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Khabarovsk Russian Хабаровск xɐˈbarəfsk is the largest city and the administrative centre of Khabarovsk Krai Russia loca

Khabarovsk

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Khabarovsk
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Khabarovsk (Russian: Хабаровск [xɐˈbarəfsk] ) is the largest city and the administrative centre of Khabarovsk Krai, Russia, located 30 kilometers (19 mi) from the China–Russia border, at the confluence of the Amur and Ussuri Rivers, about 800 kilometers (500 mi) north of Vladivostok. As of the 2021 Russian census, it had a population of 617,441. It was known as Khabarovka until 1893.

Khabarovsk
Хабаровск
City
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View of Khabarovsk looking down the Ussuriysky Boulevard
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Flag
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Coat of arms
Anthem: Anthem of Khabarovsk
Location of Khabarovsk
Map
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Khabarovsk
Location of Khabarovsk
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Khabarovsk
Khabarovsk (Khabarovsk Krai)
Show map of Khabarovsk Krai
Coordinates: 48°29′N 135°05′E / 48.483°N 135.083°E / 48.483; 135.083
CountryRussia
Federal subjectKhabarovsk Krai
FoundedMay 31, 1858
City status since1880
Government
 • Body
 • MayorSergey Kravchuk
Area
 • Total
230 km2 (90 sq mi)
Elevation
72 m (236 ft)
Population
 (2010 Census)
 • Total
577,441
 • Estimate 
(January 2023)
617,000
 • Rank26th in 2010
 • Density2,500/km2 (6,500/sq mi)
Administrative status
 • Subordinated tocity of krai significance of Khabarovsk
 • Capital ofKhabarovsk Krai, city of krai significance of Khabarovsk
Municipal status
 • Urban okrugKhabarovsk Urban Okrug
 • Capital ofKhabarovsk Urban Okrug, Khabarovsky Municipal District
Time zoneUTC+10 (MSK+7 image)
Postal code(s)
680000–680003, 680006, 680007, 680009, 680011–680015, 680017, 680018, 680020–680023, 680025, 680026, 680028–680033, 680035, 680038, 680040–680043, 680045, 680047, 680051, 680052, 680054, 680055, 680700, 680880, 680890, 680899, 680921, 680950, 680960–680967, 680970, 680999, 901183, 901185
Dialing code(s)+7 4212
OKTMO ID08701000001
City DayLast Sunday of May
Websitekhabarovskadm.ru

The city was the administrative center of the Far Eastern Federal District of Russia from 2002 until December 2018, when the status was given to Vladivostok. As is typical of the interior of the Russian Far East, Khabarovsk has an extreme climate with strong seasonal swings resulting in strong, cold winters and relatively hot and humid summers.

History

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Native villages near the site of the future Khabarovsk according to an English map of 1773. The village closest to today's Khabarovsk is labeled "Hitcha". Maack's "Cape Kyrma" site (thought by B.P. Polyakov to be the site of Stepanov's Kosogorsky Ostrog) is "Heremo"

Earliest record

Historical records indicate that a city was founded on the site in the eighth century. The Tungusic peoples are indigenous to the city's vicinity. The city was named Boli (伯力; Bólì) in Chinese when it was part of the Chinese empire. During the Tang dynasty, Boli was the capital of Heishui Protectorate, called Heishui Duhufu. In AD 722, Emperor Xuanzong of Tang (唐玄宗) established Heishui Protectorate and gave self-rule to Heishui Mohe tribes. The seat of this administrative region was then established near today's Khabarovsk.

17th-century Russian exploration

In the mid-17th century, the Amur Valley became the scene of hostilities between the Russian Cossacks, who tried to expand into the region and collect tribute from the natives, and the rising Manchu Qing dynasty, who were intent on securing the region for themselves.[citation needed] The coastal areas had historically been the native home of the Manchu people.

Khabarov's Achansk

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Monument to Yerofey Khabarov in Khabarovsk.

The Russian explorers and raiders of the 1650s set up a number of more or less fortified camps (ostrogs) on the Amur. Most of them were in use for only a few months and later destroyed. It is usually thought that the first such camp in the general area of today's Khabarovsk was the fortified winter camp named Achansk (Ачанск) or Achansky gorodok (Ачанский городок), built by the Cossacks of Yerofey Khabarov in September 1651 after they had sailed to the area from the upper Amur. The fort was named after the local tribe whom Khabarov's people called "Achans". On October 8 the fort was unsuccessfully attacked by joint forces of Achans and Duchers (who had good reasons to hate the Cossacks, due to their rather heavy-handed tribute-extraction tactics), while many Russians were away fishing. In late November, Khabarov's people undertook a three-day campaign against the local chief Zhakshur (Жакшур) (whose name is also known in a more Russian version, Zaksor (Заксор)), collecting a large amount of tribute and announcing that the locals were now subjects of the Russian Czar. A similar campaign was waged later in winter against the Ducher chief Nechiga (Нечига), farther away from Achansk.

