Birsk is a city in Russia (since 1781), the administrative center of the Birsky district of the Republic of Bashkortostan, forms the urban settlement of the city of Birsk.
City in Russia
Birsk is a city in Russia (since 1781), the administrative center of the Birsky district of the Republic of Bashkortostan, forms the urban settlement of the city of Birsk.
Birsk is located on the high right bank of the Belaya River, 98 km from the city of Ufa.
History
This is the second Russian city-fortress in Bashkiria (after Ufa), founded in 1663 as a fortress on the site of the village of Arkhangelsky Kazan road burned during the Bashkir uprising. He played a big role in the settlement of Bashkiria by Russians. Birsk was originally a Russian city, but over time it became multinational. It got its name from the Bir River, which the Tatars called "Bire Sui" - "Wolf Water".
In 1774, the Birsk fortress was taken and burned by the army of Salavat Yulaev, an ally of Pugachev. After the end of the Peasants' War, it was rebuilt. In 1781 it received the status of a county town. Birsk changed its "registration" to the provinces more than once: since 1708 it belonged to the Kazan province, from 1719 to the Ufa province, and from 1796 to the Orenburg province. Now it is located on the territory of the Republic of Bashkortostan.
The inhabitants were engaged in agriculture, cattle breeding, hunting, trade. There were also handicrafts. Before the revolution, the city had a theater, three libraries, three churches, a Birsk foreign teacher's school, a county and 2 parish men's schools, a women's gymnasium, a hospital, and 68 trading shops.
In 1824, Emperor Alexander I visited Birsk. During the Great Patriotic War, the famous composer G.V. Sviridov.
In 1922-1930, Birsk was the center of the Birsk canton of the Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, and from August 20, 1930 - the Birsk region.
Enterprises
Attractions
Settlements of the Birsky District