Chukotsky District
Chukotsky District is an administrative and municipal district, one of the six in Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, Russia. It is the easternmost district of the autonomous okrug and Russia, and the closest part of Russia to the United States. It borders with the Chukchi Sea in the north, the Bering Sea in the east, Providensky District in the south, and the Kolyuchinskaya Bay in the west. The area of the district is. Its administrative center is the rural locality of Lavrentiya. Population: The population of Lavrentiya accounts for 30.2% of the district's total population.
The district is populated mainly by indigenous peoples, the majority being either Chukchi or Yupik. The sparse nature of the population means that this is the only district in the autonomous okrug without any urban localities. The selo of Uelen is located in the district, which is a focal point for indigenous artwork of the region as a whole and the birthplace of Yuri Rytkheu, the first internationally recognized Chukchi writer.
Geography
Chukotsky District covers the northern half of the Chukchi Peninsula, at the northeastern tip of Eurasia. Prior to 1957, the district was substantially larger, as its territory covered not only present-day Chukotsky District, but also present-day Providensky District, as well as a substantial territory now included in Iultinsky District.Uelen—the easternmost settlement on the Eurasian landmass and famous for its whale bone carving—is located on the district's territory. It also features the most easterly point on the Eurasian landmass: Cape Dezhnev, named after Russian navigator Semyon Dezhnyov. It was formerly the setting for a Dalstroy gulag site and the alleged starting point for Clemens Forell's epic journey in the novel As Far as My Feet Will Carry Me.
The district also includes Big Diomede Island, sometimes called Tomorrow Island since it is twenty-one hours ahead of its partner Little Diomede, despite being only away across the sea.
History
For the indigenous peoples, life has been rather static for the last few millennia, judging from archaeological excavations. The region contains about eighty archaeological and historical sites, many of which are in the vicinity of present-day villages.From the view of non-indigenous people, the area now known as Chukotsky District was a formidable place and was only gradually and tentatively explored in comparison with other areas of Chukotka. Semyon Dezhnyov and his Cossacks nearly had their entire fleet destroyed as they attempted to sail around the cape that would ultimately bear his name on their way to the Anadyr River in the mid-17th century. Eighty years later, Vitus Bering sailed through the strait which now bears his name, and five years later, the first maps of the coastline were drawn by the Second Kamchatka Expedition. However, it was not for a further fifty-five years that the coast of the region was visited by James Cook, and a permanent Russian presence in the form of trading posts in any of the villages was not established until the early 1900s.
Prior to the establishment of the current administrative arrangement, Chukotsky Uyezd was founded with its seat in Provideniya Bay in 1909, and in 1912, the seat was moved to Uelen with one of the first schools in the area opening there four years later.
Historical sites in Chukotsky District
There were once many indigenous Yupik settlements throughout Chukotsky District; however, at the end of the 1950s, the Soviet government began a substantial program of relocation, closing a large number of indigenous settlements and relocating their inhabitants to a small number of villages. These settlements were destined to become local hubs and model Soviet villages Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, local indigenous people rely more heavily on their traditional hunting skills and are considering the resettling a number of these villages due to the lack of centralized relocation. The table below outlines some of the more important historical localities within the district.Locality name | Comments |
Аккани/Akkani | Also known as Ыӄынин/Yqynin and Ыӄыт/Yqyt . In 1927, it had a population of eighty-four. This had grown to 165 by 1943 and shrunk to 153 by 1950. In the 1960s, it was abolished and its population moved to Lorino. The hunting camp of Akkani has been temporarily inhabited by hunters and their families from Lorino since the closure of the Akkani settlement in the 1960s; mostly used during the spring and summer hunting season. Sea mammal hunting site: Protected cove for boat landing; bluff at a cape overlooking two bays; the surroundings of the Akkani cape are ice free early and late in the season; close to a preferred walrus watch-out west of Cape Kriguygu; close to berry and plant gathering areas. |