On 24 or 26 March 1652, Fort Achansk was attacked by Manchu cavalry, led by Ninguta's commander Haise, reinforced by Ducher auxiliaries, but the Cossacks stood their ground in a day-long battle and even managed to seize the attackers' supply train. Once the ice on the Amur broke in the spring of 1652, Khabarov's people destroyed their fort and sailed away.

The exact location of Khabarov's Achansk has long been a subject for debate among Russian historians and geographers. A number of locations, both upstream and downstream of today's Khabarovsk, have been proposed since Richard Maack, one of the first Russian scholars to visit the region, identified Achansk in 1859 with the ruins on Cape Kyrma, which is located on the southern (Chinese) shore of the Amur, upstream of Khabarovsk. The most widely accepted point of view is probably that of Boris Polevoy, who believed that Khabarov's Achansk was located in the Nanai village later known as Odzhal-Bolon (Russian: Оджал-Болонь), located on the left bank of the Amur, closer to Amursk than to Khabarovsk. One of his arguments was that both Khabarov's Achan (sometimes also spelt by the explorer as Otshchan, Отщан), and Wuzhala (乌扎拉) of the Chinese records of the 1652 engagement are based on the name of the Nanai clan "Odzhal" (Оджал), corresponding to the 20th-century name of the village as well. (The name of the clan was also written as "Uzala", as in the name of its best-known member, Dersu Uzala).

Polevoy's view appeared to gain wide support among the Russian geographer community; petitioned by the Amur Branch of the Russian Geographical Society, the Russian Government renamed the village of Odzhal to Achan in 1977, to celebrate its connection with Khabarov's raid.

As to the Cape Kyrma ruins, thought by Maack to be the remains of Achansk, B.P. Polevoy identified them as the remains of another ostrog – namely, Kosogorsky Ostrog, where Onufriy Stepanov stayed a few years later.

Qing Empire

After the Treaty of Nerchinsk (1689) between the Tsardom of Russia and the Qing Empire, the area became an uncontested part of China for the next century and a half. Modern historical maps of the Qing period published in China mark the site of future Khabarovsk as Bólì (Chinese: 伯力). All of the middle and lower Amur region was nominally part of the Jilin Province, run first out of Ninguta and later out of Jilin City.

French Jesuits who sailed along the Ussuri and the Amur Rivers in 1709 prepared the first more or less precise map of the region. According to them, the indigenous Nanai people were living on the Ussuri and on the Amur down to the mouth of the Dondon River (i.e., in the region including the site of the future Khabarovsk). These people were known to the Chinese as Yupi Dazi ("Fish skin Tartars").

From Khabarovka to Khabarovsk

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Khabarovsk – residence of the governor-general of Amur region 1895

In 1858, the area was ceded to Russia under the Treaty of Aigun. The Russians founded the military outpost of Khabarovka (Хаба́ровка), named after Yerofey Khabarov. The post later became an important industrial center for the region. Town status was granted in 1880. In 1893, it was given its present name: Khabarovsk.

In 1894, a department of the Russian Geographical Society was formed in Khabarovsk and to found libraries, theatres and museums in the city. Since then, Khabarovsk's cultural life has flourished. Much of the local indigenous history has been well preserved in the Regional Lore Museum and Natural History Museum and in places like near the Nanai settlement of Sikachi-Alyan, where cliff drawings from more than 13,000 years ago can be found. The Khabarovsk Art Museum exhibits a rare collection of old Russian icons.

In 1916, the Khabarovsk Bridge across the Amur was completed, allowing Trans-Siberian trains to cross the river without using ferries (or temporary rail tracks over the frozen river in winter). During the Russian Civil War, Khabarovsk was occupied by Japan in September 1918.

Soviet era

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Khabarovsk (1950)

By the Decree of the Council of Labor and Defense of December 11, 1933, the Directorate of Road Construction of Eastern Siberia and the Far East (Daldorstroy) was created in Khabarovsk, with the task of constructing strategic highways according to the list of the government of the USSR, in the regions of Eastern Siberia and the Soviet Far East. The construction plans were announced at the 17th Congress of the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks), held in Moscow from January-February 1934, when the Second Five-Year Plan for the development of the Soviet Union was adopted. In accordance with it, it was planned to build a Vladivostok-Khabarovsk highway, with a hard (gravel) surface, 600 kilometers long.

