasyanka (a Russo-Belarusian mixed language) in their everyday lives.[44]

Religion

There are no reliable statistics on the religious affiliations of those living in Minsk, or among the population of Belarus generally. The majority of Christians belong to the Belarusian Orthodox Church, which is the exarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church in Belarus. There is a significant minority of Roman Catholics.[citation needed]

 
New synagogue in Minsk

As of 2006, there are approximately 30 religious communities of various denominations in Minsk.[45][46] The only functioning monastery in the city is St Elisabeth Convent; its large complex of churches is open to visitors.

Crime

 

Minsk has the highest crime rate in Belarus – 193.5 crimes per 10,000 citizens.[47][48] 20–25% of all serious crimes in Belarus, 55% of bribes and 67% of mobile phone thefts are committed in Minsk.[47][49] However, attorney general Grigory Vasilevich stated that the homicide rate in Minsk in 2008 was "relatively fine".[50]

The crime rate grew significantly in 2009 and 2010:[47] for example, the number of corruption crimes grew by 36% in 2009 alone.[51] Crime detection level varies from 13% in burglary[52] to 92% in homicide[53] with an average 40.1%.[54] Many citizens are concerned for their safety at night and the strongest concern was expressed by residents of Chizhovka and Shabany microdistricts (both in Zavodski District).[53]

The SIZO-1 detention center, IK-1 general prison, and the KGB special jail called "Amerikanka" are all located in Minsk. Alexander Lukashenko's rivals in the 2010 presidential election were imprisoned in the KGB jail[55] along with other prominent politicians and civil activists. Ales Michalevic, who was kept in this jail, accused the KGB of using torture.[56][57]

On 15 November 2020, more than 1,000 protesters were arrested during an anti-government protest. Protesters took to the streets in the capital, Minsk, following the death of an opposition activist, Roman Bondarenko. The activist died after allegedly being beaten up by the security forces. The protesters put flowers at the site where he was detained before succumbing to his injuries.[58]

 
2020–21 Belarusian protests — Minsk, 30 August 2020

Economy

Minsk is the economic capital of Belarus. It has developed industrial and services sectors which serve the needs not only of the city, but of the entire nation. Minsk's contributions form nearly 46% of Belarusian budget.[59] According to 2010 results, Minsk paid 15 trillion BYR to state budget while the whole income from all other regions was 20 trillion BYR.[60] In the period January 2013 to October 2013, 70.6% of taxes in the budget of Minsk were paid by non-state enterprises, 26.3% by state enterprises, and 1.8% by individual entrepreneurs. Among the top 10 taxpayers were five oil and gas companies (including two Gazprom's and one Lukoil's subsidiaries), two mobile network operators (MTS and A1), two companies producing alcoholic beverages (Minsk-Kristall and Minsk grape wines factory) and one producer of tobacco goods.[61]

In 2012, Gross Regional Product of Minsk was formed mainly by industry (26.4%), wholesale (19.9%), transportation and communications (12.3%), retail (8.6%) and construction (5.8%).

GRP of Minsk measured in Belarusian rubles was 55 billion(€20 billion) or around 1/3 of Gross domestic product of Belarus.[62]

Minsk city has highest salaries in Belarus. As of July 2022 average gross salary in Minsk was 2,265 BYN per month or around €900 per month.[63]

Industry

 
Power plant

Minsk is the major industrial centre of Belarus. According to 2012 statistics, Minsk-based companies produced 21.5% of electricity, 76% of trucks, 15.9% of footwear, 89.3% of television sets, 99.3% of washing machines, 30% of chocolate, 27.7% of distilled alcoholic beverages and 19.7% of tobacco goods in Belarus.[64]

Today the city has over 250 factories and plants. Its industrial development started in the 1860s and was facilitated by the railways built in the 1870s. However, much of the industrial infrastructure was destroyed during World War I, especially during World War II. After the last war, the development of the city was linked to the development of industry, especially of R&D-intensive sectors (heavy emphasis of R&D intensive industries in urban development in the USSR is known in Western geography as 'Minsk phenomenon').[citation needed] Minsk was turned into a major production site for trucks, tractors, gears, optical equipment, refrigerators, television sets and radios, bicycles, motorcycles, watches, and metal-processing equipment. Outside machine-building and electronics, Minsk also had textiles, construction materials, food processing, and printing industries. During the Soviet period, the development of the industries was linked to suppliers and markets within the USSR. The break-up of the union in 1991 led to a serious economic meltdown in 1991–1994.[65]

However, since the adoption of the neo-Keynesean policies under Alexander Lukashenko's government in 1995, much of the gross industrial production was regained.[65] Unlike many other cities in the CIS and Eastern Europe, Minsk was not heavily de-industrialised in the 1990s. About 40% of the workforce is still employed in the manufacturing sector.[65]

Major industrial employers include:

  • Minsk Tractor Plant – specialised in manufacturing tractors. Established in 1946 in eastern Minsk, is among major manufacturers of wheeled tractors in the CIS. Employs about 30,000 staff.[66]
  • Minsk Automobile Plant – specialising in producing trucks, buses, and mini-vans. Established in 1944 in south-eastern Minsk, is among major vehicle manufacturers in the CIS.[citation needed]
  • Minsk Refrigerator Plant (also known as Atlant) – specialised in manufacturing household goods, such as refrigerators, freezers, and recently also of washing machines. Established in 1959 in the north-west of the city.[citation needed]
  • Horizont – specialised in producing TV-sets, audio and video electronics. Established in 1950 in north-central Minsk.[citation needed]

Unemployment

In 2011 official statistics quote unemployment in Minsk at 0.3%.[67] During the 2009 census 5.6% of Minsk residents of employable age called themselves unemployed.[67] The government discourages official unemployment registration with tiny unemployment benefits and obligatory public works. Until 2018 there was an 'unemployment tax' taken from those who were suspected of loitering.[68]

Government and administrative divisions

 

Minsk is subdivided into nine raions (districts):

  1.   Tsentralny (Belarusian: Цэнтральны, Russian: Центральный), or "Central District"
  2.   Savetski (Belarusian: Савецкі, Russian: Советский, Sovetsky), or "Soviet District"
  3.   Pershamayski (Belarusian: Першамайскі, Russian: Первомайский, Pervomaysky), named after 1 May
  4.   Partyzanski (Belarusian: Партызанскі, Russian: Партизанский, Partizansky), named after the Soviet partisans
  5.   Zavodski (Belarusian: Заводскі, Russian: Заводской, Zavodskoy), or "Factory district" (initially it included major plants, Minsk Tractor Works (MTZ) and Minsk Automobile Plant (MAZ), later the Partyzanski District with MTZ was split off it)
  6.   Leninski (Belarusian: Ленінскі, Russian: Ленинский, Leninsky), named after Lenin
  7.   Kastrychnitski (Belarusian: Кастрычніцкі, Russian: Октябрьский, Oktyabrsky), named after the October Revolution
  8.   Maskouski (Belarusian: Маскоўскі, Russian: Московский, Moskovsky), named after Moscow
  9.   Frunzenski (Belarusian: Фрунзенскі, Russian: Фрунзенский, Frunzensky), named after Mikhail Frunze

In addition, a number of residential neighbourhoods are recognised in Minsk, called microdistricts, with no separate administration.

Culture

Minsk is the major cultural center of Belarus. Its first theatres and libraries were established in the middle of the 19th century. Now it has 11 theatres and 16 museums. There are 20 cinemas and 139 libraries.[citation needed]

Churches

  • The Orthodox Cathedral of the Holy Spirit is actually the former church of the Bernardine convent. It was built in the simplified Baroque style in 1642–87 and went through renovations in 1741–46 and 1869.
  • The Cathedral of Saint Mary was built by the Jesuits as their principal church in 1700–10, restored in 1951 and 1997; it overlooks the recently restored 18th-century city hall, located on the other side of the Liberty Square;
  • Two other historic churches are the cathedral of Saint Joseph, formerly affiliated with the Bernardine monastery, built in 1644–52 and repaired in 1983, and the fortified church of Sts. Peter and Paul, originally built in the 1620s and recently restored, complete with its flanking twin towers.
  • The impressive Neo-Romanesque Roman Catholic Red Church (Cathedral of Sts. Simeon and Helene) was built in 1906–10 immediately after religious freedoms were proclaimed in Imperial Russia and the tsar allowed dissidents to build their churches;
  • The largest church built in the Russian imperial period of the town's history is dedicated to St. Mary Magdalene;
  • Many Orthodox churches were built after the dissolution of the USSR in a variety of styles, although most remain true to the Neo-Russian idiom. A good example is St. Elisabeth's Convent, founded in 1999.
 
The city hall (rebuilt in 2003)

Cemeteries

  • Kalvaryja (Calvary Cemetery) is the oldest surviving cemetery in the city. Many famous people of Belarus are buried here. The cemetery was closed to new burials in the 1960s.
  • Military Cemetery
  • Eastern Cemetery
  • Čyžoŭskija Cemetery
  • Northern Cemetery

Theatres

Major theatres are:

Museums

Major museums include:

Art galleries include:

Recreation areas

Tourism

There are more than 400 travel agencies in Minsk, about a quarter of them provide agent activity, and most of them are tour operators.[69][70]

Sports

 
Outside view of the Dinamo National Olympic Stadium, 2019

Football

 
Dinamo National Olympic Stadium (after reconstruction)

Ice hockey

Handball

Basketball

International sporting events

In 2013, Minsk hosted the European Junior Rowing Championships at the Republican Center of Olympic Training for Rowing And Canoeing to the north-west of the city.[71]

Minsk hosted the 2014 IIHF World Championship at the Minsk Arena.

In January 2016, the 2016 European Speed Skating Championships were held in the Minsk Arena. Minsk Arena is the only indoor speed skating rink in Belarus.

Minsk hosted the 2019 European Games in June.[72]

The 2019 European Figure Skating Championships were held in the Minsk Arena from the 21 to 27 January.

