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Revision as of 11:40, 2 May 2008 by DumbBOT (talk | contribs) (removing a protection template from a non-protected page (info))(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) Place in Transnistria, MoldovaBender (Tighina) | |
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Transfiguration Cathedral | |
Flag of Bender (Tighina)FlagOfficial seal of Bender (Tighina)Seal | |
Location of Tighina in Moldova | |
Country | Moldova |
Autonomous Region | Transnistria |
Founded | 1408 |
Government | |
• Mayor | Vyacheslav Kogut |
Area | |
• Total | 97.29 km (37.56 sq mi) |
Population | |
• Total | 97,027 |
Time zone | UTC+2 (EET) |
Bender, also known as Tighina (Template:Lang-mo, Moldovan Cyrillic: Бендер, Тигина; Russian: Бендéры/Bendery; Ukrainian: Бендéри/Bendery) is a city controlled by the authorities of Transnistria, the breakaway region of Moldova, although geographically on the right bank of the river Dniester. Together with the village of Proteagailovca, the city forms a municipality, which Moldova considers separate from Transnistria. Tighina is located in the buffer zone established at the end of the War of Transnistria. While the Joint Control Commission has overriding powers, Transnistria has de facto administrative control over the city and both Moldova and breakaway Transnistria have small police forces in the city.
Name
Known in the middle ages as Tighina (in Romanian sources) and Bender (in Turkish sources), it was called Bender for the most part of the time the city belonged to the Ottoman (1538-1812) and Russian Empires (1812-1917), and as Tighina when it belonged to the Principality of Moldavia (before 1538), in the early part of the Russian Empire (1812-1828), and during the time the city belonged to Romania (1918-1940). During the Soviet period the city was known in the Moldavian SSR as Бендер (Bender) in Moldovan written then with the Cyrillic alphabet, and as Бендéры (Bendery) in Russian. Moldova kept the name Bender after it became independent in 1991. The breakaway authorities of Transnistria (which currently have control over the city) use the names Бендер/Bender, Бендéры/Bendery, and Бендéри/Bendery in Moldovan, Russian, and Ukrainian, respectively.
Population
Year | Population | Moldovans | Russians | Ukrainians | Others |
17 September 1979 | 101,000 | ||||
12 January 1989 | 130,000 | ||||
5 October 2004 | 97,027 | 24,500 | 41,500 | 17,000 | 14,000 |
25.5% | 42.8% | 17.4% | 14.6% |
Administration
Vyacheslav Kogut is the city's current mayor.
History
Tighina was first mentioned as an important customs post in a commerce grant issued by the Moldavian voivode Alexander the Good the merchants of Lviv on October 8 1408. The document is written in Old Slavonic, and the place is named Тягянакача . The name "Tighina" is found in documents from the second half of the 15th century. The town was the main Moldavian custom point on the commercial road linking the country to Tatars' Crimea.
In 1538, the Ottoman sultan Suleiman the Magnificent conquered the town from Moldavia, and renamed it Bender. Its fortress was re-built under the supervision of the Turkish architect Koji Mimar Sinan, and was renamed the Bender Fortress (cf. Turkish language: Bender, "gate"). The Ottomans used it to keep the pressure on Moldavia.Cite error: A <ref>
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(see the help page).
During the second half of the 18th century, the fortress fell three times to the Russians during the Russo-Turkish Wars (in 1770, 1789, and finally in 1806 without a fight).
Along with Bessarabia, the city was annexed to the Russian Empire in 1812, and remained part of the Russian gubernia of Bessarabia until 1917.
As a part of Bessarabia, Tighina belonged to the Moldavian Democratic Republic (1917-1918), and Romania (1918-1940, 1941-1944).
Along with Bessarabia, the city was occupied by the Soviet Union on June 28, 1940, following an ultimatum. In the course of World War II, it was retaken by Romania in July 1941, and again by the USSR in August 1944.
In 1940-41, and 1941-1991 it was one of the four "republican cities" (i.e. not subordinated to a district) of the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic, one of the 15 republics of the Soviet Union. Since 1991, the city is part of the independent Republic of Moldova.
During the War of Transnistria (1992), because of the city's key strategic location on the right bank of Dniester river, 10 km from left-bank Tiraspol, it was the biggest of the three battlefields of that war.
Since 1992, Tighina is formally in the demilitarized zone established at the end of the conflict, but is de facto controlled by Transnistrian authorities. Moldovan authorities control the village of Varniţa, which fringes the city to the north.
Famous natives
Famous people born in the city include:
- Two Ottoman Grand Viziers known as Benderli Pasha
- Lev Simonovich Berg, Jewish Soviet zoologist and geographer
- Tamara Buciuceanu, Romanian actress
- Emil Constantinescu, former President of Romania
- Iuliu Filippovitch Edlis, dramatist, writer
- Evgenii Konstantinovitch Fiodorov, Russian geophysicist
- Jerzy Neyman, Polish statistician
- Michael Postan, British economic historian
- Anna Pavlovna Tanskaia, singer
- Constantin Andronic, artist
References
- A map of Moldova from government site
- Law 764-XV from December 27, 2001 on administrative-territorial organisation of the Republic of Moldova, Monitorul Oficial al Republicii Moldova, no. 16/53, December 29, 2001 (subsequent modifications taken into account)
- Ion Nistor, Istoria Basarabiei, Cernăuţi, 1923, reprint Chişinău, Cartea Moldovenească, 1991, p.76
- The other two were Coşniţa and Cocieri.
External links
Template:Municipality of Tighina, Moldova
Administrative divisions of Moldova | |
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Districts | |
Autonomous territorial units | |
Municipalities | |
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Geography of the Transnistria conflict | |||||||||||||
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belongs to Dubăsari district; belongs to Anenii Noi district; belongs to Căușeni district; also known as Tighina; belongs to Municipality of Bender; belongs to Administrative-Territorial Units of the Left Bank of the Dniester |
46°50′N 29°29′E / 46.833°N 29.483°E / 46.833; 29.483
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