After the defeat of Japan in World War II, Khabarovsk was the site of the Khabarovsk War Crime Trials, in which twelve former members of the Japanese Kwantung Army and Unit 731 were put on trial for the manufacture and use of biological weapons during World War II.

Chinese Emperor Puyi, captured by Soviet troops in Manchuria, was relocated to Khabarovsk and lived there from 1945 up to 1950, when he was returned to China.

When Japan fell in September 1945 the United States reached an agreement with Stalin to build two U.S. Naval Advance Bases (Fleet Weather Centrals) in the USSR. The U.S. built one 10 miles (16 km) outside Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky on the Kamchatka Peninsula with the code name TAMA. The other was 20 miles (32 km) outside Khabarovsk in buildings provided by the Soviets, code-named MOKO. For mail Khabarovsk was assigned U.S.Navy number 1168, FPO San Francisco. The American use of these two bases was short-lived.[citation needed]

On 5 November 1956, the first phase of the city tram was commissioned. The Khabarovsk television studio began broadcasting in 1960. On 1 September 1967, the Khabarovsk Institute of Physical Education, now the , opened. On 14 January 1971, Khabarovsk was awarded the Order of October Revolution. In 1975 the first stage of the urban trolley opened. In 1976 the city hosted an international ice hockey tournament with the ball for the prize of the newspaper Sovietskaya Rossia. In 1981 the Bandy World Championship was played in the city.

Russian Federation

In 1996, Khabarovsk held its first mayoral elections. Paul D. Filippov, whose candidacy was supported by Governor Viktor Ishayev, was defeated. In 1998, reconstruction of the central square of Khabarovsk was completed. In May 2000, President of Russia, Vladimir Putin, decreed that new federal districts be formed, and Khabarovsk became the center of the Far Eastern Federal District.

In 2006, the Center for Cardiovascular Surgery, a high-tech medical center, was constructed according to a Russian national health project. In 2008, the train station was completely renovated, and the adjacent square was reconstructed to include fountains and an underground passage. In 2009, Khabarovsk hosted the EU-Russia summit. In 2010, the city hosted a meeting of the Great Circle of Ussuri Cossacks. On 3 November 2012, Khabarovsk was awarded the honorary title of "City of Military Glory".

On 9 July 2020, the governor of the region, Sergei Furgal, was arrested and flown to Moscow. The 2020 Khabarovsk Krai protests began on 11 July 2020 in support of Furgal.

Flag

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Flag of the city of Khabarovsk.

The flag of Khabarovsk displays a bear on the right (Red side) and a Siberian tiger on the left (blue side), holding a yellow shield with a blue reversed pall and a red fish. The flag is a representation of the coat of arms of Khabarovsk. The flag was adopted on 30 October 2007 and is 2:3 in ratio.

Geography

The city is located 30 kilometers (19 mi) from the China–Russia border, at the confluence of the Amur and Ussuri Rivers, about 800 kilometers (500 mi) north of Vladivostok.

Climate

Khabarovsk experiences a monsoonal dry-winter humid continental climate (Köppen climate classification Dwb borders on Dwa, Trewartha climate classification Dcbc bordering on Dcac). Its climate is strongly continental, featuring very warm summers and bitterly cold winters.

The average annual precipitation is 696 millimeters (27.4 in), mainly concentrated in the summer. In a few years, November to March hardly receive any precipitation. The driest year was 2001 with only 381 millimeters (15.0 in) of precipitation and the wettest was 1981 when 1,105 millimeters (43.5 in) of precipitation fell. The wettest month was August 1981 with a total precipitation of 434 millimeters (17.1 in). Due to high summer humidity, overnight lows remain mild to warm during several months. Snowfall is common, though light, with an average maximum snow height of 16 centimeters (6.3 in). During peak winter, highs above freezing are very rare.

The city's extreme climate sees daily average high and low temperatures vary by around 50 °C (90 °F) over the course of the year. The average temperature in January is −19.2 °C (−2.6 °F) and the average for July is +21.4 °C (70.5 °F). Extremes have ranged from +36.4 °C (97.5 °F) in June 2010 to −40 °C (−40 °F) in January 2011.

