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Sakha

Sakha,[a] officially the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia),[b] is the largest republic of Russia, located in the Russian Far East, along the Arctic Ocean, with a population of roughly 1 million.[10] Sakha comprises half of the area of its governing Far Eastern Federal District, and is the world's largest country subdivision, covering over 3,083,523 square kilometers (1,190,555 sq mi).[11] Yakutsk, which is the world's coldest major city,[12] is its capital and largest city. The republic has a reputation for an extreme and severe climate, with the lowest temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere being recorded in Verkhoyansk and Oymyakon, and regular winter averages commonly dipping below −35 °C (−31 °F) in Yakutsk. The hypercontinental tendencies also result in warm summers for much of the republic.

Republic of Sakha (Yakutia)
Республика Саха (Якутия)
Other transcription(s)
 • YakutСаха Өрөспүүбүлүкэтэ
 • RomanizationSakha Öröspüübülükete
Anthem: "State Anthem of the Sakha Republic"
Coordinates: 66°24′N 129°10′E / 66.400°N 129.167°E / 66.400; 129.167Coordinates: 66°24′N 129°10′E / 66.400°N 129.167°E / 66.400; 129.167
CountryRussia
Federal districtFar Eastern[1]
Economic regionFar Eastern[2]
CapitalYakutsk[3]
Government
 • BodyState Assembly (Il Tumen)[4]
 • Head[4]Aysen Nikolayev
Area
 • Total3,083,523 km2 (1,190,555 sq mi)
 • Rank1st
Population
 (2021 Census)[6]
 • Total995,686
 • Estimate 
(2018)[7]
964,330
 • Rank51st
 • Density0.32/km2 (0.84/sq mi)
Time zones
most (excluding districts in UTC+10:00 and UTC+11:00 time zones)UTC+09:00 (Yakutsk Time)
Oymyakonsky, Ust-Yansky and Verkhoyansky districtsUTC+10:00 (Vladivostok Time)
Abyysky, Allaikhovsky, Momsky, Nizhnekolymsky, Srednekolymsky and Verkhnekolymsky districtsUTC+11:00 (Magadan Time)
ISO 3166 codeRU-SA
License plates14
OKTMO ID98000000
Official languagesRussian;[8] Yakut[9]
Websitesakha.gov.ru
Interactive map of the Sakha Republic

Sakha was first home to hunting-gathering and reindeer herding Tungusic and Paleosiberian peoples such as the Evenks and Yukaghir. Migrating from the area around Lake Baikal, the Turkic Sakha people first settled along the middle Lena river sometime between the 9th and 16th centuries, likely in several waves, bringing the pastoral economic system of Central Asia with them.

The Russians colonised and incorporated the area as Yakutsk Oblast into the Tsardom of Russia in the early-mid 17th century, obliging the indigenous peoples of the area to pay fur tribute. While the initial period following the Russian conquest saw the Sakha population drop by 70%, the Imperial period also saw the expansion of the native Yakuts from the middle Lena along the Vilyuy River to the north and the east displacing other indigenous groups. Yakutia saw some of the last battles of the Russian Civil War, and the Bolshevik authorities re-organized Yakutsk Oblast into the autonomous Yakut ASSR in 1922. The Soviet era saw the migration of many Slavs, specifically Russians and Ukrainians, into the area.

Etymology

The exonym Yakut comes from the Evenk term Yako (also yoqo, ñoqa, or ñoka), which was the term the Evenks used to describe the Sakha. This was in turn picked up by the Russians.[13] The Yukaghirs, another neighboring people in Siberia, use the exonym yoqol ~ yoqod- ~ yoqon- (Tundra Yukaghir) or yaqal ~ yaqad- ~ yaqan- (Kolyma Yukaghir).[citation needed]

The self-designation Sakha is probably of the same origin (*jaqa > Sakha following regular sound changes in the course of development of the Yakut language) as the Evenk and Yukaghir exonyms for the Yakuts.[14] It is pronounced as Haka by the Dolgans, whose language is either a dialect or a close relative of the Yakut language.[15][16]

Geography

 
Fauna of the Sakha Republic: Ross's gull, the Siberian crane, polar bear, horse and reindeer. Russian post miniature sheet, 2006.

Sakha stretches to the Henrietta Island in the far north and is washed by the Laptev and Eastern Siberian Seas of the Arctic Ocean. These waters, the coldest and iciest of all seas in the Northern Hemisphere, are covered by ice for 9–10 months of the year. New Siberian Islands are a part of the republic's territory. After Nunavut was separated from Canada's Northwest Territories, Sakha became the largest subnational entity (statoid) in the world, with an area of 3,083,523 square kilometers (1,190,555 sq mi),[11] slightly smaller than the territory of India (3.3 million km2).

Sakha can be divided into three great vegetation belts. About 40% of Sakha lies above the Arctic circle and all of it is covered by permafrost which greatly influences the region's ecology and limits forests in the southern region. Arctic and subarctic tundra define the middle region, where lichen and moss grow as great green carpets and are favorite pastures for reindeer. In the southern part of the tundra belt, scattered stands of dwarf Siberian pine and larch grow along the rivers. Below the tundra is the vast taiga forest region. Larch trees dominate in the north and stands of fir and pine begin to appear in the south. Taiga forests cover about 47% of Sakha and almost 90% of the cover is larch.

The Sakha Republic is the site of Pleistocene Park, a project directed at recreating Pleistocene tundra grasslands by stimulating the growth of grass with the introduction of animals which thrived in the region during the late Pleistocene – early Holocene period.

Time zones

Sakha is the only federal subject of Russia which uses more than one time zone. Sakha spans three time zones.[17] Like the rest of Russia, it does not use daylight saving time.

Map Time zone Abbr. UTC offset Areas
  Yakutsk Time YAKT UTC+09:00 Most of the republic's territory.
  Vladivostok Time VLAT UTC+10:00 Districts of Oymyakonsky, Ust-Yansky and Verkhoyansky.
  Magadan Time MAGT UTC+11:00 Districts of Abyysky, Allaikhovsky, Momsky, Nizhnekolymsky, Srednekolymsky and Verkhnekolymsky.

Rivers

 
Ura River.

The largest river is the navigable Lena River (4,400 km). As it moves northward, it includes hundreds of small tributaries located in the Verkhoyansk Range.

Lakes

There are over 800,000 lakes in the republic.[18] Major lakes and reservoirs include:

Mountains

Sakha's greatest mountain range, the Verkhoyansk Range, runs parallel and east of the Lena River, forming a great arc that begins in the Sea of Okhotsk and ends in the Laptev Sea.

The Chersky Range runs east of the Verkhoyansk Range and has the highest peak in Sakha, Peak Pobeda (3,147 m). The second highest peak is Peak Mus-Khaya reaching 3,011 m.

The Stanovoy Range borders Sakha in the south.

 
Udachnaya pipe diamond mine.

Peninsulas

The Republic's extensive coastline contains a number of peninsulas; from west to east the most prominent are:

  • Uryung-Tumus Peninsula
  • Nordvik Peninsula
  • Terpyay-Tumsa Peninsula
  • Bykovsky Peninsula
  • Buor-Khaya Peninsula
  • Manyko Peninsula
  • Shirokostan Peninsula
  • Merkushina Strelka Peninsula
  • Lopatka Peninsula
  • Dogukan Peninsula

Islands

From west to east the main islands of Sakha are:

Natural resources

Sakha is well endowed with raw materials. The soil contains large reserves of oil, gas, coal, diamonds, gold, silver, tin, tungsten and many others. Sakha produces 99% of all Russian diamonds and over 25% of the diamonds mined in the world.[19][20]

Climate

Sakha is known for its climate extremes, with the Verkhoyansk Range being the coldest area in the Northern Hemisphere. Some of the lowest natural temperatures ever recorded have been here. The Northern Hemisphere's Pole of Cold is at Verkhoyansk, where the temperatures reached as low as −67.8 °C (−90.0 °F) in 1892, and at Oymyakon, where the temperatures reached as low as −71.2 °C (−96.2 °F) in January 1924.

Average daily maximum and minimum temperatures for selected locations in Yakutiya Russia[21][22][23][24]
City July (°C) July (°F) January (°C) January (°F)
Aldan 22.6/10.9 72.7/51.6 −21.9/−30.6 −7.4/−23.1
Neryungri 21.8/10.9 71.24/51.62 −26.8/−33.9 −16.24/−29.02
Olyokminsk 24.9/12 76.8/53.6 −26.2/−34.6 −15.2/−30.28
Oymyakon 22.7/6.1 72.9/43 −42.5/−50 −44.5/−58
Verkhoyansk 23.5/9.7 74.3/49.5 −42.4/−48.3 −44.3/−54.9
Yakutsk 25.5/12.7 78/54.9 −35.1/−41.5 −31.2/−42.7
Saskylakh 16.8/7.7 62.2/45.9 −29.2/−36.7 −20.6/−34.1
Tiksi 12.1/3.9 53.8/39 −26.7/−33.8 −16.1/−28.8

Average annual precipitation: 200 mm (central parts) to 700 mm (mountains of Eastern Sakha).

Administrative divisions


History

Pre-history

 
The people of the Ymyyakhtakh culture are regarded to be the ancestors of the modern Yukaghirs.

Siberia, and particularly Sakha, is of paleontological significance, as it contains bodies of prehistoric animals from the Pleistocene Epoch, preserved in ice or permafrost. In 2015, the frozen bodies of Dina and Uyan the cave lion cubs were found. Bodies of Yuka and another woolly mammoth from Oymyakon, a woolly rhinoceros from the Kolyma River, and bison and horses from Yukagir have also been found.[25] In June 2019, the severed yet preserved head of a large wolf from the Pleistocene, dated to over 40,000 years ago, was found close to the Tirekhtyakh River.[26][27][28]

Ymyakhtakh culture (c. 2200–1300 BC) was a Late Neolithic culture of Siberia, with a very large archaeological horizon. Its origins were in Sakha, in the Lena river basin. From there it spread both to the east and to the west.[29]

Early history

 
Tygyn Darkhan was the ruler of the Khangalas Sakha until the Russian Conquest of Siberia.