Чегитун/Chegitun | Also known as Чегтун/Chegtun and Сахтуӄ/Sahtuq . Its population grew from 73 in 1927 to 124 in 1943. It was abolished by 1957 at the earliest, when the inhabitants were moved to Inchoun. |
Дежнёво/Dezhnyovo | Also called Каӈисӄаӄ/Kaṇisqaq and Кэӈисӄун/Kėṇisqun, old Chukchi Valkatlian, Enmytagin, and Mikhaylovsky throughout its history. During Soviet times, until its closure in 1951, Dezhnyovo was an important outpost of the Uelen state farm. It was used as a border guard station until 1994. Several remaining cabins are occasionally used by hunting parties. The sheltered bay presents an excellent sea mammal hunting location. The village was formed in 1902 around a trading post run by Olaf Svenson and the Karayev Brothers until 1931, renamed 'Red Star' but closed 1951 with the population moved to Uelen. |
Катрыткино/Katrytkino | Also known as Ӄытрыткын/Qytrytkyn, Kytryn, and Ӄытжын/Qytžyn. It was extremely close to Lorino and was eventually absorbed by it. |
Ильян/Ilyan | Also known as Йиԓен/Yiḷen. Another village in the Mechigmen Bay area Like Mechigmen, it was established in order to hunt Gray whales. |
Кукуни/Kukuni | Also known as Кукъун/Kukʺun and Кукун/Kukun. Kukun is a village analogous to Ilyan. |
Мечигмен/Mechigmen | Also known as Мэчивмэн/Mėchivmėn. A small locality on the north shore of the Mechigmen Bay. In 1927, it had a population of twenty-seven, though it is not certain whether this count is of the population of Mechgmen proper or of Raupelian a village on the northern spit of the Mechigmen Bay, across the water from the village of Masik in Providensky District. By 1950, it was under the jurisdiction of Lorinsky Selsoviet. |
Мыткувԓен/Mytkuvḷen | Also called Мытӄуӷлаӄ/Mytquǥlaq and Миткулино/Mitkulino it was a small locality of 27 residents in 1927. Its name derives from the Chukchi word "Mytkuvḷen", meaning "much oil/blubber", due to the fact that the coast here has a concave bend where the current washes ashore dead whales and walrus which were used for oil and dog food. |
Наукан/Naukan | Also known as Нууӄан/Nuuqan and Нывуӄаӄ/Nyvuqaq. Its name derives from the Naukan Yupik word "Nyvuqaq", meaning "cespitose". This village was a cultural center of the Naukan Yupik and developed its own branch of the language. Naukan, situated on the easternmost point of the Chukotsky Peninsula, was a key trading post linking those Chukchi who engaged in reindeer herding in the tundra and American sea hunters. The Chukchi herders provided meat and skins, while their Alaskan partners provided blubber and American goods. In 1947, Naukan received the families resettled from Ratmanov. In 2004 an orthodox cross was erected next to Deshnov’s monument. Warm micro-climate: People from Uelen occasionally go to Naukan to gather wild onions. It was a major center of Eskimo culture until closed in 1958 by Soviet authorities, people moved to Nunyamo, Pinakul, Lavrentiya, Uelen. |
Нунямо/Nunyamo | Also known as Нунама/Nunama and Нунъэмун/Nunʺėmun, this locality was populated solely by Chukchi until 1958, having been previously a Yupik village in the 18th century as evidenced by old ruins and archeological finds. In 1958, following the closure of Naukan, the village became a mixed Chukchi/Yupik settlement until 1970, when the population were moved to Lorino, Lavrentiya, and Uelen. |
Поутэн/Pouten | Also known as Пиӽтуӄ/Piḥtuq and Пуʼутэн/Puʼutėn. Its name derives from the Chukchi word пуэʼпуй or пуйъэпуй, meaning "soot". This is a site of two villages and was occasionally used as a border guard station. In pre-Soviet times, American geologists extracted graphite from shaft mines in the surrounding mountains and the pigments extracted were used by the indigenous population for decoration and ritual activity The site is still used by local people as a stopping point and a shelter on fishing trips. The southern village's population was moved to Lorino, while the northern village's population was moved to Uelen. People from these settlements still use the site as a temporary camp. |
Сешан/Seshan | Also known as Чечаӈэн/Čečaṇėn and Сисаӈиӄ/Sisaṇiq. Seshan had 114 residents in 1940, all bar one of whom were indigenous. Assumed to have been closed in the 1950s. |