Climate data for Khabarovsk (1991–2020, extremes 1878–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 0.6
(33.1)
6.3
(43.3)
17.0
(62.6)
28.6
(83.5)
31.5
(88.7)
36.4
(97.5)
35.7
(96.3)
35.6
(96.1)
29.8
(85.6)
26.4
(79.5)
15.5
(59.9)
6.6
(43.9)
36.4
(97.5)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) −14.9
(5.2)
−9.9
(14.2)
−1.0
(30.2)
10.5
(50.9)
19.2
(66.6)
23.8
(74.8)
26.8
(80.2)
24.9
(76.8)
19.7
(67.5)
10.6
(51.1)
−2.8
(27.0)
−13.6
(7.5)
7.8
(46.0)
Daily mean °C (°F) −19.2
(−2.6)
−14.9
(5.2)
−5.9
(21.4)
4.8
(40.6)
12.9
(55.2)
18.0
(64.4)
21.4
(70.5)
19.9
(67.8)
14.1
(57.4)
5.4
(41.7)
−6.9
(19.6)
−17.4
(0.7)
2.7
(36.9)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) −23.1
(−9.6)
−19.6
(−3.3)
−10.7
(12.7)
−0.1
(31.8)
7.3
(45.1)
12.8
(55.0)
16.8
(62.2)
15.7
(60.3)
9.4
(48.9)
1.0
(33.8)
−10.4
(13.3)
−20.9
(−5.6)
−1.8
(28.8)
Record low °C (°F) −40.0
(−40.0)
−35.1
(−31.2)
−28.9
(−20.0)
−15.1
(4.8)
−3.1
(26.4)
2.2
(36.0)
6.8
(44.2)
4.9
(40.8)
−3.3
(26.1)
−15.6
(3.9)
−27.7
(−17.9)
−38.1
(−36.6)
−40.0
(−40.0)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 13
(0.5)
12
(0.5)
22
(0.9)
37
(1.5)
70
(2.8)
84
(3.3)
137
(5.4)
143
(5.6)
85
(3.3)
48
(1.9)
26
(1.0)
19
(0.7)
696
(27.4)
Average extreme snow depth cm (inches) 14
(5.5)
16
(6.3)
12
(4.7)
1
(0.4)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
1
(0.4)
5
(2.0)
10
(3.9)
16
(6.3)
Average rainy days 0 0 1 10 16 15 15 17 15 11 2 0 102
Average snowy days 14 11 11 6 1 0 0 0 0.1 4 12 14 73
Average relative humidity (%) 75 72 68 63 65 74 79 83 78 67 69 73 72
Mean monthly sunshine hours 147 181 231 213 242 262 248 217 212 189 159 145 2,446
Source 1: Pogoda.ru.net
Source 2: NOAA (sun, 1961–1990)
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Map including Khabarovsk (AMS, 1950)

Administrative and municipal status

Khabarovsk is the administrative center of the krai and, within the framework of administrative divisions, it also serves as the administrative center of Khabarovsky District, even though it is not a part of it. As an administrative division, it is incorporated separately as the city of krai significance of Khabarovsk—an administrative unit with the status equal to that of the districts. As a municipal division, the city of krai significance of Khabarovsk is incorporated as Khabarovsk Urban Okrug.

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1897 14,971—    
1926 49,704+232.0%
1939 199,172+300.7%
1959 322,744+62.0%
1970 435,962+35.1%
1979 527,848+21.1%
1989 600,623+13.8%
2002 583,072−2.9%
2010 577,441−1.0%
2021 617,441+6.9%
Source: Census data

Ethnic composition (2010):

  • Russians – 92.6%
  • Ukrainians – 1.8%
  • Koreans – 1.1%
  • Chinese – 0.6%
  • Tatars – 0.5%
  • Uzbeks – 0.5%
  • Others – 2.9%

Economy and infrastructure

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Khabarovsk monument to Nikolay Muravyov-Amursky (obverse) and Khabarovsk Bridge over the Amur River (reverse) are prominently featured on the 5000 ruble banknote

Primary industries include iron processing, steel milling, Khabarovsk shipyard, Daldizel, machinery, petroleum refining, flour milling, pharmaceutical industry, meatpacking and manufacturing of various types of heavy and light machinery.

A high-speed international fiber-optic cable connects the city of Khabarovsk with the city of Fuyuan in China.

Transportation

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Trolleybus near Lenina Square
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Amur waterfront
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The city is a principal railway center and is located along the Trans-Siberian Railway; the rail distance of Khabarovsk railway station from Moscow is 8,523 kilometers (5,296 mi).