The Turkic Sakha people or Yakuts may have settled the area as early as the 9th century or as late as the 16th century, though most likely there were several migrations. They migrated up north from around Lake Baikal to the middle Lena due to pressure by the Buryats, a Mongolic group.[30]

The Sakha displaced earlier, much smaller populations who lived on hunting and reindeer herding, introducing the pastoralist economy of Central Asia. The indigenous populations of Paleosiberian and Tungusic stock were mostly assimilated to the Sakha by the 17th century.[31]

Russian conquest

The Tsardom of Russia began its conquest of the region in the 17th century, moving east after the defeat of the Khanate of Sibir. Tygyn, a king of the Khangalassky Sakha, granted territory for Russian settlement in return for a military pact that included war against indigenous rebels of all North Eastern Asia (Magadan, Chukotka, Kamchatka and Sakhalin). Kull, a king of the Megino-Khangalassky Sakha, began a Sakha conspiracy by allowing the first stockade construction.[citation needed]

 
1821 map of Yakutsk Oblast.

In August 1638, the Moscow Government formed a new administrative unit with the administrative center of Lensky Ostrog (Fort Lensky), the future city of Yakutsk, which had been founded by Pyotr Beketov in 1632.

The arrival of Russian settlers at the remote Russkoye Ustye in the Indigirka delta is also believed to date from the 17th century.[32] The Siberian Governorate was established as part of the Russian Empire in 1708.

Russian settlers began to form a community in the 18th century, which adopted certain Sakha customs and was often called Yakutyane (Якутя́не) or Lena Early Settlers (ленские старожилы). However, the influx of later settlers had assimilated themselves into the Russian mainstream by the 20th century.

Russian Empire

In an administrative reform of 1782, Irkutsk Governorate was created. In 1805, Yakutsk Oblast was split from Irkutsk Governorate.

 
British explorer & missionary Kate Marsden in Yakutsk, 1891.

Yakutsk Oblast in the early 19th century marked the easternmost territory of the Russian Empire, including such Far Eastern (Pacific) territories as were acquired, known as Okhotsk Okrug within Yakutsk Oblast. With the formation of Primorskaya Oblast in 1856, the Russian territories of the Pacific were detached from Sakha.

 
Members of the Siberian Regional Duma from Yakutsk, 1917.

The Russians established agriculture in the Lena River basin. The members of religious groups who were exiled to Sakha in the second half of the 19th century began to grow wheat, oats, and potatoes. The fur trade established a cash economy. Industry and transport began to develop at the end of the 19th century and in the beginning of the Soviet period. This was also the beginning of geological prospecting, mining, and local lead production. The first steam-powered ships and barges arrived.

Sakha's remoteness, compared to the rest of Siberia, made it a place of exile of choice for both Tsarist and Communist governments of Russia. Among the famous Tsarist-era exiles were the democratic writer Nikolay Chernyshevsky; Doukhobor conscientious objectors, whose story was told to Leo Tolstoy by Vasily Pozdnyakov; the Socialist Revolutionary and writer Vladimir Zenzinov, who left an account of his Arctic experiences; and Polish socialist activist Wacław Sieroszewski, who pioneered in ethnographic research on the Sakha people.

A Sakha national movement first emerged during the 1905 Revolution. A Yakut Union was formed under the leadership of a Sakha lawyer and city councilor by the name of Vasily Nikiforov, which criticized the policies and effects of Russian colonialism, and demanded representation in the State Duma. The Yakut Union acted to make the city council of Yakutsk stand down and was joined by thousands of Sakha from the countryside, but the leaders were arrested and the movement fizzled out by April 1906. Their demand for a Sakha repsentative in the Duma, however, was granted.[33]

Soviet era

Sakha was home to the last stage of the Russian Civil War, the Yakut Revolt. On April 27, 1922, former Yakutsk Oblast was proclaimed the Yakut ASSR, although in fact the eastern part of the territory, including the city of Yakutsk, was controlled by the White Russians.

 
Platon Oyunsky, who wrote the traditionally-oral olonkho epics.

The early Soviet period saw a flourishing of Sakha literature as men such as Platon Oyunsky wrote down in writing the traditionally oral and improvised olonkho, in addition to composing their own works. Many early Sakha leaders, including Oyunsky, died in the Great Purge.

Sakha experienced significant collectivization between 1929 and 1934, with the number of households experiencing collectivization rising from 3.6% in 1929 to 41.7% in 1932. Policies by which the Sakha were harshly affected resulted in the population dropping from 240,500 in 1926 down to 236,700 at the 1959 census.[34]

Sakha's demographics shifted wildly during the Soviet period as ethnic Russians and Ukrainians, among other groups, settled the area en masse, primarily in Yakutsk and the industrial south. Previously, even Yakutsk had been primarily Sakha and Sakha-speaking. With the end of korenizatsiya, usage of the Sakha language was restricted in urban areas such as Yakutsk, which became primarily Russian-speaking.

Post-Soviet era

In 1992, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Sakha was recognized in Moscow as the Sakha (Yakutia) Republic under the jurisdiction of the Russian Federation. Sakha is historically part of Russian Siberia, but since the formation of the Far Eastern Federal District in 2000, it is administratively part of the Russian Far East.

Demographics

Population: 995,686 (2021 Census);[35] 958,528 (2010 Census);[36] 949,280 (2002 Census);[37] 1,081,408 (1989 Census).[38] Population density is 0.31 per km2 (2019), which is one of the lowest among Russian districts. Urban population - 65,45% (2018).[39]

Settlements

Vital statistics

Vital statistics
 
Breakdown of population changes, 1939–2002.
 
Statehood Day celebrations in Yakutsk.
 
Cruise on the Lena River.
Source:
Average population (x 1000) Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate (per 1000) Crude death rate (per 1000) Natural change (per 1000) Fertility rates
1970 674 13,899 5,700 8,199 20.6 8.5 12.2
1975 775 15,636 6,242 9,394 20.2 8.1 12.1
1980 887 18,132 7,501 10,631 20.4 8.5 12.0
1985 1,002 22,823 7,266 15,557 22.8 7.3 15.5
1990 1,115 21,662 7,470 14,192 19.4 6.7 12.7 2.46
1991 1,110 19,805 7,565 12,240 17.8 6.8 11.0 2.32
1992 1,090 17,796 8,710 9,086 16.3 8.0 8.3 2.17
1993 1,072 16,771 9,419 7,352 15.6 8.8 6.9 2.08
1994 1,051 16,434 10,371 6,063 15.6 9.9 5.8 2.07
1995 1,029 15,731 10,079 5,652 15.3 9.8 5.5 2.01
1996 1,015 14,584 9,638 4,946 14.4 9.5 4.9 1.88
1997 1,003 13,909 9,094 4,815 13.9 9.1 4.8 1.81
1998 986 13,640 8,856 4,784 13.8 9.0 4.9 1.80
1999 970 12,724 9,480 3,244 13.1 9.8 3.3 1.71
2000 960 13,147 9,325 3,822 13.7 9.7 4.0 1.77
2001 954 13,262 9,738 3,524 13.9 10.2 3.7 1.78
2002 950 13,887 9,700 4,187 14.6 10.2 4.4 1.85
2003 949 14,224 9,660 4,564 15.0 10.2 4.8 1.86
2004 950 14,716 9,692 5,024 15.5 10.2 5.3 1.91
2005 950 13,591 9,696 3,895 14.3 10.2 4.1 1.74
2006 950 13,713 9,245 4,468 14.4 9.7 4.7 1.73
2007 951 15,268 9,179 6,089 16.1 9.7 6.4 1.92
2008 953 15,363 9,579 5,784 16.1 10.1 6.1 1.92
2009 955 15,970 9,353 6,617 16.7 9.8 6.9 2.00
2010 958 16,109 9,402 6,707 16.8 9.8 7.0 2.02
2011 957 16,402 8,992 7,410 17.1 9.4 7.7 2.06
2012 956 16,998 8,918 8,080 17.8 9.3 8.5 2.17
2013 955 16,704 8,351 8,353 17.5 8.7 8.8 2.17
2014 956 17,010 8,209 8,801 17.8 8.6 9.2 2.25
2015 958 16,459 8,233 8,226 17.1 8.6 8.5 2.19
2016 961 15,424 8,052 7,372 16.0 8.4 7.6 2.09
2017 963 13,954 7,817 6,137 14.5 8.1 6.4 1.93
2018 13,234 7,572 5,662 13.7 7.8 5.9 1.85
2019 12,819 7,611 5,208 13.2 7.8 5.4 1.82
2020 13,097 9,081 4,016 13.4 9.3 4.1 1.86

Ethnic groups

 
Yakuts celebrating Yhyakh. Yakuts form the easternmost indigenous community of Turkic peoples.

