Olonetsky District
Олонецкий район | |
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Coordinates: 60°59′N 32°58′E / 60.983°N 32.967°E | |
Country | Russia |
Federal subject | Republic of Karelia[1] |
Established | 29 August 1927 |
Administrative center | Olonets[2] |
Area | |
• Total | 3,988 km2 (1,540 sq mi) |
Population | |
• Total | 23,124 |
• Density | 5.8/km2 (15/sq mi) |
• Urban | 39.2% |
• Rural | 60.8% |
Administrative structure | |
• Inhabited localities[5] | 1 cities/towns, 64 rural localities |
Municipal structure | |
• Municipally incorporated as | Olonetsky Municipal District[6] |
• Municipal divisions[7] | 1 urban settlements, 8 rural settlements |
Time zone | UTC+3 (MSK [8]) |
OKTMO ID | 86630000 |
Website | http://www.olon-rayon.ru |
Olonetsky District (Russian: Оло́нецкий райо́н; Karelian: Anuksen piiri) is an administrative district (raion), one of the fifteen in the Republic of Karelia, Russia.[1]
Its administrative center is the town of Olonets.[2]
Olonetsky district is equated to the districts of the far north.
Refers to national areas.
About 90% of the district's territory is occupied by forests and swamps. There are 49 lakes and 11 rivers on the territory of the district.
The nature of the relief is mainly flat. In the north and east of the district there are hills, the most significant is Mount Zheleznaya (97 m).
The climate is mild, moderately continental. The average temperature in January is -9.9 °C, in July — +16.5 °C. The average annual precipitation is 584 mm.
The district was formed on August 29, 1927 as part of the Autonomous Karelian SSR. In 1930, the Vidlitsky district of the Autonomous Karelian SSR became part of the district.
During the Soviet-Finnish War (1941-1944), the territory of the district was occupied. The territory of the district was liberated by Soviet troops in the summer of 1944 during the Svir-Petrozavodsk operation.
On May 23, 1957, part of the territory of the abolished Pitkyarantsky district was annexed to the Olonetsky district.[10]
Within the framework of administrative divisions, Olonetsky District is one of the fifteen in the Republic of Karelia[1] and has administrative jurisdiction over one town (Olonets) and sixty-four rural localities.[5] As a municipal division, the district is incorporated as Olonetsky Municipal District.[6] The town of Olonets and eight rural localities are incorporated into an urban settlement, while the remaining fifty-six rural localities are incorporated into eight rural settlements within the municipal district.[7] The town of Olonets serves as the administrative center of both the administrative[2] and municipal[6] district.
The basis of the district's economy is the forestry industry, timber processing and agriculture (crop production, meat and dairy farming, animal husbandry). Tourism activity is developing.
The federal highway «Kola» passes through the district.
The district is connected by regular bus routes with Petrozavodsk, St. Petersburg, Sortavala. Commuter flights from Olonets to Verkhny Olonets, Vidlitsa, Ilyinsky, Tuksy, Kovera, Megrega, Rypushkalitsa and Verkhovye.
Railway line Yanisjarvi — Lodeynoye Pole.
More than 130 monuments of historical and cultural heritage have been preserved on the territory of the district.[11]
Olonetsky District is the only district in the republic where Karelians form a majority of the population (63.4% in 1989).[citation needed] Natural population growth rate was -12.02 per 1,000 in 1994.[citation needed]
2010 Census | 23,124[4] |
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2002 Census | 27,034[12] |
1989 Census | 30,497[13] |
1979 Census | 29,616[14] |
Artamonov Ivan Ilyich (1914-1985) — Hero of the Soviet Union, a native of the village of Stepannavolok.
Vladimir Egorovich Brandoev (1931-1990) was a Karelian poet and translator, a native of Berezhnaya village.
Mikhail Konstantinovich Kononov (1923-2005) was an economic and party leader, a native of the city of Olonets.
Ivan Petrovich Kuzmin (1928-2002) — Honored School teacher of the RSFSR, a native of the village of Matchezero.
Heroes of Socialist Labor worked in the district — I. V. Chaikin, S. V. Sablin, F. F. Koshkin.