Transportation

Local transport

Minsk has an extensive public transport system.[73] Passengers are served by 8 tramway lines, over 70 trolleybus lines, 3 subway lines and over 100 bus lines. Trams were the first public transport used in Minsk (since 1892 – the horse-tram, and since 1929 – the electric tram). Public buses have been used in Minsk since 1924, and trolleybuses since 1952.[74][75]

 
Electrobus AKSM E321 in Minsk

All public transport is operated by Minsktrans, a government-owned and -funded transport not-for-profit company. As of November 2021, Minsktrans used 1,322 buses (plus 93 electric buses), 744 trolleybuses and 135 tramway cars in Minsk.[76]

The Minsk city government in 2003 decreed that local transport provision should be set at a minimum level of 1 vehicle (bus, trolleybus or tram) per 1,500 residents. The number of vehicles in use by Minsktrans is 2.2 times higher than the minimum level.[citation needed]

Public transport fares are controlled by the city's executive committee (city council). Single trip ticket for bus, trolleybus or tramway costs 0.75 BYN (≈ USD 0.3),[77] 0.80 BYN for metro and 0.90 BYN for express buses.[77] Monthly ticket for one kind of transport costs 33 BYN and 61 BYN for all five.[77] Commercial marshrutka's prices varies from 1.5 to 2 BYN.[citation needed]

Rapid transit

 
Vakzalnaja station in the Minsk Metro

Minsk is the only city in Belarus with an underground metro system. Construction of the metro began in 1977, soon after the city reached over a million people, and the first line with 8 stations was opened in 1984. Since then it has expanded into three lines: Maskoŭskaja, Aŭtazavodskaja, and Zielienalužskaja which are 19.1, 18.1 and 3.5 km (11.9, 11.2 and 2.2 mi) long with 15, 14 and 4 stations, respectively. On 7 November 2012, three new stations on the Moskovskaya Line were opened and another on 3 June 2014.[citation needed]. Construction of the third line began in 2011 and the first stage opened in 2020. Some layout plans speculate on a possible fourth line running from Vyasnyanka to Serabranka micro-rayons.[citation needed]

Stations of the new Zielienalužskaja line on video

Trains use 243 standard Russian metro-cars. On a typical day Minsk metro is used by 800,000 passengers. In 2007 ridership of Minsk metro was 262.1 million passengers,[78] in 2017 ridership of Minsk metro was 284,1 million passengers,[79] making it the 5th busiest metro network in the former USSR (behind Moscow, St. Petersburg, Kyiv and Kharkiv). During peak hours trains run each 2–2.5 minutes. The metro network employs 3,200 staff.[citation needed]

Most of the urban transport is being renovated to modern standards. For instance, all metro stations built since 2001 have passenger lifts from platform to street level, thus enabling the use of the newer stations by disabled passengers.[citation needed][80]

Railway and intercity bus

 
Minsk Central Bus Station Nowadays
 
Stadler Astra train, Minsk train station

Minsk is the largest transport hub in Belarus. Minsk is located at the junction of the Warsaw-Moscow railway (built in 1871) running from the southwest to the northeast of the city and the Liepaja-Romny railway (built in 1873) running from the northwest to the south. The first railway connects Russia with Poland and Germany; the second connects Ukraine with Lithuania and Latvia. They cross at the Minsk-Pasažyrski railway station, the main railway station of Minsk. The station was built in 1873 as Vilenski vakzal. The initial wooden building was demolished in 1890 and rebuilt in stone. During World War II the Minsk railway station was completely destroyed. It was rebuilt in 1945 and 1946 and served until 1991. The new building of the Minsk-Pasažyrski railway station was built during 1991–2002. Its construction was delayed due to financial difficulties; now, however, Minsk boasts one of the most modern and up-to-date railway stations in the CIS. There are plans to move all suburban rail traffic from Minsk-Pasažyrski to the smaller stations, Minsk- Uschodni (East), Minsk-Paŭdniovy (South) and Minsk-Paŭnočny (North), by 2020.[citation needed]

There are three intercity bus stations that link Minsk with the suburbs and other cities in Belarus and the neighboring countries. There are frequent services to Moscow, Smolensk, Vilnius, Riga, Kyiv and Warsaw.[citation needed]

Cycling

According to the 2019 survey of 1934 people,[81] Minsk had around 811,000 adult bicycles and 232,000 child and adolescent bicycles. In Minsk there is one bike for every 1.9 people. The total number of bicycles in Minsk exceeds the total number of cars (770,000 personal automobiles). 39% of Minsk residents have a personal bike. 43% of Minsk residents ride a bicycle once a month or more. As of 2017, the level of bicycle use is about 1% of all transport movements (for comparison: 12% in Berlin, 50% in Copenhagen).[82]

 
Bike path in Minsk

Since 2015, an annual bicycle parade / bicycle carnival is held in Minsk, during which vehicles are blocked for several hours along Pobediteley (Peramohi) Avenue. The number of participants in 2019 was more than 20,000 and the number of registrations was about 12,000.[83][84][85][86] In 2017, the European Union funded the project "Urban cycling in Belarus" at a cost of €560,000, within the framework of which the public association Minsk Cycling Society together with the Council of Ministers created the regulatory document National Concept for the Development of Cycling in Belarus.[87][88] In 2020, Minsk entered the top 3 most cycling cities in the CIS – after Moscow and Saint Petersburg.[89]

Airports

Minsk National Airport is located 42 km (26 mi) to the east of the city. It opened in 1982 and the current railway station opened in 1987. It is an international airport with flights to Europe and the Middle East.[90]

Prior to 1982, the main airport was Minsk-1 Airport, opened in 1933 a few kilometres to the south of the historical centre. In 1955 it became an international airport and by 1970 served over 1 million passengers a year.[citation needed] After 1982, it mainly served domestic routes in Belarus and short-haul routes to Moscow, Kyiv and Kaliningrad. Minsk-1 was closed in December 2015 because of the noise pollution in the surrounding residential areas.[citation needed] The land of the airport is currently being redeveloped for residential and commercial real estate, branded as Minsk-City, as well as the new Zelenaluzhskaya line of the Minsk Metro.[91]

Minsk Borovaya Airfield (UMMB) is located in a suburb north-east of the city, next to Zaliony Luh Forest Park, housing Aero Club Minsk and Minsk Aviation Museum.[92]

Education

Minsk has about 451 kindergartens, 241 schools, 22 further education colleges,[93] and 29 higher education institutions,[94] including 12 major national universities.[citation needed]

Major higher educational institutions

Honors

A minor planet 3012 Minsk discovered by Soviet astronomer Nikolai Chernykh in 1979 is named after the city.[95]

Notable residents

Musicians

Sport

Twin towns – sister cities

Minsk is twinned with:[125]

Significant depictions in popular culture

  • In the Don Bluth animated film, An American Tail the protagonist Fievel Mousekewitz (voiced by Phillip Glasser) is told of a mythical being known as the "Giant Mouse of Minsk" in all his bedtime stories by his father (voiced by Nehemiah Persoff); in said stories, the powerful mouse was a giant who drove out both cats and Communist invaders. These stories would inspire him to take up the mantle as he rallies the other mice in New York to construct a huge mechanical mouse as a secret weapon to drive off the mafia cats who rule the city.
  • Minsk is one of the starting towns of Lithuania in the turn-based strategy game Medieval II: Total War: Kingdoms.[127]
  • In the American sitcom Friends, recurring-character David "the Science Guy" (played by Hank Azaria) has a romance with Phoebe Buffay, one of the main characters, in the first season of the series, but breaks her heart when he decides to leave for Minsk on a three-year research trip. In the show, Minsk is incorrectly referred to as being located in Russia, despite taking place after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
  • In the science fiction franchise Star Trek, the Klingon character Worf is raised by human parents from Minsk, and spends some of his early life there. He regards it as one of his favorite places on Earth, and suggests that Chief Miles O'Brien move his family there.
  • In Seinfeld there are repeated references to a film and later play titled "Rochelle, Rochelle" the subtitle is "A young girl's strange, erotic journey from Milan to Minsk."

See also

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Bibliography

  • Bohn, Thomas M. (2008). Minsk – Musterstadt des Sozialismus: Stadtplanung und Urbanisierung in der Sowjetunion nach 1945. Köln: Böhlau. ISBN 978-3-412-20071-8.
  • Бон, томас м. (2013). "Минский феномен". Городское планирование и урбанизация в Советском Союзе после Второй мировой войны. Translated by Слепович, Е. Москва: РОССПЭН.
  • Бон, томас м. (2016). Сагановіч, Г. (ed.). "Мінскі феномен". Гарадское планаванне і ўрбанізацыя ў Савецкім Саюзе пасля 1945 г. Translated by Рытаровіч, мовы М. ; навук. рэд. Мінск: Зміцер Колас.

Further reading

  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Minsk (town)" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 18 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 556.
  • Nechepurenko, Ivan (5 October 2017). "How Europes Last Dictatorship Became a Tech Hub". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.

External links

  • A city guide for Minsk
  • Minsk city on the official website of Belarus
  • The Minsk Herald online magazine in English
  • Minsk, Belarus at JewishGen
  • 2020-11-27 at the Wayback Machine Photos of old Minsk
  • 2020-11-01 at the Wayback Machine Photos of Minsk during World War II