According to the 2021 Census, the ethnic composition was:[40]

Historical population figures are shown below:

Ethnic
group
1926 Census 1939 Census 1959 Census 1970 Census 1979 Census 1989 Census 2002 Census 2010 Census 2021 Census1
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
Sakha 235,926 81.6% 233,273 56.5% 226,053 46.4% 285,749 43.0% 313,917 36.9% 365,236 33.4% 432,290 45.5% 466,492 49.9% 469,348 55.3%
Dolgans 0 0.0% 10 0.0% 64 0.0% 408 0.0% 1,272 0.1% 1,906 0.2% 2,147 0.3%
Evenks 13,502 4.7% 10,432 2.5% 9,505 2.0% 9,097 1.4% 11,584 1.4% 14,428 1.3% 18,232 1.9% 21,008 2.2% 24,334 2.9%
Evens 738 0.3% 3,133 0.8% 3,537 0.7% 6,471 1.0% 5,763 0.7% 8,668 0.8% 11,657 1.2% 15,071 1.6% 13,233 1.6%
Yukaghir 396 0.1% 267 0.1% 285 0.1% 400 0.1% 526 0.1% 697 0.1% 1,097 0.1% 1,281 0.1% 1,510 0.2%
Chukchis 1,298 0.4% 400 0.1% 325 0.1% 387 0.1% 377 0.0% 473 0.0% 602 0.1% 670 0.1% 709 0.1%
Russians 30,156 10.4% 146,741 35.5% 215,328 44.2% 314,308 47.3% 429,588 50.4% 550,263 50.3% 390,671 41.2% 353,649 37.8% 276,986 32.6%
Ukrainians 138 0.0% 4,229 1.0% 12,182 2.5% 20,253 3.0% 46,326 5.4% 77,114 7.0% 34,633 3.6% 20,341 2.2% 7,169 0.8%
Tatars 1,671 0.6% 4,420 1.1% 5,172 1.1% 7,678 1.2% 10.976 1.3% 17,478 1.6% 10,768 1.1% 8,122 0.9% 4,262 0.5%
Others 5,260 1.8% 10,303 2.5% 14,956 3.1% 19,770 3.0% 32,719 3.8% 59,300 5.4% 48,058 5.1% 46,124 4.9% 49,070 5.8%
1 146,918 people were registered from administrative databases, and could not declare an ethnicity. It is estimated that the proportion of ethnicities in this group is the same as that of the declared group.[41]

Languages

The official languages are both Russian and Sakha, also known as Yakut, which is spoken by 47% of the total population, including 87% of Yakuts. The Sakha language is a member of the Turkic language family, in the Siberian Turkic branch, and it is closely related to the Dolgan language of the former Taymyr Dolgano-Nenets AO, and somewhat related to other Siberian Turkic languages such as Tuvan, Altai, Khakas, Shor & others. Influence from Tungusic languages (especially Evenk) and Mongolian are recorded.

Besides those 2 languages, the Sakha Republic is also where much of the world's speakers of Tungusic languages reside, most of whom either speak Evenk, or the Even language (formerly known as Lamut). Additionally, the lects of the Yukaghir language-family is spoken in the northeast, which is one of the Paleosiberian languages (alternatively considered as a language isolate due to lack of research).There are proposed links to Uralic languages, though these are dubious.

Ethnicity Language spoken
Russian Sakha English
Yakuts 90.4% 87.0% 4.6%
Russians 99.9% 2.0% 4.3%
Evenks 91.1% 81.0% 2.6%
Ukrainians 99.8% 0.8% 3.8%

Religion

Religion in Sakha Republic as of 2012 (Sreda Arena Atlas)[42][43]
Russian Orthodoxy
37.8%
Protestantism
0.8%
Other Christians
0.8%
Islam
2%
Tengrism and other native faiths
13%
Spiritual but not religious
16.6%
Atheism and irreligion
25.6%
Other and undeclared
4%

Before the arrival of the Russian Empire, the majority of the local population was Tengrist, similar to the other Turkic people of Central Asia, or in Paleoasian indigenous shamanism with both 'light' (community leading) and 'dark' (healing through spirit journey) shamans. Under the Russians, the local population was converted to the Russian Orthodox Church and required to take Orthodox Christian names, but in practice generally continued to follow traditional religions. During the Soviet era, most or all of the shamans died without successors.

 
Temple dedicated to the Aiyy neo-Tengrist creed in Yakutsk.

In the 1990s, a neopagan shamanist movement called aiyy yeurekhé was founded by the controversial journalist Ivan Ukhkhan and a philologist calling himself Téris.[44] This group and others cooperated to build a shaman temple in downtown Yakutsk in 2002.[45]

Currently, while Orthodox Christianity maintains a following (however, with very few priests willing to be stationed outside of Yakutsk), there is interest and activity toward renewing the traditional religions. As of 2008, Orthodox leaders described the worldview of the republic's indigenous population (or, rather, those among the population who are not completely indifferent to religion) as dvoyeverie (dual belief system), or a "tendency toward syncretism", as evidenced by the locals sometimes first inviting a shaman, and then an Orthodox priest to carry out their rites in connection with some event in their life.[46]

 
Transfiguration of Jesus Christ Cathedral in Yakutsk.

According to the Information Center under the President of Sakha Republic (Информационный центр при Президенте РС(Я)), the religious demography of the republic was as follows:[47] Orthodoxy: 44.9%, Shamanism: 26.2%, Non-religious: 23.0%, New religious movements: 2.4%, Islam: 1.2%, Buddhism: 1.0%, Protestantism: 0.9%, Catholicism: 0.4%.

The Russian Orthodox Eparchy (Diocese) of Yakutia is led by Bishop Roman (Lukin) of Yakutsk (2011). [2]

According to a 2012 survey,[42] 37.8% of the population of Sakha adheres to the Russian Orthodox Church, 13% to Tengrism or Sakha shamanism, 2% to Islam, 1% are unaffiliated Christians, 1% to forms of Protestantism, and 0.4% to Tibetan Buddhism. In addition, 26% of the population deems itself atheist, 17% is "spiritual but not religious", and 1.8% follows other religions or did not give an answer to the question.[42]

Education

The most important facilities of higher education include North-Eastern Federal University (previously Yakutsk State University) and Yakutsk State Agricultural Academy.

Politics

 
Russia Day celebrations in Mirny, June 12, 2014.

The head of government in Sakha is the Head (previously President). The first Head of the Sakha Republic was Mikhail Yefimovich Nikolayev.[48] As of 2021, the head is Aysen Nikolayev, who took office on May 28, 2018.

The supreme legislative body of state authority in Sakha is a unicameral State Assembly known as the Il Tumen. The government of the Sakha (Yakutia) Republic is the executive body of state authority.

The republic fosters close cultural, political, economic, and industrial relations with the independent Turkic states through membership in organizations such as the Turkic Council and the Joint Administration of Turkic Arts and Culture.[49][50][51]

Economy

 
Unusual gold specimen from Bulun District, Lena River basin. Weight is about 6 grams.

Industry generates slightly above 50%[citation needed] of the gross national product of Sakha, stemming primarily from mineral exploitation. Industrial enterprises are concentrated in the capital Yakutsk, as well as in Aldan, Mirny, Neryungri, Pokrovsk, and Udachny. The diamond, gold, and tin ore mining industries are the major focus of the economy. Uranium ore is beginning to be mined. The Turkic-speaking Sakha people are engaged in politics, government, finance, economy, and cattle-breeding (horses and cows for milk and meat). The Paleoasian indigenous peoples are hunters, fishermen, and reindeer herders. As of 2008, Sakha Republic is the 19th most developed federal subject in Russia.

The largest companies in the region include Alrosa, Yakutugol, Yakutskenergo, and Yakutia Airlines.[52]

Transportation

Water transport ranks first for cargo turnover. There are six river ports, two seaports (Tiksi and Zelyony Mys). Four shipping companies, including the Arctic Sea Shipping Company, operate in the republic. The republic's main waterway is the Lena River, which links Yakutsk with the rail station of Ust-Kut in Irkutsk Oblast.

 
Yakutsk Aeroport, the main air-traffic hub of the republic.

Air transport is the most important for transporting people. Airlines connect the republic with most regions of Russia. Yakutsk Airport has an international terminal.

Two federal roads pass the republic. They are Yakutsk–Skovorodino (A360 Lena highway) and Yakutsk–Magadan (M56 Kolyma Highway). However, due to the presence of permafrost, use of asphalt is not practical, and therefore the roads are made of clay. When heavy rains blow over the region, the roads often turn to mud, sometimes stranding hundreds of travelers in the process.[53]

The BerkakitTommot railroad is currently in operation. It links the Baikal Amur Mainline with the industrial centers in South Sakha. Construction of the Amur Yakutsk Mainline continues northward; the railway was completed to Nizhny Bestyakh, across the river from Yakutsk, in 2013. Though this one-track railroad from Tommot to Nizhny Bestyakh is under temporary operation (30% of its full capacity), the federal agency for railways declared that this railroad would be in full operation in fall 2015.[needs update] Also the private company is now[when?] constructing the transport and logistics center in Nizhny Bestyakh.

Media

NVK Sakha (national broadcaster company Sakha, Национальная вещательная компания Саха, "Саха" көрдөрөр иһитиннэрэр тэрилтэтэ), the largest media company in the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia). The company owns dozens of TV channels in Yakutia, Russia, and other countries. The main broadcasting languages are Yakut, English, Russian and Evenk. It was founded in 1992 after the collapse of the USSR. 70% of the shares are owned by the Russian VGTRK, 25% are owned by Yakutia, and 5% are in free float. NVK Sakha owns its own animation and film production studios, and some music studios. Since 2018, it has also been streaming 24/7 on YouTube.

Culture

 
Sakha dance with traditional clothing.

Points of interest in the city of Yakutsk include:

  • the State Russian drama theatre named after Alexander Pushkin
  • the Sakha Theater named after Platon Oyunsky
  • the State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre named after D. K. Sivtsev
  • Suorun Omoloon, the Young Spectator's Theatre

There are a number of museums as well. These include the National Fine Arts Museum of Sakha, the Museum of Local Lore and History named after E. Yaroslavsky, and the Khomus Museum and Museum of Permafrost.

