Results for Karakalpak Republic
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Columbia Encyclopedia: Karakalpak Republic
('rəkŭlpäk') , autonomous republic (1992 pop. 1,312,000), c.61,000 sq mi (158,000 sq km), W Uzbekistan, on the Amu Darya River. Nukus is the capital. The republic comprises parts of the Ustyurt plateau, the Kyzyl Kum desert, and the Amu Darya delta on the Aral Sea. It is the major Central Asian producer of alfalfa; other crops are cotton, rice, corn, and jute. Livestock raising (notably cattle and Karakul sheep) and silkworm breeding are widespread. There are many light industries. The population, concentrated in the delta, consists of Turkic-speaking Karakalpaks (31%), Uzbeks (31%), Kazakhs (26%), Turkmens, Russians, and Tatars. The Karakalpak, known since the 16th cent., when they lived along the lower and middle courses of the Syr Darya River, were partly subjugated by the Kazakhs. In the 18th cent. they migrated to their present homeland and in the 19th cent. came under the rule of the khanate of Khiva. The khanate passed under Russian control at the end of the 19th cent. and under Bolshevik control by 1920. The Karakalpak Autonomous Region was formed in 1925 within the Kazakh Autonomous Republic. It became an autonomous republic itself in 1932 and was transferred to the Uzbek SSR (now Uzbekistan) in 1936. The economy and the environment in Karakalpak are deteriorating due to the evaporation of the Aral Sea and misuse of agricultural chemicals.


 
 
Wikipedia: Karakalpakstan
Qoraqalpoghiston Respublikasi
Қарақалпақстан Республикасы
Republic of Karakalpakstan
Flag of Karakalpakstan
Location of Karakalpakstan
Political map of Karakalpakstan
Image:LocationKarakalpakstan.png
Location of Karakalpakstan in green
Capital Nukus
Official languages Karakalpak, Uzbek
Demonym Karakalpak
Government Autonomous republic of Uzbekistan
 -  President of the republic Musa Yerniyazov [1]
Area
 -  Total  km² 
 sq mi 
Population
 -  2005 estimate 1,200,000 
 -  Density 7.5/km² 
 /sq mi
Currency Som (UZS)
Internet TLD .qr

Karakalpakstan (Uzbek: Qoraqalpoghiston Respublikasi or Қорақалпоғистон Республикаси; Karakalpak: Қарақалпақстан Республикасы or Qaraqalpaqstan Respublikası) is an autonomous republic of Uzbekistan. It occupies the whole western end of Uzbekistan. The capital is Nukus (Karakalpak: Nökis or Нөкис). The Republic of Karakalpakstan has an area of  square kilometers ( sq mi). Its territory covers the classical land of Khwarezm, though in classical Persian literature, the area was known as "Kāth".

Demographics

The population of Karakalpakstan is estimated at 1,200,000, of whom 400,000 are of the Karakalpak ethnic group, 400,000 are Uzbek, and 300,000 are Kazakh. The Karakalpak were formerly nomadic herders and fishers, and were first mentioned in the 16th century. Their name means "Black Hat", but Karakalpak culture was so lost through Sovietization that the original meaning of the black hat is now unknown. The Karakalpak language is considered closer to Kazakh than to Uzbek. Indeed there are accusations that the ethnic group was an invention of the Soviet government to divide the Kazakh population. The language was written in a modified Cyrillic in Soviet times, and in the Latin alphabet since 1996.

Other than the capital Nukus, large cities include Hojeli (Uzbek: Hujayli; Russian Khodzheyli), a site of extensive Khorezm ruins and Moynaq, (Uzbek: Maynoq; Russian Muynak), a former Aral Sea port now several miles inland.

Economy

The economy of the region, formerly heavily dependent on fisheries, is now supported by cotton, rice and melons. Hydroelectric power from a large Soviet-built station on the Amu Darya is also important.

The Amu Darya delta was once heavily populated, and supported extensive irrigation based agriculture for thousands of years. Under the Khorezm, the area attained considerable power and prosperity. However, the gradual climate change over the centuries, accelerated by the Aral Sea ecological disaster of the late 20th century has created a science-fiction like nightmare for Karakalpakstan. The ancient oasis of rivers, lakes, reed marshes, forests and farms are drying up, and being poisoned by wind-borne salt and chemicals from the dried bed of the Aral Sea. Allegedly summer temperatures have risen 10 degrees Celsius and winter temperatures have decreased by 10 degrees Celsius, and the number of health and respiratory problems has risen dramatically.

See also

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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Karakalpakstan" Read more

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Mentioned In:

  • Nukus (city, Uzbekistan)
  • Ustyurt (geographical area, Asia)
  • Karakalpaks (Russian history)
  • Turkistan (region, China/Afghanistan/Kazakhstan/Turkmenistan/Uzbekistan/Tajikistan/Kyrgyzstan)