Khabarovsk is served by the Khabarovsk Novy Airport with international flights to East Asia, Southeast Asia, European Russia, and Central Asia.

Road links include the Trans-Siberian Highway (M58 and M60 Highways), and water transport links are provided by the Amur River and Ussuri River.

Public transport includes: tram (8 routes); trolleybus (4 routes); bus and fixed-route taxi (marshrutka, approximately 100 routes).

Transborder travel to China in winter ice road in summer boat on Amur river to Fuyuan (and train to Harbin)

In 2021, the construction of a paid high-speed bypass of the city was completed.

Education

There are the following institutions of higher education in Khabarovsk:

  • Pacific National University (former Khabarovsk State University of Technology or Polytechnic Institute)
  • Far Eastern State University of Humanities (former Khabarovsk State Teachers Training University)
  • Far Eastern State Medical University
  • Khabarovsk State Academy of Economics and Law
  • Far Eastern State Transport University
  • Far Eastern Academy of Public Service
  • Far Eastern State Physical Education University
  • Khabarovsk State Institute of Arts and Culture

Tourism

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The Cathedral of the Saviour's Transfiguration
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Ice sculptures on the central square of Khabarovsk

A key street in Khabarovsk is the broad with its many shops and a local market. The city's five districts stretch for 45 kilometers (28 mi) along the Amur River. The similar boulevard – Ussuryisky is located between the two main streets Muravyov-Amursky and Lenin street and runs to the city's artificial lakes (Gorodskie Prudi) with the sport complex Platinum Arena. The lakes are famous for their fountains with the light show. The Military History Museum of the Far Eastern Military District is located in the city, the only such museum in the Russian Far East.

There is a walking tour from the Lenin Square to Utyos on Amur via Muravyov-Amursky Street, where visitors find traditional Russian cuisine restaurants and shops with souvenirs.[citation needed] There are a number of night clubs and pubs in this area. In wintertime ice sculptures are on display on the cities squares and parks. Artists come from as far as Harbin in China.

Unlike Vladivostok, the city has never been closed to foreigners, despite it being the headquarters of the Far East Military District, and retains its historically international flavor. Once the capital of the Soviet Far East (from 1926 to 1938), since the demise of the Soviet Union, it has experienced an increased Asian presence. It is estimated[by whom?] that over one million Chinese travel to and through Khabarovsk yearly, and foreign investment by Japanese and Korean corporations have grown in recent years. The city has a multi-story shopping mall and about a dozen hotels.

Aleksandr Fedosov, the Khabarovsk Krai Minister of Culture, estimates that the city became more attractive to tourists following the 2015 Bandy World Championship.

Khabarovsk is the closest major city to Birobidzhan, which is the administrative center of the Jewish Autonomous Oblast, Russia, located on the Trans-Siberian Railway, close to the border with China. The Jewish Autonomous Oblast is a federal subject of Russia in the Russian Far East, bordering Khabarovsk Krai and Amur Oblast in Russia and Heilongjiang province in China. Its administrative center is the town of Birobidzhan, and it is the only region in the world in which Yiddish is the official language. Khabarovsk provides the closest major airport to Birobidzhan, which is Khabarovsk Novy Airport (KHV / UHHH), 198 km from the center of Birobidzhan.[citation needed]

Military

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The Khabarovsk Honour Guard.

The headquarters of the Russian Ground Forces's Eastern Military District is located at 15 Serysheva Street. The district was preceded by the Far Eastern Military District, which was located in the same location. The following component units of the district are stationed in the city:

  • 104th Chuj Headquarters Brigade
  • Honour Guard Company of the Khabarovsk Garrison
  • 17th Independent Electronic Warfare Brigade
  • 118th Independent Pontoon-Bridge Railway Battalion
  • 392nd Pacific Training Center for Junior Specialists
  • 11th Air and Air Defence Forces Army
  • Military Band of the Eastern Military District

All 5 of these units make up the Khabarovsk Garrison. The Russian Navy's Pacific Fleet maintains a presence in the city as well. There is also an airbase located 3 km (1.9 mi) to the east of the city. The main public relations asset for the military in the city is the Military History Museum of the Far Eastern Military District and the district military band.[citation needed]

Sports

image
Stamp depicting 1981 Bandy World Championship in Khabarovsk
image
A corner during the final of the 2015 Bandy World Championship
  • Amur Khabarovsk, a professional ice hockey club of the international Kontinental Hockey League and plays its home games at the Platinum Arena. It used to be the furthest team from the European-based teams in the league until Admiral Vladivostok joined the KHL in 2013 as an expansion team.
  • FC SKA-Khabarovsk, a professional association football team playing in the Russian First League, the second tier of Russian association football.
  • SKA-Neftyanik, a professional bandy club which plays in the top-tier Russian Bandy Super League at its own indoor venue Arena Yerofey. It is both the easternmost and southernmost team in the top division. In the 2016–17 season the club became Russian champion for the first time. As of 2019 the team has won the title three years in a row.