In the 2010s, a movie boom began in Yakutia. The local film industry was labelled "Sakhawood".[54]

National days

  • April 27: Republic Day
  • June 21: Yhyakh festival (also known as Sakha New Year)

See also

Notes

  1. ^
  2. ^

References

Citations

  1. ^ Президент Российской Федерации. Указ №849 от 13 мая 2000 г. «О полномочном представителе Президента Российской Федерации в федеральном округе». Вступил в силу 13 мая 2000 г. Опубликован: "Собрание законодательства РФ", No. 20, ст. 2112, 15 мая 2000 г. (President of the Russian Federation. Decree #849 of May 13, 2000 On the Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of the Russian Federation in a Federal District. Effective as of May 13, 2000.).
  2. ^ Госстандарт Российской Федерации. №ОК 024-95 27 декабря 1995 г. «Общероссийский классификатор экономических регионов. 2. Экономические районы», в ред. Изменения №5/2001 ОКЭР. (Gosstandart of the Russian Federation. #OK 024-95 December 27, 1995 Russian Classification of Economic Regions. 2. Economic Regions, as amended by the Amendment #5/2001 OKER. ).
  3. ^ a b Minahan, James (2002). Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations: S-Z. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 1630ff.
  4. ^ a b Constitution of the Sakha (Yakutia) Republic 53.1
  5. ^ Федеральная служба государственной статистики (Federal State Statistics Service) (May 21, 2004). "Территория, число районов, населённых пунктов и сельских администраций по субъектам Российской Федерации (Territory, Number of Districts, Inhabited Localities, and Rural Administration by Federal Subjects of the Russian Federation)". Всероссийская перепись населения 2002 года (All-Russia Population Census of 2002) (in Russian). Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved November 1, 2011.
  6. ^ "Оценка численности постоянного населения по субъектам Российской Федерации". Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved September 1, 2022.
  7. ^ "26. Численность постоянного населения Российской Федерации по муниципальным образованиям на 1 января 2018 года". Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved January 23, 2019.
  8. ^ Official throughout the Russian Federation according to Article 68.1 of the Constitution of Russia.
  9. ^ Constitution of the Sakha (Yakutia) Republic, Article 46
  10. ^ Russian Federal State Statistics Service (2011). Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года. Том 1 [2010 All-Russian Population Census, vol. 1]. Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года [2010 All-Russia Population Census] (in Russian). Federal State Statistics Service.
  11. ^ a b Rosstat (Russian Statistical Service), 2010 October 18, 2012, at the Wayback Machine (xls). Retrieved June 15, 2012.
  12. ^ Gamble, Jessa (January 28, 2015). "What's the world's coldest city?". The Guardian. Retrieved May 14, 2022.
  13. ^ Forsyth, James (1992). A History of the Peoples of Siberia: Russia's North Asian Colony. Cambridge University Press. p. 55. ISBN 978-0521477710.
  14. ^ Johanson, Lars (2021). Turkic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 89.
  15. ^ Victor P. Krivonogov, "The Dolgans’Ethnic Identity and Language Processes." Journal of Siberian Federal University, Humanities & Social Sciences 6 (2013 6) 870–888.
  16. ^ "The Dolgans" in The Red Book of the Peoples of the Russian Empire
  17. ^ Federal law on the calculation of time, Official internet portal of legal information of the Russian Federation (in Russian).
  18. ^ [1] January 3, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ Yakovleva, Natalia P. (2000). "Natural resource use in the Russian North: a case study of diamond mining in the Republic of Sakha". Environmental Management and Health. 11 (4): 318–336. doi:10.1108/09566160010372743.
  20. ^ Bohlen, Celestine (1992). "Poor Region in Russia Lays Claim to Its Diamonds". The New York Times. Retrieved March 18, 2018.
  21. ^ "Climate Olyokminsk". pogodaiklimat.ru. Retrieved June 12, 2017.
  22. ^ "Climate Oimjakon". pogodaikilmat.ru. Retrieved June 12, 2017.
  23. ^ "Climate Verkhoyansk". pogodaiklimat.ru. Retrieved June 12, 2017.
  24. ^ "Clunate Yakutsk". pogodaiklimat.ru. Retrieved June 12, 2017.
  25. ^ "Meet this extinct cave lion, at least 10,000 years old – world exclusive". siberiantimes.com. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
  26. ^ Saplakoglu, Yasemin (June 10, 2019). "Severed Head of a Giant 40,000-Year-Old Wolf Discovered in Russia". Live Science. Retrieved May 16, 2020.
  27. ^ "Still snarling after 40,000 years, a giant Pleistocene wolf discovered in Yakutia". The Siberian Times. June 7, 2019. Retrieved May 16, 2020.
  28. ^ "Frozen wolf's head found in Siberia is 40,000 years old". The Guardian. Reuters. June 13, 2019. Retrieved May 16, 2020.
  29. ^ Kicki Näslund. "Short summary of Siberian pre-history and cultures". Academia.edu.
  30. ^ Jordan, Bella Bychkova; Jordan-Bychkov, Terry G. (2000). Siberian Village: Land and Life in the Sakha Republic. University Of Minnesota Press. p. 38. ISBN 978-0816635696.
  31. ^ "Scott Polar Research Institute — Republic of Sakha". Spri.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved February 25, 2014.
  32. ^ A. I. Gogolev, "История Якутии: (Обзор исторических событий до начала ХХ в.)" (History of Yakutia: Review of Historical Events to the beginning of the 20th century May 27, 2005, at the Wayback Machine) Yakutsk, 1999.
  33. ^ Forsyth, James (1992). A History of the Peoples of Siberia: Russia's North Asian Colony. Cambridge University Press. pp. 167–168. ISBN 978-0521477710.
  34. ^ Jordan, Bella Bychkova; Jordan-Bychkov, Terry G. (2000). Siberian Village: Land and Life in the Sakha Republic. University Of Minnesota Press. pp. 64–65. ISBN 978-0816635696.
  35. ^ Russian Federal State Statistics Service. Всероссийская перепись населения 2020 года. Том 1 [2020 All-Russian Population Census, vol. 1] (XLS) (in Russian). Federal State Statistics Service.
  36. ^ Russian Federal State Statistics Service (2011). Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года. Том 1 [2010 All-Russian Population Census, vol. 1]. Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года [2010 All-Russia Population Census] (in Russian). Federal State Statistics Service.
  37. ^ Russian Federal State Statistics Service (May 21, 2004). Численность населения России, субъектов Российской Федерации в составе федеральных округов, районов, городских поселений, сельских населённых пунктов – районных центров и сельских населённых пунктов с населением 3 тысячи и более человек [Population of Russia, Its Federal Districts, Federal Subjects, Districts, Urban Localities, Rural Localities—Administrative Centers, and Rural Localities with Population of Over 3,000] (XLS). Всероссийская перепись населения 2002 года [All-Russia Population Census of 2002] (in Russian).
  38. ^ Всесоюзная перепись населения 1989 г. Численность наличного населения союзных и автономных республик, автономных областей и округов, краёв, областей, районов, городских поселений и сёл-райцентров [All Union Population Census of 1989: Present Population of Union and Autonomous Republics, Autonomous Oblasts and Okrugs, Krais, Oblasts, Districts, Urban Settlements, and Villages Serving as District Administrative Centers]. Всесоюзная перепись населения 1989 года [All-Union Population Census of 1989] (in Russian). Институт демографии Национального исследовательского университета: Высшая школа экономики [Institute of Demography at the National Research University: Higher School of Economics]. 1989 – via Demoscope Weekly.
  39. ^ "Population of Russian Federation on 1 January 2018". GKS.
  40. ^ "Национальный состав населения". Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved December 30, 2022.
  41. ^ "Впн-2010".
  42. ^ a b c "Arena: Atlas of Religions and Nationalities in Russia". Sreda, 2012.
  43. ^ 2012 Arena Atlas Religion Maps. "Ogonek", № 34 (5243), 27/08/2012. Retrieved 21/04/2017. .
  44. ^ Yakutia (Sakha) Faces a Religious Choice: Shamanism or Christianity
  45. ^ Whose Steeple is Higher? Religious Competition in Siberia
  46. ^ Елена Дятлова (Yelena Dyatlova) (October 1, 2008). "В Якутии господствует двоеверие (Ч. 1) (Yakutia is dominated by a dual belief system)". Во многих случаях нам говорили, что при совершении тех или иных обрядов или просто действий приглашают сначала шамана, потом священника. Правда, именно в таком порядке, признавая христианство чем-то высшим по отношению к местной магической языческой традиции, но это соединяя. Даже среди тех представителей якутской интеллигенции, с которыми мы общались, это стремление к синкретизму было отчетливо приметно. (An interview with Maxim Kozlov, a Moscow priest who had recently returned from a missionary trip down the Lena along with the Bishop of Yakutsk).
  47. ^ "РЕЛИГАРЕ – Современная религиозная ситуация в Республике Саха (Якутия): проблемы и перспективы". Religare.ru. Retrieved February 25, 2014.
  48. ^ . Члены Совета Федерации Федерального Собрания РФ. Government of the Sakha Republic (Yakutia). Archived from the original on November 11, 2007. Retrieved February 18, 2010.
  49. ^ . Todayszaman.com. October 9, 2011. Archived from the original on October 14, 2013. Retrieved February 25, 2014.
  50. ^ . Archived from the original on January 3, 2012. Retrieved May 10, 2012.
  51. ^ "Foreign Relations of the Sakha Republic (Yakutia)". YakutiaToday.Com. January 1, 2008. Retrieved February 25, 2014.
  52. ^ Выписки ЕГРЮЛ и ЕГРИП, проверка контрагентов, ИНН и КПП организаций, реквизиты ИП и ООО. СБИС (in Russian). Retrieved October 20, 2018.
  53. ^ EnglishRussia.com – Russian Roads
  54. ^ Why the Film Industry Is Booming in the Russian Wilderness | Time

Sources

  • Верховный Совет Республики Саха (Якутия). 4 апреля 1992 г. «Конституция (основной закон) Республики Саха (Якутия)», в ред. Конституционного закона №581-З 53-IV от 22 июля 2008 г. (Supreme Council of the Sakha (Yakutia) Republic. April 4, 1992 Constitution (Basic Law) of the Sakha (Yakutia) Republic, as amended by the Constitutional Law #581-Z 53-IV of July 22 2008. ).