minsk, other, uses, disambiguation, belarusian, Мінск, mʲinsk, russian, Минск, capital, largest, city, belarus, located, svislach, subterranean, niamiha, rivers, capital, special, administrative, status, belarus, administrative, centre, region, voblast, distri. For other uses see Minsk disambiguation Minsk Belarusian Minsk mʲinsk Russian Minsk is the capital and the largest city of Belarus located on the Svislach and the now subterranean Niamiha rivers As the capital Minsk has a special administrative status in Belarus and is the administrative centre of Minsk Region voblast and Minsk District raion As of January 2021 its population was 2 million 6 making Minsk the 11th most populous city in Europe Minsk is one of the administrative capitals of the Commonwealth of Independent States CIS and the Eurasian Economic Union EAEU Minsk Minsk MinskCapital cityClockwise from top Minsk business district Pobediteley Avenue the Church of Sts Peter and Paul Railway Station Square the Red Church National Opera and Ballet Theatre and Minsk City HallFlagCoat of armsInteractive map of MinskLocation within BelarusShow map of BelarusLocation within EuropeShow map of EuropeCoordinates 53 54 N 27 34 E 53 900 N 27 567 E 53 900 27 567 Coordinates 53 54 N 27 34 E 53 900 N 27 567 E 53 900 27 567CountryBelarusFirst mentioned1067Government ChairmanVladimir Kukharev 1 Area Capital city409 53 km2 158 12 sq mi Metro2 352 5 km2 908 3 sq mi Elevation280 6 m 920 6 ft Population 1 January 2021 3 Capital city1 996 553 Density4 876 km2 12 630 sq mi Metro2 256 263 2 Metro density959 km2 2 480 sq mi Gross Regional Product 4 TotalBr 58 9 billion 21 6 billion Per capitaBr 29 500 10 800 Time zoneUTC 3 MSK 5 Postal Code220001 220141Area code 375 17ISO 3166 codeBY HMLicense plate7Websitewww minsk gov byFirst mentioned in 1067 Minsk became the capital of the Principality of Minsk before being annexed by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1242 It received town privileges in 1499 7 From 1569 it was the capital of the Minsk Voivodeship an administrative division of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth It was part of the territories annexed by the Russian Empire in 1793 as a consequence of the Second Partition of Poland From 1919 to 1991 after the Russian Revolution Minsk was the capital of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic a republic of the Soviet Union Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union Minsk became the capital of the newly independent Republic of Belarus Trajeckaje pradmiescie Contents 1 Etymology and historical names 2 History 2 1 Early history 2 2 Late Middle Ages 2 3 Russian rule 2 4 20th century 2 5 Recent developments 3 Geography 4 Climate 4 1 Ecological situation 5 Demographics 5 1 Population growth 5 2 Ethnic groups 5 3 Languages 5 4 Religion 5 5 Crime 6 Economy 6 1 Industry 6 2 Unemployment 7 Government and administrative divisions 8 Culture 8 1 Churches 8 2 Cemeteries 8 3 Theatres 8 4 Museums 8 5 Recreation areas 9 Tourism 10 Sports 10 1 Football 10 2 Ice hockey 10 3 Handball 10 4 Basketball 10 5 International sporting events 11 Transportation 11 1 Local transport 11 2 Rapid transit 11 3 Railway and intercity bus 11 4 Cycling 11 5 Airports 12 Education 12 1 Major higher educational institutions 13 Honors 14 Notable residents 14 1 Musicians 14 2 Sport 15 Twin towns sister cities 16 Significant depictions in popular culture 17 See also 18 References 19 Bibliography 20 Further reading 21 External linksEtymology and historical names Edit Independence Square in the centre of Minsk The Old East Slavic name of the town was Mѣnsk i e Mensk lt Early Proto Slavic or Late Indo European Menĭskŭ derived from a river name Men lt Menŭ The resulting clarification needed form of the name Minsk spelled either Minsk or Mѣnsk was taken over both in Russian modern spelling Minsk and Polish Minsk and under the influence of Russian this form also became official in Belarusian The direct continuation of the name in Belarusian is Miensk Mensk IPA ˈmʲɛnsk 8 which some Belarusian speakers continue to use as their preferred name for the city 9 When Belarus was under Polish rule the names Minsk Litewski Minsk of Lithuania and Minsk Bialoruski Minsk of Belarus were used to differentiate this place name from Minsk Mazowiecki Minsk in Masovia In modern Polish Minsk without an attribute usually refers to the city in Belarus which is about 50 times bigger than Minsk Mazowiecki cf Brest Litovsk and Brzesc Kujawski for a similar case 10 History EditMain articles History of Minsk and Timeline of Minsk Early history Edit The Saviour Church built under the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1577 is part of an archaeological preservation in Zaslavl 23 km 14 mi northwest of Minsk The area of today s Minsk was settled by Lithuanians in the 9th and 10th centuries AD 11 The Svislach River valley was the settlement boundary between two early East Slavic tribes the Krivichs and Dregovichs By 980 the area was incorporated into the early medieval Principality of Polotsk one of the earliest East Slavic principalities of Kievan Rus Minsk was first mentioned in the name form Menesk Mѣnesk in the Primary Chronicle for the year 1067 in association with the Battle on the River Nemiga 12 1067 is now widely accepted as the founding year of Minsk City authorities consider the date of 3 March 1067 to be the exact founding date of the city 13 though the town by then fortified by wooden walls had certainly existed for some time by then The origin of the name is unknown but there are several theories 14 In the early 12th century the Principality of Polotsk disintegrated into smaller fiefs The Principality of Minsk was established by one of the Polotsk dynasty princes In 1129 the Principality of Minsk was annexed by Kiev the dominant principality of Kievan Rus however in 1146 the Polotsk dynasty regained control of the principality By 1150 Minsk rivalled Polotsk as the major city in the former Principality of Polotsk The princes of Minsk and Polotsk were engaged in years of struggle trying to unite all lands previously under the rule of Polotsk 15 Late Middle Ages Edit Minsk in 1772 The Church of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul built in the early 17th century is the oldest existing building in the city Minsk escaped the Mongol invasion of Rus in 1237 1239 In 1242 Minsk became a part of the expanding Grand Duchy of Lithuania It joined peacefully and local elites enjoyed high rank in the society of the Grand Duchy In 1413 the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Kingdom of Poland entered into a union Minsk became the centre of Minsk Voivodship province In 1441 as Grand Duke of Lithuania Casimir IV included Minsk in a list of cities enjoying certain privileges and in 1499 during the reign of his son Alexander I Jagiellon Minsk received town privileges under Magdeburg law In 1569 after the Union of Lublin the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland merged into a single state the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 16 By the middle of the 16th century Minsk was an important economic and cultural centre in the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth It was also an important centre for the Eastern Orthodox Church Following the Union of Brest both the Eastern Catholic Churches and the Roman Catholic Church increased in influence citation needed In 1655 Minsk was conquered by troops of Tsar Alexei of Russia 17 Russians governed the city until 1660 when it was regained by John II Casimir Grand Duke of Lithuania and King of Poland By the end of the Polish Russian War Minsk had only about 2 000 residents and just 300 houses The second wave of devastation occurred during the Great Northern War when Minsk was occupied in 1708 and 1709 by the army of Charles XII of Sweden and then by the army of Peter the Great citation needed The last decades of the Polish rule involved decline or very slow development since Minsk had become a small provincial town of little economic or military significance citation needed Russian rule Edit Orthodox church of St Mary Magdalene built in 1847 Minsk was annexed by Russia in 1793 as a consequence of the Second Partition of Poland 18 19 In 1796 it became the centre of the Minsk Governorate All of the initial street names were replaced by Russian names though the spelling of the city s name remained unchanged It was briefly occupied by the Grande Armee during French invasion of Russia in 1812 20 Throughout the 19th century the city continued to grow and significantly improve In the 1830s major streets and squares of Minsk were cobbled and paved A first public library was opened in 1836 and a fire brigade was put into operation in 1837 In 1838 the first local newspaper Minskiye gubernskiye vedomosti Minsk province news went into circulation The first theatre was established in 1844 By 1860 Minsk was an important trading city with a population of 27 000 There was a construction boom that led to the building of 2 and 3 story brick and stone houses in Upper Town 21 22 Minsk s development was boosted by improvements in transportation In 1846 the Moscow Warsaw road was laid through Minsk In 1871 a railway link between Moscow and Warsaw ran via Minsk and in 1873 a new railway from Romny in Ukraine to the Baltic Sea port of Libava Liepaja was also constructed Thus Minsk became an important rail junction and a manufacturing hub A municipal water supply was introduced in 1872 the telephone in 1890 the horse tram in 1892 and the first power generator in 1894 By 1900 Minsk had 58 factories employing 3 000 workers The city also boasted theatres cinemas newspapers schools and colleges as well as numerous monasteries churches synagogues and a mosque According to the 1897 Russian census the city had 91 494 inhabitants with some 47 561 Jews constituting more than half of the city population 21 23 20th century Edit The Jesuit Collegium in 1912 Belarusian national flag over the building of the People s Secretariat of the Belarusian People s Republic Meeting in the Kurapaty woods 1989 where between 1937 and 1941 from 30 000 to 250 000 Belarusian intelligentsia members were murdered by the NKVD during the Great Purge In the early years of the 20th century Minsk was a major centre for the worker s movement in Belarus The 1st Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party the forerunner to the Bolsheviks and eventually the CPSU was held there in 1898 It was also one of the major centres of the Belarusian national revival alongside Vilnius However the First World War significantly affected the development of Minsk By 1915 Minsk was a battlefront city Some factories were closed down and residents began evacuating to the east Minsk became the headquarters of the Western Front of the Russian army and also housed military hospitals and military supply bases citation needed The Russian Revolution had an immediate effect in Minsk A Workers Soviet was established in Minsk in October 1917 drawing much of its support from disaffected soldiers and workers After the Treaty of Brest Litovsk German forces occupied Minsk on 21 February 1918 24 On 25 March 1918 Minsk was proclaimed the capital of the Belarusian People s Republic The republic was short lived in December 1918 Minsk was taken over by the Red Army In January 1919 Minsk was proclaimed the capital of the Belorussian SSR though later in 1919 see Operation Minsk and again in 1920 the city was controlled by the Second Polish Republic during the course of the Polish Bolshevik War between 8 August 1919 and 11 July 1920 and again between 14 October 1920 and 19 March 1921 Under the terms of the Peace of Riga Minsk was handed back to the Russian SFSR and became the capital of the Belorussian SSR one of the founding republics of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics citation needed A programme of reconstruction and development was begun in 1922 By 1924 there were 29 factories in operation schools museums theatres and libraries were also established Throughout the 1920s and the 1930s Minsk saw rapid development with dozens of new factories being built and new schools colleges higher education