International events

The city was a host to the 1981 Bandy World Championship. It also hosted the 2015 Bandy World Championship, which was visited by Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev. Khabarovsk organised the 2018 tournament as well, but not Division B that time around, which was held in Chinese Harbin. The event was named by the Federal Agency for Tourism as one of the best 200 events of the year.

A delegation from the 2022 Winter Olympics organising committee visited Khabarovsk to watch matches in the bandy league to study the plans if the sport was to be added to the Games program.

Notable people

  • Kristina Akheeva, actress and model
  • Oleksandr Aliyev, association football player
  • Nikita Balakhontsev, association football player
  • Sergei Bodrov, filmmaker
  • Evgeny Grachev, ice hockey player
  • Mikhail Grigorenko, ice hockey player
  • Alexandra Ivanovskaya, 2005 Miss Russia winner
  • Denis Kenzo, music producer
  • Ivan Koumaev, dancer
  • Alexander Mogilny, ice hockey player
  • Evgeni Plushenko, Olympic figure skater
  • Vita Sidorkina, model
  • Ivan Skobrev, speed skater
  • Andrei Tchmil, professional cyclist
  • Evgeny Tsaregorodtsev, professional ice hockey player
  • Daria Usacheva, figure skater
  • Vladimir Volegov, painter
  • Andrey Zamkovoy, boxer
  • Efim Zelmanov, mathematician
  • Artem Zub, ice hockey player

Twin towns – sister cities

Khabarovsk is twinned with:

  • image Niigata, Japan (1965)
  • image Portland, United States (1988)
  • image Victoria, Canada (1990) As of March 4, 2022, Victoria City Council voted to suspend the city's relationship with Khabarovsk as a result of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.
  • image Harbin, China (1993)
  • image Bucheon, South Korea (2002)
  • image Sanya, China (2011)

Awards

  • Khabarovsk placed first in different categories of "Most Developed and Comfortable City of Russia" in 2006, 2008 and 2009.
  • In 2010, Khabarovsk won the second place in the Forbes list of most suitable cities for private business in Russia. First place went to Krasnodar.

See also

  • imageSiberia portal
  • imageRussia portal
  • Bolshoy Ussuriysky Island
  • 2020 Khabarovsk Krai protests