External links

  • (in Russian) Official website of the government of Sakha Republic

sakha, other, uses, disambiguation, officially, republic, yakutia, largest, republic, russia, located, russian, east, along, arctic, ocean, with, population, roughly, million, comprises, half, area, governing, eastern, federal, district, world, largest, countr. For other uses see Sakha disambiguation Sakha a officially the Republic of Sakha Yakutia b is the largest republic of Russia located in the Russian Far East along the Arctic Ocean with a population of roughly 1 million 10 Sakha comprises half of the area of its governing Far Eastern Federal District and is the world s largest country subdivision covering over 3 083 523 square kilometers 1 190 555 sq mi 11 Yakutsk which is the world s coldest major city 12 is its capital and largest city The republic has a reputation for an extreme and severe climate with the lowest temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere being recorded in Verkhoyansk and Oymyakon and regular winter averages commonly dipping below 35 C 31 F in Yakutsk The hypercontinental tendencies also result in warm summers for much of the republic Republic of Sakha Yakutia RepublicRespublika Saha Yakutiya Other transcription s YakutSaha Өrospүүbүlүkete RomanizationSakha OrospuubuluketeFlagCoat of armsAnthem State Anthem of the Sakha Republic source source track track track Coordinates 66 24 N 129 10 E 66 400 N 129 167 E 66 400 129 167 Coordinates 66 24 N 129 10 E 66 400 N 129 167 E 66 400 129 167CountryRussiaFederal districtFar Eastern 1 Economic regionFar Eastern 2 CapitalYakutsk 3 Government BodyState Assembly Il Tumen 4 Head 4 Aysen NikolayevArea 5 Total3 083 523 km2 1 190 555 sq mi Rank1stPopulation 2021 Census 6 Total995 686 Estimate 2018 7 964 330 Rank51st Density0 32 km2 0 84 sq mi Time zonesmost excluding districts in UTC 10 00 and UTC 11 00 time zones UTC 09 00 Yakutsk Time Oymyakonsky Ust Yansky and Verkhoyansky districtsUTC 10 00 Vladivostok Time Abyysky Allaikhovsky Momsky Nizhnekolymsky Srednekolymsky and Verkhnekolymsky districtsUTC 11 00 Magadan Time ISO 3166 codeRU SALicense plates14OKTMO ID98000000Official languagesRussian 8 Yakut 9 Websitesakha wbr gov wbr ruInteractive map of the Sakha Republic Sakha was first home to hunting gathering and reindeer herding Tungusic and Paleosiberian peoples such as the Evenks and Yukaghir Migrating from the area around Lake Baikal the Turkic Sakha people first settled along the middle Lena river sometime between the 9th and 16th centuries likely in several waves bringing the pastoral economic system of Central Asia with them The Russians colonised and incorporated the area as Yakutsk Oblast into the Tsardom of Russia in the early mid 17th century obliging the indigenous peoples of the area to pay fur tribute While the initial period following the Russian conquest saw the Sakha population drop by 70 the Imperial period also saw the expansion of the native Yakuts from the middle Lena along the Vilyuy River to the north and the east displacing other indigenous groups Yakutia saw some of the last battles of the Russian Civil War and the Bolshevik authorities re organized Yakutsk Oblast into the autonomous Yakut ASSR in 1922 The Soviet era saw the migration of many Slavs specifically Russians and Ukrainians into the area Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 2 1 Time zones 2 2 Rivers 2 3 Lakes 2 4 Mountains 2 5 Peninsulas 2 6 Islands 2 7 Natural resources 2 8 Climate 3 Administrative divisions 4 History 4 1 Pre history 4 2 Early history 4 3 Russian conquest 4 4 Russian Empire 4 5 Soviet era 4 6 Post Soviet era 5 Demographics 5 1 Settlements 5 2 Vital statistics 5 3 Ethnic groups 5 4 Languages 5 5 Religion 5 6 Education 6 Politics 7 Economy 7 1 Transportation 8 Media 9 Culture 10 National days 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Sources 14 External linksEtymology EditThe exonym Yakut comes from the Evenk term Yako also yoqo noqa or noka which was the term the Evenks used to describe the Sakha This was in turn picked up by the Russians 13 The Yukaghirs another neighboring people in Siberia use the exonym yoqol yoqod yoqon Tundra Yukaghir or yaqal yaqad yaqan Kolyma Yukaghir citation needed The self designation Sakha is probably of the same origin jaqa gt Sakha following regular sound changes in the course of development of the Yakut language as the Evenk and Yukaghir exonyms for the Yakuts 14 It is pronounced as Haka by the Dolgans whose language is either a dialect or a close relative of the Yakut language 15 16 Geography Edit Fauna of the Sakha Republic Ross s gull the Siberian crane polar bear horse and reindeer Russian post miniature sheet 2006 Borders internal Chukotka Autonomous Okrug 660 km E Magadan Oblast 1520 km E SE Khabarovsk Krai 2130 km SE Amur Oblast S Zabaykalsky Krai S Irkutsk Oblast S SW Krasnoyarsk Krai W water Arctic Ocean including Laptev Sea and Eastern Siberian Sea N Highest point Peak Pobeda 3 003 m Mus Khaya Mountain Peak 2959 m or 3 011 m Maximum N gt S distance 2 500 km 1 600 mi Maximum E gt W distance 2 000 km 1 200 mi Sakha stretches to the Henrietta Island in the far north and is washed by the Laptev and Eastern Siberian Seas of the Arctic Ocean These waters the coldest and iciest of all seas in the Northern Hemisphere are covered by ice for 9 10 months of the year New Siberian Islands are a part of the republic s territory After Nunavut was separated from Canada s Northwest Territories Sakha became the largest subnational entity statoid in the world with an area of 3 083 523 square kilometers 1 190 555 sq mi 11 slightly smaller than the territory of India 3 3 million km2 Sakha can be divided into three great vegetation belts About 40 of Sakha lies above the Arctic circle and all of it is covered by permafrost which greatly influences the region s ecology and limits forests in the southern region Arctic and subarctic tundra define the middle region where lichen and moss grow as great green carpets and are favorite pastures for reindeer In the southern part of the tundra belt scattered stands of dwarf Siberian pine and larch grow along the rivers Below the tundra is the vast taiga forest region Larch trees dominate in the north and stands of fir and pine begin to appear in the south Taiga forests cover about 47 of Sakha and almost 90 of the cover is larch The Sakha Republic is the site of Pleistocene Park a project directed at recreating Pleistocene tundra grasslands by stimulating the growth of grass with the introduction of animals which thrived in the region during the late Pleistocene early Holocene period Time zones Edit Time zones in Sakha Yakutsk Time UTC 09 00 Vladivostok Time UTC 10 00 Magadan Time UTC 11 00 Main article Time in Sakha Sakha is the only federal subject of Russia which uses more than one time zone Sakha spans three time zones 17 Like the rest of Russia it does not use daylight saving time Map Time zone Abbr UTC offset Areas Yakutsk Time YAKT UTC 09 00 Most of the republic s territory Vladivostok Time VLAT UTC 10 00 Districts of Oymyakonsky Ust Yansky and Verkhoyansky Magadan Time MAGT UTC 11 00 Districts of Abyysky Allaikhovsky Momsky Nizhnekolymsky Srednekolymsky and Verkhnekolymsky Rivers Edit Ura River Olyokma River Lena Pillars The largest river is the navigable Lena River 4 400 km As it moves northward it includes hundreds of small tributaries located in the Verkhoyansk Range Lena River Vilyuy River 2 650 km Lena River tributary Markha River 1 181 km Vilyuy River tributary Morkoka River 812 km Markha River tributary Tyung River 1 092 km Vilyuy River tributary Aldan River 2 273 km Lena River tributary Amga River 1 462 km Aldan River tributary Maya River 1 053 km Aldan River tributary Uchur River 812 km Aldan River tributary Olyokma River 1 320 km Lena River tributary Linde River 804 km Lena River tributary Nyuya River 798 km Lena River tributary Olenyok River 2 292 km Kolyma River 2 129 km Indigirka River 1 726 km Selennyakh River 796 km Indigirka River tributary Alazeya River 1 590 km Anabar River 939 km Yana River 872 km Adycha River 715 km Yana River tributary Oldzho River 330 km Yana River tributary Bytantay River 620 km Yana River tributaryLakes Edit Lake Ozhogino There are over 800 000 lakes in the republic 18 Major lakes and reservoirs include Lake Bolshoye Morskoye Lake Bustakh Lake Emanda Lake Mogotoyevo Lake Nedzheli Lake Nerpichye Lake Ozhogino Lake Suturuokha Lake Tabanda Ulakhan Kyuel Vilyuy ReservoirMountains Edit Verkhoyansk Range Sakha s greatest mountain range the Verkhoyansk Range runs parallel and east of the Lena River forming a great arc that begins in the Sea of Okhotsk and ends in the Laptev Sea The Chersky Range runs east of the Verkhoyansk Range and has the highest peak in Sakha Peak Pobeda 3 147 m The second highest peak is Peak Mus Khaya reaching 3 011 m The Stanovoy Range borders Sakha in the south Udachnaya pipe diamond mine Peninsulas Edit The Republic s extensive coastline contains a number of peninsulas from west to east the most prominent are Uryung Tumus Peninsula Nordvik Peninsula Terpyay Tumsa Peninsula Bykovsky Peninsula Buor Khaya Peninsula Manyko Peninsula Shirokostan Peninsula Merkushina Strelka Peninsula Lopatka Peninsula Dogukan PeninsulaIslands Edit From west to east the main islands of Sakha are Preobrazheniya Island Bolshoy Begichev Island Maliy Begichev Island Peschany Island Salkay Island Orto Ary Daldalakh Dyangylakh Island Dunay Islands Leykina Island Islands of the Lena Delta Brusneva Island Muostakh Island Ulakhan Ary Island Yarok Island Shelonsky Islands Makar Island Stolbovoy Island New Siberian Islands by far the largest group De Long Islands Medvezhyi Islands Kolesovsky Island Kolesovskaya Otmel Gabyshevskiy Island Kamenka Island Markhayanovskiy Island Gusmp Island Sukhanyy IslandNatural resources Edit Sakha is well endowed with raw materials The soil contains large reserves of oil gas coal diamonds gold silver tin tungsten and many others Sakha produces 99 of all Russian diamonds and over 25 of the diamonds mined in the world 19 20 Climate Edit Sakha is known for its climate extremes with the Verkhoyansk Range being the