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Zabaykalsk

Zabaykalsk (English)
Забайка́льск (Russian)
-  Urban-type settlement  -
Map of Russia - Zabaykalsky Krai (2008-03).svg
Location of Zabaykalsky Krai in Russia
Zabaykalsk is located in Zabaykalsky Krai
Zabaykalsk
Zabaykalsk
Location of Zabaykalsk in Zabaykalsky Krai
Coordinates: 49°39′05″N 117°19′37″E / 49.65139°N 117.32694°E / 49.65139; 117.32694Coordinates: 49°39′05″N 117°19′37″E / 49.65139°N 117.32694°E / 49.65139; 117.32694
Coat of Arms of Zabaikalsk (Chita oblast).png
Coat of Arms
Administrative status
Country Russia
Federal subject Zabaykalsky Krai
Administrative district Zabaykalsky District
Administrative center of Zabaykalsky District
Municipal status
Municipal district Zabaykalsky Municipal District
Urban settlement Zabaykalskoye Urban Settlement
Administrative center of Zabaykalskoye Urban Settlement
Statistics
Population (2010 Census) 11,769 inhabitants
Time zone YAKT (UTC+09:00)
Otpor station 1904
Urban-type settlement status since 1954
Postal code(s) 674650
Dialing code(s) +7 674650
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Zabaykalsk (Russian: Забайка́льск) is an urban locality (an urban-type settlement) and the administrative center of Zabaykalsky District of Zabaykalsky Krai, Russia, located on the Sino-Russian border just opposite the Chinese border town of Manzhouli. Population: 11,769 (2010 Census);10,210 (2002 Census);8,632 (1989 Census).

The formerly disputed Abagaitu Islet in the Argun River is located about 100 kilometers (62 mi) to the east.

It was founded in 1904 as a station (Razyezd 86, i.e. "Passing loop No. 86") on the Chinese Eastern Railway.

Since 1924, a border guard detachment has been stationed there. In the aftermath of the Sino-Soviet conflict (1929) the station was renamed Otpor ("Repulse").

Until the mid-1930s, Razyezd 86 / Otpor had little significance as a station, as all border formalities were done at Matsiyevskaya station (deeper into Russia) and at Manzhouli, on the Chinese side of the border. The station was expanded in the mid-1930s, as the railway on the Chinese side had been sold by the USSR to Manchukuo and converted from the 1,520 mm (4 ft 11 2732 in) gauge of the Russian Railways to the 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) China Railways; Otpor thus became the last Russian-gauge station. The station became quite important in 1945, as one of the bases of the Soviet invasion of Manchuria (1945), which also saw the rail line on the Chinese side temporary re-converted to Russian gauge. The station's importance continued as the main rail connection between the USSR and the Communist China. On China's request, in 1958 the Soviets changed the name "Otpor" to the neutral Zabaykalsk (i.e., "a city in Transbaikalia", or "a city beyond Lake Baikal").


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