Тойгунен/Toygunen | Also known as Тойгуӈынӷуӄ/Toyguṇynǥuq and Тойвыӈынвын/Toyvyṇynvyn. A locality of 89 residents between 1946 and 1950 that had grown from just 13 in 1927. It was located five miles east of Cape Dzhenretlen and was established in the early 20th century by American gold prospectors based there who built wooden houses. Its name derives from the Chukchi word Toyvyngynvyn, meaning "new fortress/wooden house". |
Яндагай/Yandagay | Also known as Яндагай/Yandagay, Янраӈай/Yanraṇay and Янраӈаӄ/Yanraṇaq , and Yanranak. This was a locality on the southwest entrance to Saint Lawrence Bay between Akkani and Kotrytkino. In 1927, it had a population of 169, falling to 117 in 1950. In the 1950s, it was abolished and its population moved to Lorino. |
Demographics
Chukotsky District has the highest percentage of indigenous peoples in the whole of Chukotka, with 85% of people being of native origin. The native peoples are primarily Chukchi, but there are also small populations of Evens, Koryaks, and Yupik.The remaining 15% of the population is of non-indigenous origin, mainly Russian. These people either migrated to the Far East or are the descendants of those who did, enticed by the higher pay, large pensions, and more generous allowances permitted to those prepared to endure the cold and the isolation, as well as those who were exiled here as a result of the Stalin's purges or after having been released from the gulag.
Economy
Unlike with most other districts of Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, Chukotsky District's economy is much more focused on traditional marine hunting and reindeer herding. This is in part because, at around 85%, Chukotsky District has the highest percentage of indigenous peoples in the autonomous okrug. There is next to no industrial activity in this district, with the population mainly involved in reindeer herding, fishing, and seal hunting, with an administrative program in place to ensure that local indigenous peoples receive material incentives to continue with their traditional way of life.Culture
Although many native rural localities in the autonomous okrug have historical museums documenting the culture of the indigenous peoples, Chukotsky District has a particularly strong cultural tradition, with Uelen being a notable hub, particularly for whale bone carving. Famous for its walrus ivory carvings, Uelen has long been a major artistic center in the region, with several of the leading exponents of the craft, such as Vukvutagin, Vukvol, Tukkay, and Khukhutan, working out of Uelen. It is also home to an indigenous choir which has a history of cultural collaboration with their Inuit cousins across the Bering Strait in Alaska.The village also serves as the base for archaeological expeditions to the area, which have uncovered a burial ground containing over three hundred burials of early Whale Hunter cultures, covering a time span from 500 BCE to 1000 CE. These excavations have shown that Uelen was a major settlement in the first centuries CE. In addition to revealing the existence of a culture dependent on whale and walrus hunting, archeologists also unearthed early examples of the indigenous peoples ivory carvings, a number of which are now held at the Peter the Great Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography in St. Petersburg.
The writer Yuri Rytkheu was born in Uelen in 1930 to a family of trappers and hunters and was the first Chukchi author to achieve national prominence. His book A Dream in Polar Fog deals with the Chukchi people's efforts to adapt when a foreigner is shipwrecked on their shores.
The district hosts the dog sled race "Hope" and the sea hunters' "Beringiya" festival.
Administrative and municipal status
Within the framework of administrative divisions, Chukotsky District is one of the six in the autonomous okrug. The selo of Lavrentiya serves as its administrative center. The district does not have any lower-level administrative divisions and has administrative jurisdiction over six rural localities.As a municipal division, the district is incorporated as Chukotsky Municipal District and is divided into six rural settlements.
Inhabited localities
Rural settlements | Population | Male | Female | Rural localities in jurisdiction* |
Enurmino | 301 | 139 | 162 |
|
Inchoun | 387 | 185 | 202 |
|
Lavrentiya | 1459 | 703 | 756 |
|
Lorino | 1267 | 628 | 639 |
|
Neshkan | 704 | 352 | 352 |
|
Uelen | 720 | 368 | 352 |
|
- Administrative centers are shown in bold
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