coldest area in the Northern Hemisphere Some of the lowest natural temperatures ever recorded have been here The Northern Hemisphere s Pole of Cold is at Verkhoyansk where the temperatures reached as low as 67 8 C 90 0 F in 1892 and at Oymyakon where the temperatures reached as low as 71 2 C 96 2 F in January 1924 Average daily maximum and minimum temperatures for selected locations in Yakutiya Russia 21 22 23 24 City July C July F January C January F Aldan 22 6 10 9 72 7 51 6 21 9 30 6 7 4 23 1Neryungri 21 8 10 9 71 24 51 62 26 8 33 9 16 24 29 02Olyokminsk 24 9 12 76 8 53 6 26 2 34 6 15 2 30 28Oymyakon 22 7 6 1 72 9 43 42 5 50 44 5 58Verkhoyansk 23 5 9 7 74 3 49 5 42 4 48 3 44 3 54 9Yakutsk 25 5 12 7 78 54 9 35 1 41 5 31 2 42 7Saskylakh 16 8 7 7 62 2 45 9 29 2 36 7 20 6 34 1Tiksi 12 1 3 9 53 8 39 26 7 33 8 16 1 28 8Average annual precipitation 200 mm central parts to 700 mm mountains of Eastern Sakha Administrative divisions EditMain article Administrative divisions of the Sakha RepublicHistory EditFurther information History of Siberia This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Pre history Edit The people of the Ymyyakhtakh culture are regarded to be the ancestors of the modern Yukaghirs Siberia and particularly Sakha is of paleontological significance as it contains bodies of prehistoric animals from the Pleistocene Epoch preserved in ice or permafrost In 2015 the frozen bodies of Dina and Uyan the cave lion cubs were found Bodies of Yuka and another woolly mammoth from Oymyakon a woolly rhinoceros from the Kolyma River and bison and horses from Yukagir have also been found 25 In June 2019 the severed yet preserved head of a large wolf from the Pleistocene dated to over 40 000 years ago was found close to the Tirekhtyakh River 26 27 28 Ymyakhtakh culture c 2200 1300 BC was a Late Neolithic culture of Siberia with a very large archaeological horizon Its origins were in Sakha in the Lena river basin From there it spread both to the east and to the west 29 Early history Edit Tygyn Darkhan was the ruler of the Khangalas Sakha until the Russian Conquest of Siberia The Turkic Sakha people or Yakuts may have settled the area as early as the 9th century or as late as the 16th century though most likely there were several migrations They migrated up north from around Lake Baikal to the middle Lena due to pressure by the Buryats a Mongolic group 30 The Sakha displaced earlier much smaller populations who lived on hunting and reindeer herding introducing the pastoralist economy of Central Asia The indigenous populations of Paleosiberian and Tungusic stock were mostly assimilated to the Sakha by the 17th century 31 Russian conquest Edit Main article Russian conquest of Siberia The Tsardom of Russia began its conquest of the region in the 17th century moving east after the defeat of the Khanate of Sibir Tygyn a king of the Khangalassky Sakha granted territory for Russian settlement in return for a military pact that included war against indigenous rebels of all North Eastern Asia Magadan Chukotka Kamchatka and Sakhalin Kull a king of the Megino Khangalassky Sakha began a Sakha conspiracy by allowing the first stockade construction citation needed 1821 map of Yakutsk Oblast In August 1638 the Moscow Government formed a new administrative unit with the administrative center of Lensky Ostrog Fort Lensky the future city of Yakutsk which had been founded by Pyotr Beketov in 1632 The arrival of Russian settlers at the remote Russkoye Ustye in the Indigirka delta is also believed to date from the 17th century 32 The Siberian Governorate was established as part of the Russian Empire in 1708 Russian settlers began to form a community in the 18th century which adopted certain Sakha customs and was often called Yakutyane Yakutya ne or Lena Early Settlers lenskie starozhily However the influx of later settlers had assimilated themselves into the Russian mainstream by the 20th century Russian Empire Edit In an administrative reform of 1782 Irkutsk Governorate was created In 1805 Yakutsk Oblast was split from Irkutsk Governorate British explorer amp missionary Kate Marsden in Yakutsk 1891 Yakutsk Oblast in the early 19th century marked the easternmost territory of the Russian Empire including such Far Eastern Pacific territories as were acquired known as Okhotsk Okrug within Yakutsk Oblast With the formation of Primorskaya Oblast in 1856 the Russian territories of the Pacific were detached from Sakha Members of the Siberian Regional Duma from Yakutsk 1917 The Russians established agriculture in the Lena River basin The members of religious groups who were exiled to Sakha in the second half of the 19th century began to grow wheat oats and potatoes The fur trade established a cash economy Industry and transport began to develop at the end of the 19th century and in the beginning of the Soviet period This was also the beginning of geological prospecting mining and local lead production The first steam powered ships and barges arrived Sakha s remoteness compared to the rest of Siberia made it a place of exile of choice for both Tsarist and Communist governments of Russia Among the famous Tsarist era exiles were the democratic writer Nikolay Chernyshevsky Doukhobor conscientious objectors whose story was told to Leo Tolstoy by Vasily Pozdnyakov the Socialist Revolutionary and writer Vladimir Zenzinov who left an account of his Arctic experiences and Polish socialist activist Waclaw Sieroszewski who pioneered in ethnographic research on the Sakha people A Sakha national movement first emerged during the 1905 Revolution A Yakut Union was formed under the leadership of a Sakha lawyer and city councilor by the name of Vasily Nikiforov which criticized the policies and effects of Russian colonialism and demanded representation in the State Duma The Yakut Union acted to make the city council of Yakutsk stand down and was joined by thousands of Sakha from the countryside but the leaders were arrested and the movement fizzled out by April 1906 Their demand for a Sakha repsentative in the Duma however was granted 33 Soviet era Edit Sakha was home to the last stage of the Russian Civil War the Yakut Revolt On April 27 1922 former Yakutsk Oblast was proclaimed the Yakut ASSR although in fact the eastern part of the territory including the city of Yakutsk was controlled by the White Russians Platon Oyunsky who wrote the traditionally oral olonkho epics The early Soviet period saw a flourishing of Sakha literature as men such as Platon Oyunsky wrote down in writing the traditionally oral and improvised olonkho in addition to composing their own works Many early Sakha leaders including Oyunsky died in the Great Purge Sakha experienced significant collectivization between 1929 and 1934 with the number of households experiencing collectivization rising from 3 6 in 1929 to 41 7 in 1932 Policies by which the Sakha were harshly affected resulted in the population dropping from 240 500 in 1926 down to 236 700 at the 1959 census 34 Sakha s demographics shifted wildly during the Soviet period as ethnic Russians and Ukrainians among other groups settled the area en masse primarily in Yakutsk and the industrial south Previously even Yakutsk had been primarily Sakha and Sakha speaking With the end of korenizatsiya usage of the Sakha language was restricted in urban areas such as Yakutsk which became primarily Russian speaking Post Soviet era Edit In 1992 after the fall of the Soviet Union Sakha was recognized in Moscow as the Sakha Yakutia Republic under the jurisdiction of the Russian Federation Sakha is historically part of Russian Siberia but since the formation of the Far Eastern Federal District in 2000 it is administratively part of the Russian Far East Demographics EditPopulation 995 686 2021 Census 35 958 528 2010 Census 36 949 280 2002 Census 37 1 081 408 1989 Census 38 Population density is 0 31 per km2 2019 which is one of the lowest among Russian districts Urban population 65 45 2018 39 Settlements Edit Largest cities or towns in the Sakha Republic 2021 Russian CensusRank Administrative division Pop Yakutsk Neryungri 1 Yakutsk City of republic significance of Yakutsk 355 443 Mirny Aldan2 Neryungri Neryungrinsky District 53 4093 Mirny Mirninsky District 34 0454 Aldan Aldansky District 21 5905 Lensk Lensky District 21 3926 Aykhal Mirninsky District 13 3707 Udachny Mirninsky District 12 9308 Suntar Suntarsky District 10 3029 Nyurba Nyurbinsky District 10 13810 Vilyuysk Vilyuysky District 10 032 Vital statistics Edit Vital statistics Breakdown of population changes 1939 2002 Statehood Day celebrations in Yakutsk Vitim Sakha Republic Dapparay Cruise on the Lena River Source Russian Federal State Statistics ServiceAverage population x 1000 Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate per 1000 Crude death rate per 1000 Natural change per 1000 Fertility rates1970 674 13 899 5 700 8 199 20 6 8 5 12 21975 775 15 636 6 242 9 394 20 2 8 1 12 11980 887 18 132 7 501 10 631 20 4 8 5 12 01985 1 002 22 823 7 266 15 557 22 8 7 3 15 51990 1 115 21 662 7 470 14 192 19 4 6 7 12 7 2 461991 1 110 19 805 7 565 12 240 17 8 6 8 11 0 2 321992 1 090 17 796 8 710 9 086 16 3 8 0 8 3 2 171993 1 072 16 771 9 419 7 352 15 6 8 8 6 9 2 081994 1 051 16 434 10 371 6 063 15 6 9 9 5 8 2 071995 1 029 15 731 10 079 5 652 15 3 9 8 5 5 2 011996 1 015 14 584 9 638 4 946 14 4 9 5 4 9 1 881997 1 003 13 909 9 094 4 815 13 9 9 1 4 8 1 811998 986 13 640 8 856 4 784 13 8 9 0 4 9 1 801999 970 12 724 9 480 3 244 13 1 9 8 3 3 1 712000 960 13 147 9 325 3 822 13 7 9 7 4 0 1 772001 954 13 262 9 738 3 524 13 9 10 2 3 7 1 782002 950 13 887 9 700 4 187 14 6 10 2 4 4 1 852003 949 14 224 9 660 4 564 15 0 10 2 4 8 1 862004 950 14 716 9 692 5 024 15 5 10 2 5 3 1 912005 950 13 591 9 696 3 895 14 3 10 2 4 1 1 742006 950 13 713 9 245 4 468 14 4 9 7 4 7 1 732007 951 15 268 9 179 6 089 16 1 9 7 6 4 1 922008 953 15 363 9 579 5 784 16 1 10 1 6 1 1 922009 955 15 970 9 353 6 617 16 7 9 8 6 9 2 002010 958 16 109 9 402 6 707 16 8 9 8 7 0 2 022011 957 16 402 8 992 7 410 17 1 9 4 7 7 2 062012 956 16 998 8 918 8 080 17 8 9 3 8 5 2 172013 955 16 704 8 351 8 353 17 5 8 7 8 8 2 172014 956 17 010 8 209 8 801 17 8 8 6 9 