Kamyshin (English) Камышин (Russian) |
|
---|---|
- City - | |
View of Kamyshin from the Volgograd Reservoir |
|
Location of Volgograd Oblast in Russia |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Administrative status (as of February 2010) | |
Country | Russia |
Federal subject | Volgograd Oblast |
Administratively subordinated to | city of oblast significance of Kamyshin |
Administrative center of | Kamyshinsky District, city of oblast significance of Kamyshin |
Municipal status (as of December 2004) | |
Urban okrug | Kamyshin Urban Okrug |
Administrative center of | Kamyshin Urban Okrug, Kamyshinsky Municipal District |
Head | Alexander Chunakov |
Statistics | |
Population (2010 Census) | 119,565 inhabitants |
- Rank in 2010 | 136th |
Time zone | MSK (UTC+03:00) |
Founded | 1667 |
City status since | 1780 |
Previous names | Dmitriyevsk (until 1780) |
Postal code(s) | 403870—403895 |
Dialing code(s) | +7 84457 |
|
|
on |
Kamyshin (Russian: Камы́шин) is a city in Volgograd Oblast, Russia, located on the right bank of the Volgograd Reservoir of the Volga River, in the estuary of the Kamyshinka River. Population: 119,565 (2010 Census);127,891 (2002 Census);122,463 (1989 Census); 101,000 (1972); 24,000 (1939).
It was founded in 1667 on the left bank of the Kamyshinka River. In 1710, all of its inhabitants were relocated to the fortress of Dmitriyevsk (Дмитриевск) on the opposite bank of the river. In 1780, the name was changed to Kamyshin and it was granted town status. In the 19th century, Kamyshin turned into a merchant city with sawmills and windmills. It was formerly famous for its watermelon trade.
Near Kamyshin, the Volga is quite close—17 kilometers (11 mi)—to the upper reaches of the Ilovlya River, the tributary of the Don. The distance between the sources of the Kamyshinka River, the tributary of the Volga, and the Ilovlya is only a little more than 4 kilometers (2.5 mi). In this place in ancient times there existed a portage ("volok") many times used by the troops invading the land of the Khazars, and moving from the Don basin to the Volga. In the 16th century, the Turkish Sultan Selim II attempted to build a canal here. A similar effort was later made by Peter the Great who built the fort, originally named Petrovsk, to protect workmen during the (unfinished) construction of the canal.