References

Notes

Citations

  1. Resolution #143-pr
  2. Law #109
  3. Decision #856
  4. Charter of Khabarovsk, Article 2
  5. Энциклопедия Города России. Moscow: Большая Российская Энциклопедия. 2003. p. 503. ISBN 5-7107-7399-9.
  6. Charter of Khabarovsk, Article 19
  7. Official website of Khabarovsk. Sergei Anatolyevich Kravchuk Archived December 10, 2020, at the Wayback Machine, Mayor of Khabarovsk (in Russian)
  8. Official website of Khabarovsk. Brief Reference Archived March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)
  9. Russian Federal State Statistics Service (2011). Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года. Том 1 [2010 All-Russian Population Census, vol. 1]. Всероссийская перепись населения 2010 года [2010 All-Russia Population Census] (in Russian). Federal State Statistics Service.
  10. Khabarovsk Krai Territorial Branch of the Federal State Statistics Service. Численность населения Хабаровского края по муниципальным образованиям на 1 января 2015 года Archived March 5, 2016, at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)
  11. Государственный комитет Российской Федерации по статистике. Комитет Российской Федерации по стандартизации, метрологии и сертификации. №ОК 019-95 1 января 1997 г. «Общероссийский классификатор объектов административно-территориального деления. Код 08 401», в ред. изменения №278/2015 от 1 января 2016 г.. (State Statistics Committee of the Russian Federation. Committee of the Russian Federation on Standardization, Metrology, and Certification. #OK 019-95 January 1, 1997 Russian Classification of Objects of Administrative Division (OKATO). Code 08 401, as amended by the Amendment #278/2015 of January 1, 2016. ).
  12. Law #177
  13. Law #264
  14. "Об исчислении времени". Официальный интернет-портал правовой информации (in Russian). June 3, 2011. Retrieved January 19, 2019.
  15. Почта России. Информационно-вычислительный центр ОАСУ РПО. (Russian Post). Поиск объектов почтовой связи (Postal Objects Search) (in Russian)
  16. "Оценка численности постоянного населения по субъектам Российской Федерации". Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved September 1, 2022.
  17. "Путин перенес столицу Дальневосточного федерального округа во Владивосток". meduza.io. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  18. hellotravel, https://www.hellotravel.com/russia/khabarovsk
  19. 《新唐書·北狄傳》記載:「黑水西北又有思慕部,益北行十日得郡利部,東北行十日得窟說部,亦號屈設,稍東南行十日得莫曳皆部。」。(The "New Tang Dynasty Book of Beidi" records: "There is also a tribe called "Dream Tribe" in the northwest of Heishui, Yibei travels on the 10th days to the "County Tribe", and the northeast travels on the 10th days to the "Cave Tribe". 10th days to the "Mo Mo Tribe")
  20. 黑龙江古代道路交通史 (in Chinese). 人民交通出版社出版, 发行. 1988. ISBN 978-7-114-00315-8.
  21. Археологи обнаружили на Амуре таинственный городок. Возможно, это первое русское поселение в данном регионе Archived May 25, 2006, at the Wayback Machine (Mysterious fort found by archaeologists on the Amur. Possibly, this is the first Russian settlement in this region) (in Russian)
  22. Оксана Гайнутдинова (Oksana Gaynutdinova) Загадка Ачанского городка Archived August 13, 2007, at the Wayback Machine (The mystery of Fort Achansk)
  23. B.P. Polevoy (Б.П. Полевой), Изветная челобитная С. В. Полякова 1653 г. и ее значение для археологов Приамурья (S.V. Polyakov's denouncing letter (1653), and its significance for the archaeologists of the Amur Valley), in: Русские первопроходцы на Дальнем Востоке в XVII-XIX вв. (Историко-археологические исследования) (First Russian explorers in the Far East in the 17th–19th centuries: Historical and archaeological research – B.P.Polevoy's preface to the document), vol. 2, Vladivostok, Russian Academy of Sciences, 1995. (This article also contains references to Polevoy's earlier publications) (in Russian)
  24. Б.П. Полевой (B.P. Polevoy) О подлинном местоположении Косогорского острога 50-х гг. XVII века (About the true location of the Kosogorsky Ostrog of the 1650s) (in Russian)
  25. "Tang Prize | Laureates | Yoshinobu Shiba". www.tang-prize.org. Retrieved January 12, 2024.
  26. Du Halde, Jean-Baptiste (1735). Description géographique, historique, chronologique, politique et physique de l'empire de la Chine et de la Tartarie chinoise. Vol. IV. Paris: P.G. Lemercier. p. 7. Numerous later editions are available as well, including one on Google Books
  27. Campbell, Heather. "Khabarovsk". britannica.com. The Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved October 6, 2022.
  28. "Campaign in Far East: Japanese Occupy Kharbarovsk". The Northern Star. Reuters. September 9, 1918. Retrieved February 23, 2021 – via National Library of Australia.
  29. Working, Russell (May 6, 2001). "His last translator" (PDF). South China Morning Post.
  30. The 114th CB cruise book, 1946, U.S.Navy Seabee Museum Archives, Port Hueneme, Ca, p.123-125 [1]
  31. Yanks in Siberia: U.S. Navy Weather Stations in Soviet East Asia, 1945, G. Patrick March, Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 57, No. 3 (Aug., 1988), pp. 327–342, Published by: University of California Press.[2]
  32. US Navy Abbreviations of World War II, the Navy Department Library, U.S. Navy web site, Published:Thu Jul 23 14:45:40 EDT 2015 [3]
  33. "Anti-Putin Protests in Russia's Far East Gather Steam". VOA News. July 25, 2020.
  34. "флаг хабаровска". www.vexillographia.ru.
  35. "Pogoda.ru.net" (in Russian). Retrieved November 8, 2021.
  36. "Habarovsk/Novy (Khabarovsk) Climate Normals 1961–1990". National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved November 2, 2021.
  37. Государственный комитет Российской Федерации по статистике. Комитет Российской Федерации по стандартизации, метрологии и сертификации. №ОК 019-95 1 января 1997 г. «Общероссийский классификатор объектов административно-территориального деления. Код 08 255», в ред. изменения №278/2015 от 1 января 2016 г.. (State Statistics Committee of the Russian Federation. Committee of the Russian Federation on Standardization, Metrology, and Certification. #OK 019-95 January 1, 1997 Russian Classification of Objects of Administrative Division (OKATO). Code 08 255, as amended by the Amendment #278/2015 of January 1, 2016. ).
  38. "НАЦИОНАЛЬНЫЙ СОСТАВ И ВЛАДЕНИЕ ЯЗЫКАМИ, ГРАЖДАНСТВО НАСЕЛЕНИЯ" (PDF). Habstat. Retrieved September 24, 2020.
  39. The Institutions of Higher Education in Khabarovsk Krai Archived December 28, 2005, at the Wayback Machine
  40. "Independent Russian and Ukrainian Interpreters". RusMoose.com.
  41. Kokurin, Boris (February 25, 2014). "Военный музей в Хабаровске готовится к открытию". Komsomolskaya Pravda. Retrieved November 1, 2017.
  42. "Добро пожаловать на сайт Bandy World Championship 2018 | Bandy World Championship 2018". bandy-vm2018.ru.
  43. "Рота почетного караула | Лучшее в Хабаровске".
  44. "Законодательство Хабаровского края: Постановление Администрации города Хабаровска от 09.10.2015 N 3490".
  45. ""СКА-Нефтяник" — новый чемпион!". Archived from the original on March 28, 2017.
  46. "Threefold Russian Bandy Championship winners! | ХК СКА Нефтяник". skabandy.ru.
  47. "23-кратные! Как это было - Архив новостей - Федерация хоккея с мячом России". rusbandy.ru.
  48. "Финская адаптация - Архив новостей - Федерация хоккея с мячом России". rusbandy.ru.
  49. "Новости Хабаровска".
  50. "Города-побратимы". khabarovskadm.ru (in Russian). Khabarovsk. Archived from the original on April 15, 2020. Retrieved February 3, 2020.
  51. "Victoria pauses relationship with Russian 'twin city,' urges mayor to push back on invasion". Vancouver Island. March 4, 2022. Retrieved August 10, 2022.
  52. "В Москве наградили призеров Всероссийского конкурса "Самый благоустроенный город России" — Российская газета — Сегодня в Москве на ВВЦ прошла церемония награждения призеров Всероссийского конкурса на звание "Самый благоустроенный город России" за 2006 год". Rg.ru. October 26, 2007. Retrieved March 26, 2013.
  53. "Хабаровск вновь признан самым благоустроенным городом России — Нина Доронина — Российская газета — Хабаровск вновь признан самым благоустроенным городом России". Rg.ru. June 21, 2012. Retrieved March 26, 2013.
  54. "Хабаровск занял II место в рейтинге Forbes – Новости". Hbr.moigorod.ru. Archived from the original on August 17, 2011. Retrieved March 26, 2013.