establishments hospitals theatres and cinemas being opened During this period Minsk was also a centre for the development of Belarusian language and culture 25 Children during the German bombing of Minsk on 24 June 1941 Before the Second World War Minsk had a population of 300 000 people but this had fallen to around 50 000 by 1944 The Germans captured Minsk in the Battle of Bialystok Minsk as part of Operation Barbarossa after it had been devastated by the Luftwaffe However some factories museums and tens of thousands of civilians had been evacuated to the east The Germans designated Minsk the administrative centre of Generalbezirk Weissruthenien Communists and sympathisers were killed or imprisoned both locally and after being transported to Germany Homes were requisitioned to house invading German forces Thousands starved as food was seized by the German Army and paid work was scarce Minsk was the site of one of the largest Nazi run ghettos in the Second World War temporarily housing over 100 000 Jews see Minsk Ghetto Some anti Soviet residents of Minsk who hoped that Belarus could regain independence did support the Germans especially at the beginning of the occupation but by 1942 Minsk had become a major centre of the Soviet partisan resistance movement against the invasion in what is known as the German Soviet War For this role Minsk was awarded the title Hero City in 1974 26 War memorial in Victory Square Minsk German troops marching through Minsk Minsk was recaptured by Soviet troops on 3 July 1944 in Minsk Offensive as part of Operation Bagration The city was the centre of German resistance to the Soviet advance and saw heavy fighting during the first half of 1944 Factories municipal buildings power stations bridges most roads and 80 of the houses were reduced to rubble In 1944 Minsk s population was reduced to a mere 50 000 27 Railway Station Square an example of Stalinist Minsk architecture Janka Kupala National Theatre The historical centre was replaced in the 1940s and 1950s by Stalinist architecture which favoured grand buildings broad avenues and wide squares Subsequently the city grew rapidly as a result of massive industrialisation Since the 1960s Minsk s population has also grown apace reaching 1 million in 1972 and 1 5 million in 1986 Construction of Minsk Metro began on 16 June 1977 and the system was opened to the public on 30 June 1984 becoming the ninth metro system in the Soviet Union The rapid population growth was primarily driven by mass migration of young unskilled workers from rural areas of Belarus as well as by migration of skilled workers from other parts of the Soviet Union citation needed 28 To house the expanding population Minsk spread beyond its historical boundaries Its surrounding villages were absorbed and rebuilt as mikroraions districts of high density apartment housing 29 Recent developments Edit Independence Avenue Initial part of avenue candidates for inclusion in World Heritage Site Throughout the 1990s after the fall of Communism the city continued to change As the capital of a newly independent country Minsk quickly acquired the attributes of a major city Embassies were opened and a number of Soviet administrative buildings became government centres During the early and mid 1990s Minsk was hit by an economic crisis and many development projects were halted resulting in high unemployment and underemployment Since the late 1990s there have been improvements in transport and infrastructure and a housing boom has been underway since 2002 On the outskirts of Minsk new mikroraions of residential development have been built Metro lines have been extended and the road system including the Minsk BeltWay has been improved In recent years Minsk has been continuously decentralizing 30 with a third line of the Minsk Metro opening in 2020 More development is planned for several areas outside the city centre while the future of the older neighborhoods is still unclear 30 Geography Edit Minsk satellite photo 2019 This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Minsk is located on the southeastern slope of the Minsk Hills a region of rolling hills running from the southwest upper reaches of the river Nioman to the northeast 31 that is to Lukomskaye Lake in northwestern Belarus The average altitude above sea level is 220 metres 720 ft The physical geography of Minsk was shaped over the two most recent ice ages The Svislach River which flows across the city from the northwest to the southeast is in the urstromtal an ancient river valley formed by water flowing from melting ice sheets at the end of the last Ice Age There are six smaller rivers within the city limits all part of the Black Sea basin Minsk is in the area of mixed forests typical of most of Belarus Pinewood and mixed forests border the edge of the city especially in the north and east Some of the forests were preserved as parks for instance the Chelyuskinites Park as the city grew The city was initially built on the hills which allowed for defensive fortifications and the western parts of the city are the most hilly In 5 km from the northwestern edge of city lies large Zaslawskaye reservoir often called the Minsk sea It is the second largest reservoir in Belarus constructed in 1956 32 Climate EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Minsk has a warm summer humid continental climate Koppen Dfb though unpredictable many a times owing to its location between the strong influence of the moist air of the Atlantic Ocean and the dry air of the Eurasian landmass Its weather is unstable and tends to change relatively often The average January temperature is 4 2 C 24 4 F while the average July temperature is 19 1 C 66 4 F The lowest temperature was recorded on 17 January 1940 at 39 1 C 38 F and the warmest on 8 August 2015 at 35 8 C 96 F Fog is frequent especially in the autumn and spring Minsk receives annual precipitation of 686 millimetres 27 0 in of which one third falls during the cold period as snow and rain and two thirds in the warm period Throughout the year most winds are westerly and northwesterly bringing cool and moist air from the Atlantic Panorama to the center of MinskClimate data for Minsk 1991 2020 extremes 1887 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 10 3 50 5 13 6 56 5 18 9 66 0 28 8 83 8 30 9 87 6 35 8 96 4 35 0 95 0 35 8 96 4 31 0 87 8 24 7 76 5 16 0 60 8 11 1 52 0 35 8 96 4 Average high C F 2 28 0 8 30 6 4 5 40 1 12 8 55 0 18 9 66 0 22 4 72 3 24 3 75 7 23 6 74 5 17 5 63 5 10 3 50 5 3 6 38 5 0 6 30 9 11 2 52 2 Daily mean C F 4 2 24 4 3 6 25 5 0 7 33 3 7 6 45 7 13 4 56 1 17 1 62 8 19 1 66 4 18 2 64 8 12 7 54 9 6 7 44 1 1 4 34 5 2 6 27 3 7 2 45 0 Average low C F 6 3 20 7 6 21 2 6 27 3 2 9 37 2 8 3 46 9 12 2 54 0 14 4 57 9 13 4 56 1 8 7 47 7 3 8 38 8 0 5 31 1 4 5 23 9 3 7 38 7 Record low C F 39 1 38 4 35 1 31 2 30 5 22 9 18 4 1 1 5 23 0 0 32 0 4 3 39 7 1 7 35 1 4 7 23 5 12 9 8 8 20 4 4 7 30 6 23 1 39 1 38 4 Average precipitation mm inches 47 1 9 40 1 6 41 1 6 43 1 7 66 2 6 79 3 1 97 3 8 71 2 8 51 2 0 55 2 2 49 1 9 47 1 9 686 27 0 Average extreme snow depth cm inches 11 4 3 16 6 3 13 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 8 6 2 4 16 6 3 Average rainy days 11 9 11 13 18 19 18 15 18 18 17 13 180Average snowy days 24 21 15 4 0 3 0 0 0 0 04 3 13 22 102Average relative humidity 86 83 77 67 66 70 71 72 79 82 88 88 77Mean monthly sunshine hours 44 66 134 181 257 273 269 242 165 97 36 27 1 790Percent possible sunshine 18 24 37 43 52 54 53 53 43 30 14 12 40Source 1 Pogoda ru net 33 Source 2 Belarus Department of Hydrometeorology sun data from 1938 1940 and 1945 2000 34 Ecological situation Edit The ecological situation is monitored by Republican Centre of Radioactive and Environmental Control 35 The Svislac River in autumnDuring 2003 2008 the overall weight of contaminants increased from 186 000 to 247 400 tons 35 The change from gas as industrial fuel to mazut for financial reasons has worsened the ecological situation 35 However the majority of overall air pollution is produced by cars 35 Belarusian traffic police DAI every year hold operation Clean Air to prevent the use of cars with extremely polluting engines 36 Sometimes the maximum normative concentration of formaldehyde and ammonia in air is exceeded in Zavodski District 35 Other major contaminants are Chromium VI and nitrogen dioxide 35 Zavodski Partyzanski and Leninski districts which are located in the southeastern part of Minsk are the most polluted areas in the city 37 Demographics Edit City of Minsk population pyramid in 2022 Apartment buildings in Minsk Minsk agglomeration from space Population growth Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Historical populationYearPop 14505 000 165410 000 100 0 16672 000 80 0 17907 000 250 0 181111 000 57 1 18133 500 68 2 186027 000 671 4 189791 000 237 0 1917134 500 47 8 1941300 000 123 0 194450 000 83 3 1951306 913 513 8 1956438 709 42 9 1961580 833 32 4 1966758 319 30 6 1971966 515 27 5 19761 161 999 20 2 19811 350 492 16 2 19861 515 745 12 2 19911 624 724 7 2 20011 714 949 5 6 20111 868 657 9 0 20212 038 822 9 1 20221 996 553 2 1 Population size may be affected by changes in administrative divisions Ethnic groups Edit During its first centuries Minsk was a city with a predominantly Early East Slavic population the forefathers of modern day Belarusians After the 1569 Polish Lithuanian union the city became a destination for migrating Poles who worked as administrators clergy teachers and soldiers and Jews Ashkenazim who worked in the retail trade and as craftsmen as other opportunities were prohibited by discrimination laws During the last centuries of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth many Minsk residents became polonised adopting the language of the dominant Poles and assimilating to its culture citation needed After the second partition of Poland Lithuania in 1793 Minsk and its larger region became part of the Russian Empire The Russians dominated the city s culture as had the Poles in the earlier centuries citation needed At the time of the 1897 census under the Russian Empire Jews were the largest ethnic group in Minsk at 52 of the population with 47 500 of the 91 000 residents 38 Other substantial ethnic groups were Russians 25 5 Poles 11 4 and Belarusians 9 The latter figure may be not accurate as some local Belarusians were likely counted as Russians A small traditional community of Lipka Tatars had been living in Minsk for centuries 39 40 Between the 1880s and 1930s many Jews as well as peasants from other backgrounds emigrated from the city to the United States as part of a Belarusian diaspora citation needed Jewish Holocaust memorial The Pit in Minsk The high mortality of the First World War and the Second World War affected the demographics of the city particularly the destruction of Jews under the Nazi occupation of the Second World War Working through local populations Germans instituted deportation of Jewish citizens to concentration camps murdering most of them there The Jewish community of Minsk suffered catastrophic losses in the Holocaust From more than half the population of the city the percentage of Jews dropped to less than 10 more than ten years after the war After its limited population peaked in the 1970s continuing anti Semitism under the Soviet Union and increasing nationalism in Belarus caused most Jews to emigrate to Israel and western countries in the 1980s by 1999 less than 1 of the population of Minsk was Jewish 41 In the first three decades of the post war years the most numerous new residents in Minsk were rural migrants from other parts of Belarus the proportion of ethnic Belarusians increased markedly Numerous skilled Russians and other migrants from other parts of the Soviet Union migrated for jobs in the growing manufacturing sector 42 In 1959 Belarusians made up 63 3 of the city s residents Other ethnic groups included Russians 22 8 Jews 7 8 Ukrainians 3 6 Poles 1 1 and Tatars 0 4 Continued migration from rural Belarus in the 1960s and 1970s changed the ethnic composition further By 1979 Belarusians made up 68 4 of the city s residents Other ethnic groups included Russians 22 2 Jews 3 4 Ukrainians 3 4 Poles 1 2 