2 2 252015 958 16 459 8 233 8 226 17 1 8 6 8 5 2 192016 961 15 424 8 052 7 372 16 0 8 4 7 6 2 092017 963 13 954 7 817 6 137 14 5 8 1 6 4 1 932018 13 234 7 572 5 662 13 7 7 8 5 9 1 852019 12 819 7 611 5 208 13 2 7 8 5 4 1 822020 13 097 9 081 4 016 13 4 9 3 4 1 1 86 Ethnic groups Edit Yakuts celebrating Yhyakh Yakuts form the easternmost indigenous community of Turkic peoples According to the 2021 Census the ethnic composition was 40 469 348 Sakha 55 3 276 986 Russians 32 6 24 334 Evenks 2 9 13 233 Evens 1 6 11 203 Kyrgyz 1 3 7 169 Ukrainians 0 8 6 572 Buryats 0 8 5 620 Tajiks 0 7 Historical population figures are shown below Ethnicgroup 1926 Census 1939 Census 1959 Census 1970 Census 1979 Census 1989 Census 2002 Census 2010 Census 2021 Census1Number Number Number Number Number Number Number Number Number Sakha 235 926 81 6 233 273 56 5 226 053 46 4 285 749 43 0 313 917 36 9 365 236 33 4 432 290 45 5 466 492 49 9 469 348 55 3 Dolgans 0 0 0 10 0 0 64 0 0 408 0 0 1 272 0 1 1 906 0 2 2 147 0 3 Evenks 13 502 4 7 10 432 2 5 9 505 2 0 9 097 1 4 11 584 1 4 14 428 1 3 18 232 1 9 21 008 2 2 24 334 2 9 Evens 738 0 3 3 133 0 8 3 537 0 7 6 471 1 0 5 763 0 7 8 668 0 8 11 657 1 2 15 071 1 6 13 233 1 6 Yukaghir 396 0 1 267 0 1 285 0 1 400 0 1 526 0 1 697 0 1 1 097 0 1 1 281 0 1 1 510 0 2 Chukchis 1 298 0 4 400 0 1 325 0 1 387 0 1 377 0 0 473 0 0 602 0 1 670 0 1 709 0 1 Russians 30 156 10 4 146 741 35 5 215 328 44 2 314 308 47 3 429 588 50 4 550 263 50 3 390 671 41 2 353 649 37 8 276 986 32 6 Ukrainians 138 0 0 4 229 1 0 12 182 2 5 20 253 3 0 46 326 5 4 77 114 7 0 34 633 3 6 20 341 2 2 7 169 0 8 Tatars 1 671 0 6 4 420 1 1 5 172 1 1 7 678 1 2 10 976 1 3 17 478 1 6 10 768 1 1 8 122 0 9 4 262 0 5 Others 5 260 1 8 10 303 2 5 14 956 3 1 19 770 3 0 32 719 3 8 59 300 5 4 48 058 5 1 46 124 4 9 49 070 5 8 1 146 918 people were registered from administrative databases and could not declare an ethnicity It is estimated that the proportion of ethnicities in this group is the same as that of the declared group 41 Languages Edit The official languages are both Russian and Sakha also known as Yakut which is spoken by 47 of the total population including 87 of Yakuts The Sakha language is a member of the Turkic language family in the Siberian Turkic branch and it is closely related to the Dolgan language of the former Taymyr Dolgano Nenets AO and somewhat related to other Siberian Turkic languages such as Tuvan Altai Khakas Shor amp others Influence from Tungusic languages especially Evenk and Mongolian are recorded Besides those 2 languages the Sakha Republic is also where much of the world s speakers of Tungusic languages reside most of whom either speak Evenk or the Even language formerly known as Lamut Additionally the lects of the Yukaghir language family is spoken in the northeast which is one of the Paleosiberian languages alternatively considered as a language isolate due to lack of research There are proposed links to Uralic languages though these are dubious Ethnicity Language spokenRussian Sakha EnglishYakuts 90 4 87 0 4 6 Russians 99 9 2 0 4 3 Evenks 91 1 81 0 2 6 Ukrainians 99 8 0 8 3 8 Religion Edit Religion in Sakha Republic as of 2012 Sreda Arena Atlas 42 43 Russian Orthodoxy 37 8 Protestantism 0 8 Other Christians 0 8 Islam 2 Tengrism and other native faiths 13 Spiritual but not religious 16 6 Atheism and irreligion 25 6 Other and undeclared 4 Before the arrival of the Russian Empire the majority of the local population was Tengrist similar to the other Turkic people of Central Asia or in Paleoasian indigenous shamanism with both light community leading and dark healing through spirit journey shamans Under the Russians the local population was converted to the Russian Orthodox Church and required to take Orthodox Christian names but in practice generally continued to follow traditional religions During the Soviet era most or all of the shamans died without successors Temple dedicated to the Aiyy neo Tengrist creed in Yakutsk In the 1990s a neopagan shamanist movement called aiyy yeurekhe was founded by the controversial journalist Ivan Ukhkhan and a philologist calling himself Teris 44 This group and others cooperated to build a shaman temple in downtown Yakutsk in 2002 45 Currently while Orthodox Christianity maintains a following however with very few priests willing to be stationed outside of Yakutsk there is interest and activity toward renewing the traditional religions As of 2008 Orthodox leaders described the worldview of the republic s indigenous population or rather those among the population who are not completely indifferent to religion as dvoyeverie dual belief system or a tendency toward syncretism as evidenced by the locals sometimes first inviting a shaman and then an Orthodox priest to carry out their rites in connection with some event in their life 46 Transfiguration of Jesus Christ Cathedral in Yakutsk According to the Information Center under the President of Sakha Republic Informacionnyj centr pri Prezidente RS Ya the religious demography of the republic was as follows 47 Orthodoxy 44 9 Shamanism 26 2 Non religious 23 0 New religious movements 2 4 Islam 1 2 Buddhism 1 0 Protestantism 0 9 Catholicism 0 4 The Russian Orthodox Eparchy Diocese of Yakutia is led by Bishop Roman Lukin of Yakutsk 2011 2 According to a 2012 survey 42 37 8 of the population of Sakha adheres to the Russian Orthodox Church 13 to Tengrism or Sakha shamanism 2 to Islam 1 are unaffiliated Christians 1 to forms of Protestantism and 0 4 to Tibetan Buddhism In addition 26 of the population deems itself atheist 17 is spiritual but not religious and 1 8 follows other religions or did not give an answer to the question 42 Education Edit See also List of universities in the Sakha Republic The most important facilities of higher education include North Eastern Federal University previously Yakutsk State University and Yakutsk State Agricultural Academy Politics Edit Russia Day celebrations in Mirny June 12 2014 The head of government in Sakha is the Head previously President The first Head of the Sakha Republic was Mikhail Yefimovich Nikolayev 48 As of 2021 the head is Aysen Nikolayev who took office on May 28 2018 The supreme legislative body of state authority in Sakha is a unicameral State Assembly known as the Il Tumen The government of the Sakha Yakutia Republic is the executive body of state authority The republic fosters close cultural political economic and industrial relations with the independent Turkic states through membership in organizations such as the Turkic Council and the Joint Administration of Turkic Arts and Culture 49 50 51 Economy Edit Unusual gold specimen from Bulun District Lena River basin Weight is about 6 grams Industry generates slightly above 50 citation needed of the gross national product of Sakha stemming primarily from mineral exploitation Industrial enterprises are concentrated in the capital Yakutsk as well as in Aldan Mirny Neryungri Pokrovsk and Udachny The diamond gold and tin ore mining industries are the major focus of the economy Uranium ore is beginning to be mined The Turkic speaking Sakha people are engaged in politics government finance economy and cattle breeding horses and cows for milk and meat The Paleoasian indigenous peoples are hunters fishermen and reindeer herders As of 2008 Sakha Republic is the 19th most developed federal subject in Russia The largest companies in the region include Alrosa Yakutugol Yakutskenergo and Yakutia Airlines 52 Transportation Edit Water transport ranks first for cargo turnover There are six river ports two seaports Tiksi and Zelyony Mys Four shipping companies including the Arctic Sea Shipping Company operate in the republic The republic s main waterway is the Lena River which links Yakutsk with the rail station of Ust Kut in Irkutsk Oblast Yakutsk Aeroport the main air traffic hub of the republic Air transport is the most important for transporting people Airlines connect the republic with most regions of Russia Yakutsk Airport has an international terminal Two federal roads pass the republic They are Yakutsk Skovorodino A360 Lena highway and Yakutsk Magadan M56 Kolyma Highway However due to the presence of permafrost use of asphalt is not practical and therefore the roads are made of clay When heavy rains blow over the region the roads often turn to mud sometimes stranding hundreds of travelers in the process 53 The Berkakit Tommot railroad is currently in operation It links the Baikal Amur Mainline with the industrial centers in South Sakha Construction of the Amur Yakutsk Mainline continues northward the railway was completed to Nizhny Bestyakh across the river from Yakutsk in 2013 Though this one track railroad from Tommot to Nizhny Bestyakh is under temporary operation 30 of its full capacity the federal agency for railways declared that this railroad would be in full operation in fall 2015 needs update Also the private company is now when constructing the transport and logistics center in Nizhny Bestyakh Media EditNVK Sakha national broadcaster company Sakha Nacionalnaya veshatelnaya kompaniya Saha Saha kordoror iһitinnerer teriltete the largest media company in the Republic of Sakha Yakutia The company owns dozens of TV channels in Yakutia Russia and other countries The main broadcasting languages are Yakut English Russian and Evenk It was founded in 1992 after the collapse of the USSR 70 of the shares are owned by the Russian VGTRK 25 are owned by Yakutia and 5 are in free float NVK Sakha owns its own animation and film production studios and some music studios Since 2018 it has also been streaming 24 7 on YouTube Culture Edit Sakha dance with traditional clothing Points of interest in the city of Yakutsk include the State Russian drama theatre named after Alexander Pushkin the Sakha Theater named after Platon Oyunsky the State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre named after D K Sivtsev Suorun Omoloon the Young Spectator s TheatreThere are a number of museums as well These include the National Fine Arts Museum of Sakha the Museum of Local Lore and History named after E Yaroslavsky and the Khomus Museum and Museum of Permafrost In the 2010s a movie