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Arkhyz

Arkhyz (English)
Архыз (Russian)
-  Rural locality  -
Архыз-1.jpg
The village of Arkhyz
Map of Russia - Karachay-Cherkess Republic (2008-03).svg
Location of the Karachay-Cherkess Republic in Russia
Arkhyz is located in Karachay-Cherkessia
Arkhyz
Arkhyz
Location of Arkhyz in the Karachay-Cherkess Republic
Coordinates: 43°33′54″N 41°16′44″E / 43.565°N 41.278889°E / 43.565; 41.278889Coordinates: 43°33′54″N 41°16′44″E / 43.565°N 41.278889°E / 43.565; 41.278889
Administrative status
Country Russia
Federal subject Karachay–Cherkessia
Municipal status
Municipal district Zelenchuksky District
Rural settlement Arkhyz Rural District
Statistics
Population (2010 Census) 505 inhabitants
Time zone MSK (UTC+03:00)
Founded 1923
Postal code(s) 369152
on

Arkhyz (Russian/Karachay-Balkar: Архыз; "mudflows") is a village in the valley of the Bolshoy Zelenchuk River, in the Republic of Karachay–Cherkessia, Greater Caucasus, Russia, about 70 km inland from the Black Sea shore. The modern village was founded in 1923 near the confluence of the Arkhyz and Pshish rivers. It is located in a mountainous region in the vicinity of the eponymous aul sitting at an altitude of 1,450 meters. The elevation of the surrounding mountains is more than 3,000 meters above the sea. The population is 505 (2010 Census).

The Zelenchuksky Churches are an archaeological preserve extending for 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) around the ruins of Nizhnearkhyzskoe gorodishche, tentatively identified as the medieval capital of Alania, a Christian state destroyed by the hordes of Möngke Khan in the 13th century. No Byzantine document mentions the name of this city, whereas al-Mas'udi refers to it as Ma'as, or Maghas.

The most remarkable feature of the site is a cluster of three early medieval churches, whose construction is associated with the missionary activities of Patriarch Nicholas Mystikos in the Northern Caucasus. These structures bear much resemblance to the Shoana Church and Senty Church, situated in the neighbouring valleys. In the 19th century the churches were affiliated with the monastery of St. Alexander Nevsky. A monastic community was revived there after the fall of the Soviet Union.


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