and Tatars 0 2 42 According to the 1989 census 82 percent of Minsk residents have been born in Belarus Of those 43 have been born in Minsk and 39 in other parts of Belarus 6 2 of Minsk residents came from regions of western Belarus Grodno and Brest Regions and 13 from eastern Belarus Mogilev Vitebsk and Gomel Regions 21 4 of residents came from central Belarus Minsk Region citation needed According to the 1999 census Belarusians make up 79 3 of the city s residents Other ethnic groups include Russians 15 7 Ukrainians 2 4 Poles 1 1 and Jews 0 6 The Russian and Ukrainian populations of Minsk peaked in the late 1980s at 325 000 and 55 000 respectively After the break up of the Soviet Union many of them chose to move to their respective mother countries although some families had been in Minsk for generations Another factor in the shifting demographics of the city was the changing self identification of Minsk residents of mixed ancestry in independent Belarus they identify as Belarusians citation needed The Jewish population of Minsk peaked in the early 1970s at 50 000 according to official figures independent estimates put the figure at between 100 000 and 120 000 Beginning in the 1980s there has been mass scale emigration to Israel the US and Germany Today only about 10 000 Jews live in Minsk The traditional minorities of Poles and Tatars have remained at much the same size 17 000 and 3 000 respectively Rural Poles have migrated from the western part of Belarus to Minsk and many Tatars have moved to Minsk from Tatarstan citation needed Some more recent ethnic minority communities have developed as a result of immigration The most prominent are immigrants from the Caucasus countries Armenians Azerbaijanis and Georgians each numbering about 2 000 to 5 000 They began migrating to Minsk in the 1970s and more immigrants have joined them since Many work in the retail trade in open air markets A small but prominent Arab community has developed in Minsk primarily represented by recent economic immigrants from Syria Lebanon Egypt Algeria etc In many cases they are graduates of Minsk universities who decide to settle in Belarus and bring over their families A small community of Romani numbering about 2 000 are settled in suburbs of north western and southern Minsk citation needed Languages Edit Chinese signage Minsk railway station 2018 Throughout its history Minsk has been a city of many languages Initially most of its residents spoke Ruthenian which later developed into modern Belarusian However after 1569 the official language was Polish 43 In the 19th century Russian became the official language and by the end of that century it had become the language of administration schools and newspapers The Belarusian national revival increased interest in the Belarusian language its use has grown since the 1890s especially among the intelligentsia In the 1920s and early 1930s Belarusian was the major language of Minsk including use for administration and education both secondary and tertiary However since the late 1930s Russian again began gaining dominance citation needed A short period of Belarusian national revival in the early 1990s saw a rise in the numbers of Belarusian speakers However in 1994 the newly elected president Alexander Lukashenko slowly reversed this trend Most residents of Minsk now use Russian exclusively in their everyday lives at home and at work although Belarusian is understood as well Substantial numbers of recent migrants from the rural areas use Trasyanka a Russo Belarusian mixed language in their everyday lives 44 Religion Edit There are no reliable statistics on the religious affiliations of those living in Minsk or among the population of Belarus generally The majority of Christians belong to the Belarusian Orthodox Church which is the exarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church in Belarus There is a significant minority of Roman Catholics citation needed New synagogue in Minsk As of 2006 there are approximately 30 religious communities of various denominations in Minsk 45 46 The only functioning monastery in the city is St Elisabeth Convent its large complex of churches is open to visitors Crime Edit Police during the 2020 21 Belarusian protests Minsk has the highest crime rate in Belarus 193 5 crimes per 10 000 citizens 47 48 20 25 of all serious crimes in Belarus 55 of bribes and 67 of mobile phone thefts are committed in Minsk 47 49 However attorney general Grigory Vasilevich stated that the homicide rate in Minsk in 2008 was relatively fine 50 The crime rate grew significantly in 2009 and 2010 47 for example the number of corruption crimes grew by 36 in 2009 alone 51 Crime detection level varies from 13 in burglary 52 to 92 in homicide 53 with an average 40 1 54 Many citizens are concerned for their safety at night and the strongest concern was expressed by residents of Chizhovka and Shabany microdistricts both in Zavodski District 53 The SIZO 1 detention center IK 1 general prison and the KGB special jail called Amerikanka are all located in Minsk Alexander Lukashenko s rivals in the 2010 presidential election were imprisoned in the KGB jail 55 along with other prominent politicians and civil activists Ales Michalevic who was kept in this jail accused the KGB of using torture 56 57 On 15 November 2020 more than 1 000 protesters were arrested during an anti government protest Protesters took to the streets in the capital Minsk following the death of an opposition activist Roman Bondarenko The activist died after allegedly being beaten up by the security forces The protesters put flowers at the site where he was detained before succumbing to his injuries 58 2020 21 Belarusian protests Minsk 30 August 2020Economy EditSee also Economy of Belarus Minsk is the economic capital of Belarus It has developed industrial and services sectors which serve the needs not only of the city but of the entire nation Minsk s contributions form nearly 46 of Belarusian budget 59 According to 2010 results Minsk paid 15 trillion BYR to state budget while the whole income from all other regions was 20 trillion BYR 60 In the period January 2013 to October 2013 70 6 of taxes in the budget of Minsk were paid by non state enterprises 26 3 by state enterprises and 1 8 by individual entrepreneurs Among the top 10 taxpayers were five oil and gas companies including two Gazprom s and one Lukoil s subsidiaries two mobile network operators MTS and A1 two companies producing alcoholic beverages Minsk Kristall and Minsk grape wines factory and one producer of tobacco goods 61 In 2012 Gross Regional Product of Minsk was formed mainly by industry 26 4 wholesale 19 9 transportation and communications 12 3 retail 8 6 and construction 5 8 GRP of Minsk measured in Belarusian rubles was 55 billion 20 billion or around 1 3 of Gross domestic product of Belarus 62 Minsk city has highest salaries in Belarus As of July 2022 average gross salary in Minsk was 2 265 BYN per month or around 900 per month 63 Industry Edit Power plant Minsk is the major industrial centre of Belarus According to 2012 statistics Minsk based companies produced 21 5 of electricity 76 of trucks 15 9 of footwear 89 3 of television sets 99 3 of washing machines 30 of chocolate 27 7 of distilled alcoholic beverages and 19 7 of tobacco goods in Belarus 64 Today the city has over 250 factories and plants Its industrial development started in the 1860s and was facilitated by the railways built in the 1870s However much of the industrial infrastructure was destroyed during World War I especially during World War II After the last war the development of the city was linked to the development of industry especially of R amp D intensive sectors heavy emphasis of R amp D intensive industries in urban development in the USSR is known in Western geography as Minsk phenomenon citation needed Minsk was turned into a major production site for trucks tractors gears optical equipment refrigerators television sets and radios bicycles motorcycles watches and metal processing equipment Outside machine building and electronics Minsk also had textiles construction materials food processing and printing industries During the Soviet period the development of the industries was linked to suppliers and markets within the USSR The break up of the union in 1991 led to a serious economic meltdown in 1991 1994 65 However since the adoption of the neo Keynesean policies under Alexander Lukashenko s government in 1995 much of the gross industrial production was regained 65 Unlike many other cities in the CIS and Eastern Europe Minsk was not heavily de industrialised in the 1990s About 40 of the workforce is still employed in the manufacturing sector 65 Major industrial employers include Minsk Tractor Plant specialised in manufacturing tractors Established in 1946 in eastern Minsk is among major manufacturers of wheeled tractors in the CIS Employs about 30 000 staff 66 Minsk Automobile Plant specialising in producing trucks buses and mini vans Established in 1944 in south eastern Minsk is among major vehicle manufacturers in the CIS citation needed Minsk Refrigerator Plant also known as Atlant specialised in manufacturing household goods such as refrigerators freezers and recently also of washing machines Established in 1959 in the north west of the city citation needed Horizont specialised in producing TV sets audio and video electronics Established in 1950 in north central Minsk citation needed Unemployment Edit In 2011 official statistics quote unemployment in Minsk at 0 3 67 During the 2009 census 5 6 of Minsk residents of employable age called themselves unemployed 67 The government discourages official unemployment registration with tiny unemployment benefits and obligatory public works Until 2018 there was an unemployment tax taken from those who were suspected of loitering 68 Government and administrative divisions EditMain article Administrative divisions of Minsk House of Representatives of Belarus Victory Square Minsk is subdivided into nine raions districts Tsentralny Belarusian Centralny Russian Centralnyj or Central District Savetski Belarusian Savecki Russian Sovetskij Sovetsky or Soviet District Pershamayski Belarusian Pershamajski Russian Pervomajskij Pervomaysky named after 1 May Partyzanski Belarusian Partyzanski Russian Partizanskij Partizansky named after the Soviet partisans Zavodski Belarusian Zavodski Russian Zavodskoj Zavodskoy or Factory district initially it included major plants Minsk Tractor Works MTZ and Minsk Automobile Plant MAZ later the Partyzanski District with MTZ was split off it Leninski Belarusian Leninski Russian Leninskij Leninsky named after Lenin Kastrychnitski Belarusian Kastrychnicki Russian Oktyabrskij Oktyabrsky named after the October Revolution Maskouski Belarusian Maskoyski Russian Moskovskij Moskovsky named after Moscow Frunzenski Belarusian Frunzenski Russian Frunzenskij Frunzensky named after Mikhail FrunzeIn addition a number of residential neighbourhoods are recognised in Minsk called microdistricts with no separate administration Culture EditMinsk is the major cultural center of Belarus Its first theatres and libraries were established in the middle of the 19th century Now it has 11 theatres and 16 museums There are 20 cinemas and 139 libraries citation needed Churches Edit The Orthodox Cathedral of the Holy Spirit is actually the former church of the Bernardine convent It was built in the simplified Baroque style in 1642 87 and went through renovations in 1741 46 and 1869 The Cathedral of Saint Mary was built by the Jesuits as their principal church in 1700 10 restored in 1951 and 1997 it overlooks the recently restored 18th century city hall located on the other side of the Liberty Square Two other historic churches are the cathedral of Saint Joseph formerly affiliated with the Bernardine monastery built in 1644 52 and repaired in 1983 and the fortified church of Sts Peter and Paul originally built in the 1620s and recently restored complete with its flanking twin towers The impressive Neo Romanesque Roman Catholic Red Church Cathedral of Sts Simeon and Helene was built in 1906 10 immediately after religious freedoms were proclaimed in Imperial