boom began in Yakutia The local film industry was labelled Sakhawood 54 National days EditApril 27 Republic Day June 21 Yhyakh festival also known as Sakha New Year See also Edit Siberia portalCuisine of Sakha Lena Pillars List of rural localities in the Sakha Republic Music in the Sakha Republic Tuymaada Yakutian knife Yakut languageNotes Edit Russian Yakutiya tr Yakutiya IPA jɪˈkutʲɪje Yakut Saha Sire Russian Respublika Saha Yakutiya tr Respublika Sakha Yakutiya IPA rʲɪsˈpublʲɪke sɐˈxa jɪˈkutʲɪje Yakut Saha Өrospүүbүlүkete romanized Sakha Orospuubulukete IPA saˈxa oɾosˈpyːbylykete References EditCitations Edit Prezident Rossijskoj Federacii Ukaz 849 ot 13 maya 2000 g O polnomochnom predstavitele Prezidenta Rossijskoj Federacii v federalnom okruge Vstupil v silu 13 maya 2000 g Opublikovan Sobranie zakonodatelstva RF No 20 st 2112 15 maya 2000 g President of the Russian Federation Decree 849 of May 13 2000 On the Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of the Russian Federation in a Federal District Effective as of May 13 2000 Gosstandart Rossijskoj Federacii OK 024 95 27 dekabrya 1995 g Obsherossijskij klassifikator ekonomicheskih regionov 2 Ekonomicheskie rajony v red Izmeneniya 5 2001 OKER Gosstandart of the Russian Federation OK 024 95 December 27 1995 Russian Classification of Economic Regions 2 Economic Regions as amended by the Amendment 5 2001 OKER a b Minahan James 2002 Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations S Z Greenwood Publishing Group pp 1630ff a b Constitution of the Sakha Yakutia Republic 53 1 Federalnaya sluzhba gosudarstvennoj statistiki Federal State Statistics Service May 21 2004 Territoriya chislo rajonov naselyonnyh punktov i selskih administracij po subektam Rossijskoj Federacii Territory Number of Districts Inhabited Localities and Rural Administration by Federal Subjects of the Russian Federation Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2002 goda All Russia Population Census of 2002 in Russian Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved November 1 2011 Ocenka chislennosti postoyannogo naseleniya po subektam Rossijskoj Federacii Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved September 1 2022 26 Chislennost postoyannogo naseleniya Rossijskoj Federacii po municipalnym obrazovaniyam na 1 yanvarya 2018 goda Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved January 23 2019 Official throughout the Russian Federation according to Article 68 1 of the Constitution of Russia Constitution of the Sakha Yakutia Republic Article 46 Russian Federal State Statistics Service 2011 Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2010 goda Tom 1 2010 All Russian Population Census vol 1 Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2010 goda 2010 All Russia Population Census in Russian Federal State Statistics Service a b Rosstat Russian Statistical Service 2010 Archived October 18 2012 at the Wayback Machine xls Retrieved June 15 2012 Gamble Jessa January 28 2015 What s the world s coldest city The Guardian Retrieved May 14 2022 Forsyth James 1992 A History of the Peoples of Siberia Russia s North Asian Colony Cambridge University Press p 55 ISBN 978 0521477710 Johanson Lars 2021 Turkic Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 89 Victor P Krivonogov The Dolgans Ethnic Identity and Language Processes Journal of Siberian Federal University Humanities amp Social Sciences 6 2013 6 870 888 The Dolgans in The Red Book of the Peoples of the Russian Empire Federal law on the calculation of time Official internet portal of legal information of the Russian Federation in Russian 1 Archived January 3 2007 at the Wayback Machine Yakovleva Natalia P 2000 Natural resource use in the Russian North a case study of diamond mining in the Republic of Sakha Environmental Management and Health 11 4 318 336 doi 10 1108 09566160010372743 Bohlen Celestine 1992 Poor Region in Russia Lays Claim to Its Diamonds The New York Times Retrieved March 18 2018 Climate Olyokminsk pogodaiklimat ru Retrieved June 12 2017 Climate Oimjakon pogodaikilmat ru Retrieved June 12 2017 Climate Verkhoyansk pogodaiklimat ru Retrieved June 12 2017 Clunate Yakutsk pogodaiklimat ru Retrieved June 12 2017 Meet this extinct cave lion at least 10 000 years old world exclusive siberiantimes com Retrieved January 30 2016 Saplakoglu Yasemin June 10 2019 Severed Head of a Giant 40 000 Year Old Wolf Discovered in Russia Live Science Retrieved May 16 2020 Still snarling after 40 000 years a giant Pleistocene wolf discovered in Yakutia The Siberian Times June 7 2019 Retrieved May 16 2020 Frozen wolf s head found in Siberia is 40 000 years old The Guardian Reuters June 13 2019 Retrieved May 16 2020 Kicki Naslund Short summary of Siberian pre history and cultures Academia edu Jordan Bella Bychkova Jordan Bychkov Terry G 2000 Siberian Village Land and Life in the Sakha Republic University Of Minnesota Press p 38 ISBN 978 0816635696 Scott Polar Research Institute Republic of Sakha Spri cam ac uk Retrieved February 25 2014 A I Gogolev Istoriya Yakutii Obzor istoricheskih sobytij do nachala HH v History of Yakutia Review of Historical Events to the beginning of the 20th century Archived May 27 2005 at the Wayback Machine Yakutsk 1999 Forsyth James 1992 A History of the Peoples of Siberia Russia s North Asian Colony Cambridge University Press pp 167 168 ISBN 978 0521477710 Jordan Bella Bychkova Jordan Bychkov Terry G 2000 Siberian Village Land and Life in the Sakha Republic University Of Minnesota Press pp 64 65 ISBN 978 0816635696 Russian Federal State Statistics Service Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2020 goda Tom 1 2020 All Russian Population Census vol 1 XLS in Russian Federal State Statistics Service Russian Federal State Statistics Service 2011 Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2010 goda Tom 1 2010 All Russian Population Census vol 1 Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2010 goda 2010 All Russia Population Census in Russian Federal State Statistics Service Russian Federal State Statistics Service May 21 2004 Chislennost naseleniya Rossii subektov Rossijskoj Federacii v sostave federalnyh okrugov rajonov gorodskih poselenij selskih naselyonnyh punktov rajonnyh centrov i selskih naselyonnyh punktov s naseleniem 3 tysyachi i bolee chelovek Population of Russia Its Federal Districts Federal Subjects Districts Urban Localities Rural Localities Administrative Centers and Rural Localities with Population of Over 3 000 XLS Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2002 goda All Russia Population Census of 2002 in Russian Vsesoyuznaya perepis naseleniya 1989 g Chislennost nalichnogo naseleniya soyuznyh i avtonomnyh respublik avtonomnyh oblastej i okrugov krayov oblastej rajonov gorodskih poselenij i syol rajcentrov All Union Population Census of 1989 Present Population of Union and Autonomous Republics Autonomous Oblasts and Okrugs Krais Oblasts Districts Urban Settlements and Villages Serving as District Administrative Centers Vsesoyuznaya perepis naseleniya 1989 goda All Union Population Census of 1989 in Russian Institut demografii Nacionalnogo issledovatelskogo universiteta Vysshaya shkola ekonomiki Institute of Demography at the National Research University Higher School of Economics 1989 via Demoscope Weekly Population of Russian Federation on 1 January 2018 GKS Nacionalnyj sostav naseleniya Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved December 30 2022 Vpn 2010 a b c Arena Atlas of Religions and Nationalities in Russia Sreda 2012 2012 Arena Atlas Religion Maps Ogonek 34 5243 27 08 2012 Retrieved 21 04 2017 Archived Yakutia Sakha Faces a Religious Choice Shamanism or Christianity Whose Steeple is Higher Religious Competition in Siberia Elena Dyatlova Yelena Dyatlova October 1 2008 V Yakutii gospodstvuet dvoeverie Ch 1 Yakutia is dominated by a dual belief system Vo mnogih sluchayah nam govorili chto pri sovershenii teh ili inyh obryadov ili prosto dejstvij priglashayut snachala shamana potom svyashennika Pravda imenno v takom poryadke priznavaya hristianstvo chem to vysshim po otnosheniyu k mestnoj magicheskoj yazycheskoj tradicii no eto soedinyaya Dazhe sredi teh predstavitelej yakutskoj intelligencii s kotorymi my obshalis eto stremlenie k sinkretizmu bylo otchetlivo primetno An interview with Maxim Kozlov a Moscow priest who had recently returned from a missionary trip down the Lena along with the Bishop of Yakutsk RELIGARE Sovremennaya religioznaya situaciya v Respublike Saha Yakutiya problemy i perspektivy Religare ru Retrieved February 25 2014 Mihail Efimovich NIKOLAEV Chleny Soveta Federacii Federalnogo Sobraniya RF Government of the Sakha Republic Yakutia Archived from the original on November 11 2007 Retrieved February 18 2010 Turkey seeks to institutionalize relations with Turkic republics Today s Zaman your gateway to Turkish daily news Todayszaman com October 9 2011 Archived from the original on October 14 2013 Retrieved February 25 2014 Turkey and the Turkic Republics Is There a New Vision Archived from the original on January 3 2012 Retrieved May 10 2012 Foreign Relations of the Sakha Republic Yakutia YakutiaToday Com January 1 2008 Retrieved February 25 2014 Vypiski EGRYuL i EGRIP proverka kontragentov INN i KPP organizacij rekvizity IP i OOO SBIS in Russian Retrieved October 20 2018 EnglishRussia com Russian Roads Why the Film Industry Is Booming in the Russian Wilderness Time Sources Edit Verhovnyj Sovet Respubliki Saha Yakutiya 4 aprelya 1992 g Konstituciya osnovnoj zakon Respubliki Saha Yakutiya v red Konstitucionnogo zakona 581 Z 53 IV ot 22 iyulya 2008 g Supreme Council of the Sakha Yakutia Republic April 4 1992 Constitution Basic Law of the Sakha Yakutia Republic as amended by the Constitutional Law 581 Z 53 IV of July 22 2008 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sakha Republic Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Sakha in Russian Official website of the government of Sakha Republic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sakha amp oldid 1130890911, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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