Russia and the tsar allowed dissidents to build their churches The largest church built in the Russian imperial period of the town s history is dedicated to St Mary Magdalene Many Orthodox churches were built after the dissolution of the USSR in a variety of styles although most remain true to the Neo Russian idiom A good example is St Elisabeth s Convent founded in 1999 Church of Sts Peter and Paul Russian Orthodox Church of St Mary Magdalene Russian Orthodox Church of Exaltation of the Holy Cross Roman Catholic Church of Holy Trinity Saint Rochus Roman Catholic Church of All Saints Russian Orthodox Church of St Yevfrosinya of Polotsk Russian Orthodox Church of St Elisabeth Convent Russian Orthodox The Red Church Roman Catholic Church of St Joseph formerly Uniate used as an archive Cathedral of Saint Virgin Mary Roman Catholic Minsk Cathedral of the Holy Spirit Russian Orthodox The city hall rebuilt in 2003 Cemeteries Edit Kalvaryja Calvary Cemetery is the oldest surviving cemetery in the city Many famous people of Belarus are buried here The cemetery was closed to new burials in the 1960s Military Cemetery Eastern Cemetery Cyzoŭskija Cemetery Northern CemeteryTheatres Edit Major theatres are National Academic Grand Opera and Ballet Theatre of the Republic of Belarus National Academic Grand Opera and Ballet Theatre of the Republic of Belarus Belarusian State Musical Theatre performances in Russian Maxim Gorky National Drama Theatre performances in Russian Janka Kupala National Theatre performances in Belarusian Museums Edit Major museums include Belarusian National Arts Museum National Arts Museum of the Republic of Belarus Belarusian Great Patriotic War Museum Belarusian National History and Culture Museum Belarusian Nature and Environment Museum Maksim Bahdanovic Literary Museum Old Belarusian History Museum Yanka Kupala Literary Museum ru Art galleries include Ў gallery Ў GalleryRecreation areas Edit Chelyuskinites Park Children s Railroad Gorky Park Minsk Yanka Kupala ParkTourism EditThere are more than 400 travel agencies in Minsk about a quarter of them provide agent activity and most of them are tour operators 69 70 Sports Edit Outside view of the Dinamo National Olympic Stadium 2019 Football Edit FC Dinamo Minsk FC Minsk FC Energetik BGU Minsk FC Krumkachy Minsk Dinamo National Olympic Stadium after reconstruction Ice hockey Edit HC Dinamo Minsk HC Yunost MinskHandball Edit SKA MinskBasketball Edit BC Tsmoki MinskInternational sporting events Edit Minsk Arena In 2013 Minsk hosted the European Junior Rowing Championships at the Republican Center of Olympic Training for Rowing And Canoeing to the north west of the city 71 Minsk hosted the 2014 IIHF World Championship at the Minsk Arena In January 2016 the 2016 European Speed Skating Championships were held in the Minsk Arena Minsk Arena is the only indoor speed skating rink in Belarus Minsk hosted the 2019 European Games in June 72 The 2019 European Figure Skating Championships were held in the Minsk Arena from the 21 to 27 January Transportation EditLocal transport Edit Minsk has an extensive public transport system 73 Passengers are served by 8 tramway lines over 70 trolleybus lines 3 subway lines and over 100 bus lines Trams were the first public transport used in Minsk since 1892 the horse tram and since 1929 the electric tram Public buses have been used in Minsk since 1924 and trolleybuses since 1952 74 75 Electrobus AKSM E321 in Minsk All public transport is operated by Minsktrans a government owned and funded transport not for profit company As of November 2021 Minsktrans used 1 322 buses plus 93 electric buses 744 trolleybuses and 135 tramway cars in Minsk 76 The Minsk city government in 2003 decreed that local transport provision should be set at a minimum level of 1 vehicle bus trolleybus or tram per 1 500 residents The number of vehicles in use by Minsktrans is 2 2 times higher than the minimum level citation needed Public transport fares are controlled by the city s executive committee city council Single trip ticket for bus trolleybus or tramway costs 0 75 BYN USD 0 3 77 0 80 BYN for metro and 0 90 BYN for express buses 77 Monthly ticket for one kind of transport costs 33 BYN and 61 BYN for all five 77 Commercial marshrutka s prices varies from 1 5 to 2 BYN citation needed Rapid transit Edit Vakzalnaja station in the Minsk Metro Main article Minsk Metro Minsk is the only city in Belarus with an underground metro system Construction of the metro began in 1977 soon after the city reached over a million people and the first line with 8 stations was opened in 1984 Since then it has expanded into three lines Maskoŭskaja Aŭtazavodskaja and Zielienaluzskaja which are 19 1 18 1 and 3 5 km 11 9 11 2 and 2 2 mi long with 15 14 and 4 stations respectively On 7 November 2012 three new stations on the Moskovskaya Line were opened and another on 3 June 2014 citation needed Construction of the third line began in 2011 and the first stage opened in 2020 Some layout plans speculate on a possible fourth line running from Vyasnyanka to Serabranka micro rayons citation needed source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Stations of the new Zielienaluzskaja line on video Trains use 243 standard Russian metro cars On a typical day Minsk metro is used by 800 000 passengers In 2007 ridership of Minsk metro was 262 1 million passengers 78 in 2017 ridership of Minsk metro was 284 1 million passengers 79 making it the 5th busiest metro network in the former USSR behind Moscow St Petersburg Kyiv and Kharkiv During peak hours trains run each 2 2 5 minutes The metro network employs 3 200 staff citation needed Most of the urban transport is being renovated to modern standards For instance all metro stations built since 2001 have passenger lifts from platform to street level thus enabling the use of the newer stations by disabled passengers citation needed 80 Railway and intercity bus Edit Minsk Central Bus Station Nowadays Stadler Astra train Minsk train station Minsk is the largest transport hub in Belarus Minsk is located at the junction of the Warsaw Moscow railway built in 1871 running from the southwest to the northeast of the city and the Liepaja Romny railway built in 1873 running from the northwest to the south The first railway connects Russia with Poland and Germany the second connects Ukraine with Lithuania and Latvia They cross at the Minsk Pasazyrski railway station the main railway station of Minsk The station was built in 1873 as Vilenski vakzal The initial wooden building was demolished in 1890 and rebuilt in stone During World War II the Minsk railway station was completely destroyed It was rebuilt in 1945 and 1946 and served until 1991 The new building of the Minsk Pasazyrski railway station was built during 1991 2002 Its construction was delayed due to financial difficulties now however Minsk boasts one of the most modern and up to date railway stations in the CIS There are plans to move all suburban rail traffic from Minsk Pasazyrski to the smaller stations Minsk Uschodni East Minsk Paŭdniovy South and Minsk Paŭnocny North by 2020 citation needed There are three intercity bus stations that link Minsk with the suburbs and other cities in Belarus and the neighboring countries There are frequent services to Moscow Smolensk Vilnius Riga Kyiv and Warsaw citation needed Cycling Edit According to the 2019 survey of 1934 people 81 Minsk had around 811 000 adult bicycles and 232 000 child and adolescent bicycles In Minsk there is one bike for every 1 9 people The total number of bicycles in Minsk exceeds the total number of cars 770 000 personal automobiles 39 of Minsk residents have a personal bike 43 of Minsk residents ride a bicycle once a month or more As of 2017 the level of bicycle use is about 1 of all transport movements for comparison 12 in Berlin 50 in Copenhagen 82 Bike path in Minsk Since 2015 an annual bicycle parade bicycle carnival is held in Minsk during which vehicles are blocked for several hours along Pobediteley Peramohi Avenue The number of participants in 2019 was more than 20 000 and the number of registrations was about 12 000 83 84 85 86 In 2017 the European Union funded the project Urban cycling in Belarus at a cost of 560 000 within the framework of which the public association Minsk Cycling Society together with the Council of Ministers created the regulatory document National Concept for the Development of Cycling in Belarus 87 88 In 2020 Minsk entered the top 3 most cycling cities in the CIS after Moscow and Saint Petersburg 89 Airports Edit Minsk National Airport is located 42 km 26 mi to the east of the city It opened in 1982 and the current railway station opened in 1987 It is an international airport with flights to Europe and the Middle East 90 Prior to 1982 the main airport was Minsk 1 Airport opened in 1933 a few kilometres to the south of the historical centre In 1955 it became an international airport and by 1970 served over 1 million passengers a year citation needed After 1982 it mainly served domestic routes in Belarus and short haul routes to Moscow Kyiv and Kaliningrad Minsk 1 was closed in December 2015 because of the noise pollution in the surrounding residential areas citation needed The land of the airport is currently being redeveloped for residential and commercial real estate branded as Minsk City as well as the new Zelenaluzhskaya line of the Minsk Metro 91 Minsk Borovaya Airfield UMMB is located in a suburb north east of the city next to Zaliony Luh Forest Park housing Aero Club Minsk and Minsk Aviation Museum 92 Education EditMinsk has about 451 kindergartens 241 schools 22 further education colleges 93 and 29 higher education institutions 94 including 12 major national universities citation needed Major higher educational institutions Edit Academy of Public Administration under the aegis of the President of the Republic of Belarus The Academy was established in 1991 and it acquired the status of a presidential institution in 1995 The Academy has 3 institutes Institute of Administrative Personnel which has 3 departments Institute of Civil Service which has 3 departments and Research Institute of the Theory and Practice of Public administration Belarusian State University Major Belarusian universal university founded in 1921 In 2006 had 15 major departments Applied Mathematics and Informatics Biology Chemistry Geography Economics International relations Journalism History Humanitarian Sciences Law Mechanics and Mathematics Philology Philosophy and Social sciences Physics Radiophysics and Electronics It also included 5 R amp D institutes 24 Research Centres 114 R amp D laboratories The University employs over 2 400 lecturers and 1 000 research fellows 1 900 of these hold PhD or Dr Sc degrees There are 16 000 undergraduate students at the university as well as over 700 PhD students In 2018 Olga Chupris was the first female Vice Rector appointed to the institution Academic Work and Educational Innovations Research Institute for Nuclear Problems of Belarusian State University Belarusian State University of Agricultural Technology Specialised in agricultural technology and agricultural machinery Belarusian National Technical University Specialised in technical disciplines Belarusian State Medical University Specialised in Medicine and Dentistry Since 1921 Medicine Department of the Belarusian State University In 1930 becomes separate as Belarusian Medical Institute In 2000 upgraded to university level Has six departments Belarusian State Economic University Specialised in Finance and Economics Founded in 1933 as Belarusian Institute for National Economy Upgraded to university level in 1992 Maxim Tank Belarusian State Pedagogical University Specialised in teacher training for secondary schools Belarusian State University of Informatics and Radioelectronics Specialised in IT and radioelectronic technologies Established in 1964 as Minsk Institute for Radioelectronics Belarusian State University of Physical Training Specialised in sports coaches and PT teachers training Belarusian State Technological University Specialised in chemical and pharmaceutical technology in printing and forestry Founded in 1930 as Forestry Institute in Homel In 1941 evacuated to Sverdlovsk now Yekaterinburg Returned to Gomel in 1944 but in 1946 relocated to Minsk as Belarusian Institute of Technology Upgraded to university level in 1993 Has nine departments Minsk State Linguistic University Specialised in foreign languages Founded in 1948 as Minsk Institute for Foreign Languages In 2006 had 8 departments Major focus on English French German and Spanish Belarusian State University of Culture and Arts Specializes in cultural studies visual and Performing Arts Founded in 1975 as Minsk Institute of Culture Reorganized in 1993 International Sakharov Environmental Institute Specialised in environmental sciences Established in 1992 with the support from the United Nations Focus on study and research of radio ecological consequences of the Chernobyl nuclear power station disaster in 1986 which heavily affected Belarus Minsk Institute of Management The largest private higher educational institution in Belarus Established in 1991 Specializes in Economics Management Marketing Finance Psychology and Information technology Minsk State Linguistic University Faculty of International Relations Belarusian State University Belarus State University rector s office Honors EditA minor planet 3012 Minsk discovered by Soviet astronomer Nikolai Chernykh in 1979 is named after the city 95 Notable residents EditMain category People from Minsk Andrei Pavlovich Ablameyko born 1970 Belarusian Greek Catholic priest Anton Adamovic 1909 1998 literary critic novelist publicist and historian Viktar Babaryka born 1963 Belarusian public and opposition political figure political prisoner 96 Maksim Bahdanovic 1891 1917 poet considered one of the founders of modern Belarusian literature 97 Raman Bandarenka 1989 2020 designer killed during the protests against the 2020 Belarusian presidential election 98 Masha Bruskina 1924 1941 World War II partisan Veronika Cherkasova 1959 2004 journalist 99 Illia Chrenaǔ nom de guerre Litvin 1994 2022 Belarusian volunteer killed in action defending Ukraine during the 2022 Russian invasion 100 Olga Chupris born 1969 first female Vice Rector of the Belarusian State University Avraham Even Shoshan 1906 1984 Israeli linguist and lexicographer Sophie Fedorovitch 1893 1953 ballet opera and theatre designer birthplace Ella German born 1937 girlfriend of Lee Harvey Oswald Moisei Ginzburg 1892 1946 constructivist architect Gennady Grushevoy 1950 2014 academic politician human rights and environmental activist winner of the 1999 Rafto Prize 101 Ales Harun 1887 1920 poet writer and journalist 102 Anatol Hrytskievich 1929 2015 Belarusian historian 103 Hienadz Karpienka 1949 1999 scientist and politician 104 Uladzimir Katkoŭski 1976 2007 one of the founders of the Belarusian Wikipedia 105 Jauhien Kulik 1937 2002 artist and graphic designer who designed the 1991 95 Coat of Arms of Belarus which was a version of the medieval symbol Pahonia 106 Pavel Latushka b 1973 Belarusian politician and opposition leader 107 108 Maryna Linchuk born 1987 fashion model Ivan Lubennikov born 1951 Russian painter birthplace Janka Lucyna Jan Niesluchowski 1851 1897 poet 109 Leanid Marakou 1958 2016 journalist writer 110 Valery Marakoǔ 1909 1937 Belarusian poet and translator victim of Stalin s purges 111 Yan Matusevich 1946 1998 Catholic priest and dean of the Belarusian Greek Catholic Church 112 Louis B Mayer 1884 1957 American film producer one of the founders of Metro Goldwyn Mayer Bronislava Nijinska 1890 1972 ballerina and choreographer of the Ballets Russes birthplace Lee Harvey Oswald 1939 1963 assassin of US President John F Kennedy resided in Minsk from January 1960 to June 1962 Grigoriy Plaskov 1898 1972 Soviet artillery lieutenant birthplace Alexander Rybak born 1986 winner of the Eurovision Song Contest 2009 for Norway birthplace Vitali Silitski 1972 2011 political scientist analyst the first director of the Belarusian Institute for Strategic Studies 113 Aliaksiej Skoblia nom de guerre Aliaksiej Tur 1990 2022 Belarusian fighter volunteer of the Kastus Kalinoŭski Battalion posthumously awarded the title Hero of Ukraine 114 Vanda Skuratovich 1925 2010 Roman Catholic activist Stanislav Shushkevich 1934 2022 Belarusian politician and scientist the first head of state of independent Belarus 115 116 Stefaniya Stanyuta 1905 2000 theater and movie actress 117 Alexander Taraikovsky 1986 2020 entrepreneur killed during the protests against the 2020 Belarusian presidential election 118 Barys Tasman b 1954 journalist sports writer George Tsisetski b 1985 film director screenwriter dramatist and visual artist Rachel Wischnitzer 1885 1989 architect and art historian Jazep Jucho 1921 2004 lawyer historian and writer and a leading Belarusian authority on the laws of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania 119 Simcha Zorin 1902 1974 World War II partisanMusicians Edit Angelica Agurbash born 1970 Belarusian singer Eurovision participant 120 Marina Gordon 1917 2013 soprano birthplace 121 Irma Jaunzem 1897 1975 mezzo soprano singer and folk song specialist Boris Khaykin 1904 1978 conductor Yung Lean born 1996 Swedish rapper amp musician birthplace Zmicier Sidarovic 1965 2014 musician 122 Lavon Volski b 1965 musician 123 Sport Edit Yulia Raskina Roman Sorkin Andrei Arlovski grew up and lived in Minsk before moving to the US to fight in the Ultimate Fighting Championship Victoria Azarenka former World No 1 tennis player and 2012 and 2013 Australian Open winner born in Minsk moving to Arizona at 16 Yuri Bessmertny kickboxer Svetlana Boginskaya gold medal winning gymnast at the 1988 and 1992 Olympics birthplace Isaac Boleslavsky chess grandmaster Darya Domracheva gold 4 times and bronze medal winning biathlete at the 2010 and 2014 Winter Olympics Boris Gelfand born 1968 Israeli chess Grandmaster Max Geller born 1971 Israeli Olympic wrestler Alexei Ignashov kickboxer multiple Muay Thai and K 1 world champion Oleg Karavayev wrestler and Olympic champion Viktar Kuprejcyk 1949 2017 chess grandmaster 124 Isaak Mazel 1911 1945 chess master Max Mirnyi tennis player Artsiom Parakhouski born 1987 basketball player Yulia Raskina individual rhythmic gymnast won the All Around Silver at the 2000 Sydney Olympics Roman Rubinshteyn born 1996 Belarusian Israeli basketball player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League Aryna Sabalenka 2023 Australian Open winner born in Minsk moving to Miami at 23 Yegor Sharangovich born 1998 ice hockey player Yuri Shulman born 1975 Belarusian American chess grandmaster Mark Slavin 1954 1972 Israeli Olympic Greco Roman wrestler and victim of the Munich massacre at the 1972 Summer Olympics Anna Smashnova born 1976 Belarusian born Israeli tennis player Roman Sorkin born 1996 Belarusian born Israeli basketball player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League Diana Vaisman born 1998 Belarusian born Israeli sprinterTwin towns sister cities EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Belarus Minsk is twinned with 125 Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates 2007 Ankara Turkey 2007 Bangalore India 1986 Beijing China 2016 Bishkek Kyrgyzstan 1997 Bonn Germany 1993 Changchun China 1992 Chisinău Moldova 2000 Detroit United States 1979 126 Dushanbe Tajikistan 1998 Eindhoven Netherlands 1994 Gaziantep Turkey 2018 Hanoi Vietnam 2004 Havana Cuba 2005 Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam 2008 Islamabad Pakistan 2015 Kaluga Russia 2015 Murmansk Russia 2014 Nizhny Novgorod Russia 2017 Nottingham England UK 1986 Novosibirsk Russia 2012 Rostov on Don Russia 2018 Sendai Japan 1973 Shanghai China 2019 Shenzhen China 2014 Tbilisi Georgia 2015 Tehran Iran 2006 Ufa Russia 2017 Ulyanovsk Russia 2015 Significant depictions in popular culture EditIn the Don Bluth animated film An American Tail the protagonist Fievel Mousekewitz voiced by Phillip Glasser is told of a mythical being known as the Giant Mouse of Minsk in all his bedtime stories by his father voiced by Nehemiah Persoff in said stories the powerful mouse was a giant who drove out both cats and Communist invaders These stories would inspire him to take up the mantle as he rallies the other mice in New York to construct a huge mechanical mouse as a secret weapon to drive off the mafia cats who rule the city Minsk is one of the starting towns of Lithuania in the turn based strategy game Medieval II Total War Kingdoms 127 In the American sitcom Friends recurring character David the Science Guy played by Hank Azaria has a romance with Phoebe Buffay one of the main characters in the first season of the series but breaks her heart when he decides to leave for Minsk on a three year research trip In the show Minsk is incorrectly referred to as being located in Russia despite taking place after the dissolution of the Soviet Union In the science fiction franchise Star Trek the Klingon character Worf is raised by human parents from Minsk and spends some of his early life there He regards it as one of his favorite places on Earth and suggests that Chief Miles O Brien move his family there In Seinfeld there are repeated references to a film and later play titled Rochelle Rochelle the subtitle is A young girl s strange erotic journey from Milan to Minsk See also EditThe community Zabej List of squares in MinskReferences Edit Minsk City Executive Committee 18 January 2019 Official portal minsk gov by population with Minsk district 259 710 Population of Minsk Gross domestic product and gross regional product by regions and Minsk city in 2022 Eternal Daylight Saving Time DST in Belarus timeanddate com 19 September 2011 Retrieved 30 October 2014 Just a moment Chislennost naseleniya na 1 yanvarya 2021 g po oblastyam i g Minsku in Russian National Statistical Committee of the Republic of Belarus 29 March 2018 Istoriya Minska minsk950 belta by Retrieved 31 May 2019 Proishozhdenie nazvaniya Minska Gorodskie portaly Belarusi Govorim by Retrieved 30 May 2019 79 let nazad Verhovnyj sovet BSSR pereimenoval Mensk v Minsk belsat eu in Russian Retrieved 30 May 2019 Wirtualny Minsk Mazowiecki minskmaz com Retrieved 30 May 2019 Greenbaum Masha 1995 The Jews of Lithuania A History of a Remarkable Community 1316 1945 Jerusalem Gefen p 2 ISBN 9789652291325 V lЂto 6563 1055 6579 1071 Ipatiyivskij litopis Litopys org ua Retrieved 5 May 2009 The Celebration of the 940th anniversary of Minsk will start with ringing of bells Minsk City Executive Committee Minsk gov by Archived from the original on 15 June 2008 Retrieved 5 May 2009 Minsk proishozhdenie nazvaniya stolicy Stolichnoe televidenie STV in Russian Retrieved 30 May 2019 Polockoe knyazhestvo history belarus by in Russian Retrieved 30 May 2019 Hill Melissa Belarus Worldmark Encyclopedia of Nations Gale Retrieved 4 June 2019 Robert I Frost After the Deluge Poland Lithuania and the Second Northern War 1655 1660 Cambridge University Press 2004 p 48 RU Istoriya Retrieved 31 May 2019 Minsk Stolica Belorussii geographyofrussia com 17 March 2010 Retrieved 31 May 2019 Kakie sledy ostavili vojska Napoleona na territorii sovremennoj Belarusi TUT BY in Russian 26 December 2012 Retrieved 31 May 2019 a b darriuss 25 September 2015 Bylo stalo Minsk vekovoj davnosti i sejchas Nedvizhimost Onliner Onliner in Russian Retrieved 31 May 2019 Istoriya minsk starazhytny by Retrieved 31 May 2019 darriuss 9 August 2017 Bylo stalo Minsk kotoryj my k schastyu poteryali Nedvizhimost Onliner Onliner in Russian Retrieved 31 May 2019 History Belarusian Tour operator 29 October 2013 Archived from the original on 3 November 2013 Retrieved 29 October 2013 End of XVIII 1941 in Russian Official Site of Minsk Government Retrieved 9 December 2021 Hero City Sightseeing Minsk Inyourpocket com Retrieved 26 February 2022 Explore Minsk the Belarusian capital Rough Guides 18 June 2021 Retrieved 26 February 2022 Marples David R 1 November 2016 The Minsk Phenomenon demographic development in the Republic of Belarus Nationalities Papers 44 6 919 931 doi 10 1080 00905992 2016 1218451 ISSN 0090 5992 S2CID 131971740 1945 1991 in Russian Official Site of Minsk Government Retrieved 9 December 2021 a b Minsk 2030 gde budut novye zhilye centry goroda Retrieved 11 November 2017 Pleszak Frank 15 February 2013 Two Years in a Gulag The True Wartime Story of a Polish Peasant Exiled to Frank Pleszak ISBN 9781445626048 Retrieved 26 February 2022 via Google Books Minskoe more Zaslavskoe vodohranilishe planetabelarus by in Russian Retrieved 7 June 2022 Weather and Climate The Climate of Minsk in Russian Weather and Climate Pogoda i klimat Retrieved 8 November 2021 Solnechnoe siyanie Obobsheniya II chast Tablica 2 1 Harakteristiki prodolzhitelnosti i sutochnyj hod doli chasa solnechnogo siyaniya Prodolzhenie in Russian Department of Hydrometeorology Archived from the original on 26 April 2017 Retrieved 25 April 2017 a b c d e f Ne sosnovyj bor no dyshat mozhno smelo in Russian naviny by 18 September 2009 Minskaya GAI provodit akciyu Chistyj vozduh in Russian naviny by 9 June 2007 Samyj zagryaznennyj vozduh v Minske na ulice Timiryazeva The most polluted air in Minsk is on Timiryazev Street in Russian naviny by 3 June 2009 Joshua D Zimmerman Poles Jews and the Politics of Nationality Univ of Wisconsin Press 2004 ISBN 0 299 19464 7 Google Print p 16 Wilson Andrew 2021 Belarus the last European dictatorship New Haven p 30 ISBN 978 0 300 26087 8 OCLC 1240724890 Tatars In Belarus Hope For Help From Tatarstan RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Retrieved 17 August 2022 Institute for Jewish Policy Research Belarus www jpr org uk Retrieved 17 August 2022 a b Zimmerman 2004 Poles Jews and Politics Miedzy Wschodem i Zachodem international conference Lublin 18 21 June 1991 Liskovets Irina 2009 Trasjanka A code of rural migrants in Minsk International Journal of Bilingualism 13 3 396 412 doi 10 1177 1367006909348678 ISSN 1367 0069 S2CID 144716155 local life com minsk gov by a b c Lukashenko nedovolen minskimi vlastyami in Russian TUT BY 29 June 2010 Uroven prestupnosti v Minskoj oblasti odin iz samyh vysokih v strane in Russian TUT BY 25 January 2011 Krazhi sostavlyayut v Minske okolo 70 prestuplenij in Russian TUT BY 18 April 2011 Genprokuratura analiziruet sostoyanie s prestupnostyu v Belarusi po koefficientu prestupnosti in Russian interfax by 2 October 2008 Archived from the original on 26 August 2011 V Minske uvelichivaetsya chislo vyyavlennyh korrupcionnyh prestuplenij Genprokuratura in Russian interfax by 10 March 2010 Archived from the original on 26 August 2011 Ya iz ZhESa Razreshite vas obokrast in Russian interfax by 2 January 2009 a b Rejting vseh sluzhb i podrazdelenij GUVD Mingorispolkoma vyros National Law Portal of Belarus 10 February 2006 Archived 23 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine V Minske snizhaetsya chislo hishenij sotovyh telefonov Genprokuratura in Russian interfax by 27 October 2009 Archived from the original on 2 November 2013 Lukashenka s presidential rivals held in KGB jail Archived 18 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Belarus News 21 December 2010 Mikhalevich to complain to UN Committee Against Torture about his detention conditions in KGB jail Archived 18 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Belarus News 28 February 2011 Belarus tortured protesters in jail BBC News 1 March 2011 Belarus Over 1 000 arrested at latest anti government protest BBC News 15 November 2020 Retrieved 15 November 2020 Chetvertuyu chast postuplenij v byudzhet Minska obespechili 5 platelshikov The fourth part of receipts in the budget of Minsk was provided by 5 payers afn by in Russian Minsk osnovnoj platelshik NDS in Russian 73 7 postuplenij v konsolidirovannyj byudzhet goroda Minska za 10 mesyacev 2013 goda obespecheno negosudarstvennym sektorom ekonomiki Novosti inspekcii Ministerstvo po nalogam i sboram Respubliki Belarus nalog gov by 18 November 2013 GRP of regions and Minsk city in 2021 News www myfin by Shares of region and Minsk City in the national output of selected industrial products in 2012 Archived 10 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine a b c Guriev Sergei 2020 The Political Economy of the Belarusian Crisis Intereconomics 2020 5 274 275 doi 10 1007 s10272 020 0913 1 Belarus opposition calls for national strike in what could be key test for protest movement ABC News a b Skolko realno bezrabotnyh v Minske in Russian Lukashenko otmenil nalog na tuneyadcev No lishit lgot nerabotayushih Lukashenko Cancells Unemployment Tax but Suspends Benefits in Russian BBC 25 January 2018 Retrieved 9 December 2021 Ministry of Sports and Tourism of the Republic of Belarus 2011 Number of organizations engaged in tourist activities in 2010 in Belarus Land of Ancestors National Statistical Committee of the Republic of Belarus Archived from the original on 13 October 2013 Retrieved 9 October 2013 Ministry of Sports and Tourism of the Republic of Belarus 2011 Number of organisations engaged in tourist activities in Belarus by region Land of Ancestors National Statistical Committee of the Republic of Belarus Archived from the original on 13 October 2013 Retrieved 9 October 2013 ERJCH 2013 Minsk Belarus PDF World Rowing Retrieved 29 May 2020 2ND EUROPEAN GAMES 2019 MINSK BELARUS minsk2019 by Archived from the original on 27 June 2019 Retrieved 30 May 2019 Public transport in Minsk D Minsk 4 October 2012 Retrieved 4 October 2012 History 31 October 2020 Archived from the original on 31 October 2020 Retrieved 4 August 2022 Filho Walter Leal Krasnov Eugene V Gaeva Dara V 16 October 2021 Innovations and Traditions for Sustainable Development Google Books ISBN 9783030788254 Retrieved 26 February 2022 Minsktrans received 450 new buses and trolleybuses Reform By 5 November 2021 Retrieved 7 November 2021 a b c Tarify Minsktrans in Russian CIS Metro Statistics Mrl ucsb edu 21 June 2010 Retrieved 4 July 2010 Metro segodnya metropoliten b 2018 Minsk Metro www belarus by Retrieved 26 June 2021 SATIO ISSLEDOVANIE TRANSPORTNYH PREDPOChTENIJ I OTNOShENIYa K VELOSIPEDU V GORODAH BELARUSI 24 09 2019 pdf Google Docs Retrieved 5 June 2020 Razvitie gorodskogo velosipednogo dvizheniya v Belarusi 2017 2019 pdf Google Docs Retrieved 8 June 2020 Belarus in pictures Belarus in photo Belarus in images International VIVA Bike carnival parade in Minsk Belarus in pictures Belarus in photo Belarus in images www belarus by Retrieved 5 June 2020 Bike carnival in Minsk gathers over 20K cyclists in pictures euroradio fm Retrieved 5 June 2020 Video about bicycle parade carnival YouTube Archived from the original on 30 October 2021 Text and video about cycling parade www tvr by Retrieved 5 June 2020 Development of urban cycling for public benefit in Belarus euprojects by Retrieved 5 June 2020 Project Urban cycling in Belarus Minsk Cycling Community NGO 19 July 2017 Retrieved 5 June 2020 Minsk among top three CIS bike friendly cities eng belta by 3 June 2020 Retrieved 5 June 2020 Minsk National Airport in Russian Belavia Retrieved 9 December 2021 Chto to poshlo ne tak Kak dauntaun Minsk Siti on zhe Minsk Mir lishilsya neboskrebov i stroitsya sovsem ne takim kakim zadumyvalsya Something Went Wrong How Minsk City Lost Sky Scrapers and Turned Out Not Like Planned in Russian Realty Onliner by 4 February 2018 Retrieved 9 December 2021 Borovaya Airfield Belarus komitet po obrazovaniyu Mingorispolkoma Committee of Education Minsk City Executive Committee in Russian Retrieved 23 July 2018 Upravlenie vysshego obrazovaniya the management of higher education in Russian Ministry of education of the Republic of Belarus Retrieved 23 July 2018 Dictionary of Minor Planet Names p 248 Retrieved 4 July 2010 VIKTAR BABARYKA Belarusian banker and public figure presidential candidate sentenced to 14 years in prison Retrieved 20 May 2022 Maksim Bahdanovic in Byelorussian Literature BY VERA RICH Belarus Peaceful protester held by police after beating dies in hospital Veronika Cherkasova Solidarnost Killed in Minsk Belarus October 20 2004 Retrieved 20 April 2022 Pracavay pragramistam narmalna zarablyay Hto taki belarus Illya Litvin yaki zaginuy za Ўkrainu Worked as an IT specialists earned a good salary Who is the Belarusian Ilya Litvin who died for Ukraine Radyyo Svaboda Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty in Belarusian Retrieved 14 May 2022 Laureate 1999 Gennady Grushevoy Poet Alies Harun Well known Belarusian historian Anatol Hrytskevich dies Retrieved 15 February 2022 How Lukashenka dealt with competitors for the presidential seat Retrieved 1 May 2022 U Belaruskaj Vikipedyi 200 tysyach artykulay There are now 200 000 articles in the Belarusian Wikipedia in Belarusian Retrieved 20 February 2022 Jauhien Kulik s first exhibition at the National Art Museum 7 episodes about the artist from Attic Pershaya vystava Yaygena Kulika y Nacyyanalnym mastackim muzei 7 epizoday pra mastaka z Paddashku in Belarusian Retrieved 23 April 2022 Pavel Latushka announces new protest in May Pavel Latushka Has Been Appointed as General Director of Janka Kupala Theatre Yanka Luchyna 170 gadoy z dnya naradzhennya Janka Lucyna 170 years from birth in Belarusian Writer And Historian Leanid Marakou Died Valery Marakou Ajcec Yan Matusevich pershy probashch parafii Sv Yazepa 1948 1998 Father Yan Matusievich first pastor of St Joseph Parish 1948 1998 in Belarusian 10 years ago Vitali Silitski passed away His ideas live Retrieved 19 February 2022 Belaruskaga bajca Alyakseya Skoblyu pasmyarotna yganaravali zvannem Geroya Ўkrainy Belarusian fighter Aliaksiej Skoblia posthumously awarded the title of Hero of Ukraine Radyyo Svaboda Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty in Belarusian Retrieved 15 April 2022 Stanislav Shushkevich I do not think in the conditional tense Interview by Iryna Kshtalian First leader of independent Belarus Stanislau Shushkevich has died The life story of personality and politician Pamyor pershy kiraynik nezalezhnaj Belarusi Stanislay Shushkevich Shlyah asoby i palityka in Belarusian Retrieved 4 May 2022 Stefaniya Stanyuta Retrieved 29 April 2022 Shot right in the chest partner denies Belarus protester died from own bomb Pamyac i slava Iosif Alyaksandravich Yuho Da 90 goddzya z dnya naradzhennya Memory and Glory Josif Aliaksandravic Jucho Redkal S A Balashenka i insh Minsk BDU 2011 Belarus places extradition request for Eurovision 2005 star Angelica Agurbash who faces a potential prison sentence for supporting the pro democracy protests Retrieved 16 May 2022 Marina Masha Gordon 24 March 2021 Zmicer Sidarovich muzyka z Krainy taleray Zmicier Sidarovic a musician from the Taler Country in Belarusian Retrieved 15 February 2022 Banned In Belarus Retrieved 6 May 2022 Victor Kupreichik The Maestro from Minsk Twin towns of Minsk minsk gov by Minsk Retrieved 7 May 2021 Minsk Belarus Detroit s Sister City Living Under Russia s Shadow dailydetroit com Daily Detroit 3 April 2020 Retrieved 15 December 2020 Lithuania M2TW K TC faction wiki totalwar com Retrieved 27 November 2019 Bibliography EditSee also Timeline of Minsk Bibliography Bohn Thomas M 2008 Minsk Musterstadt des Sozialismus Stadtplanung und Urbanisierung in der Sowjetunion nach 1945 Koln Bohlau ISBN 978 3 412 20071 8 Bon tomas m 2013 Minskij fenomen Gorodskoe planirovanie i urbanizaciya v Sovetskom Soyuze posle Vtoroj mirovoj vojny Translated by Slepovich E Moskva ROSSPEN Bon tomas m 2016 Saganovich G ed Minski fenomen Garadskoe planavanne i yrbanizacyya y Saveckim Sayuze paslya 1945 g Translated by Rytarovich movy M navuk red Minsk Zmicer Kolas Further reading EditChisholm Hugh ed 1911 Minsk town Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 18 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 556 Nechepurenko Ivan 5 October 2017 How Europes Last Dictatorship Became a Tech Hub The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Minsk Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Minsk A city guide for Minsk Minsk city on the official website of Belarus Why Minsk Is Not Like Other Capitals Lost In Translation In Minsk The Real Belarus Travel Tips The Minsk Herald online magazine in English Minsk Belarus at JewishGen Archived 2020 11 27 at the Wayback Machine Photos of old Minsk Archived 2020 11 01 at the Wayback Machine Photos of Minsk during World War II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Minsk amp oldid 1146514539, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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