Sources

  • Хабаровская городская Дума. Решение №856 от 28 января 2014 г. «О гимне городского округа "Город Хабаровск"». Вступил в силу 28 января 2014 г. Опубликован: "Сборник нормативных актов администрации города Хабаровска и Хабаровской городской Думы", No. 1, январь 2014 г. (Khabarovsk City Duma. Decision #856 of January 28, 2014 On the Anthem of the Urban Okrug of "the City of Khabarovsk". Effective as of January 28, 2014.).
  • Хабаровская городская Дума. Решение №509 от 13 июля 2004 г. «Устав городского округа "Город Хабаровск"», в ред. Решения №167 от 22 сентября 2015 г. «О внесении изменений и дополнений в Устав городского округа "Город Хабаровск"». Вступил в силу 8 октября 2004 г. (за исключением отдельных положений). Опубликован: "Хабаровские вести", №152, 8 октября 2004 г. (Khabarovsk City Duma. Decision #509 of July 13, 2004 Charter of the Urban Okrug of "the City of Khabarovsk", as amended by the Decision #167 of September 22, 2015 On Amending and Supplementing the Charter of the Urban Okrug of "the City of Khabarovsk". Effective as of October 8, 2004 (with the exception of several clauses).).
  • Законодательная Дума Хабаровского края. Закон №109 от 28 марта 2007 г. «Об административно-территориальном устройстве Хабаровского края», в ред. Закона №155 от 23 декабря 2015 г. «О внесении изменений в отдельные законодательные акты Хабаровского края». Вступил в силу через 10 дней после официального опубликования (28 апреля 2007 г.). Опубликован: "Приамурские ведомости", №52, 17 апреля 2007 г. (Legislative Duma of Khabarovsk Krai. Law #109 of March 28, 2007 On the Administrative-Territorial Structure of Khabarovsk Krai, as amended by the Law #155 of December 23, 2015 On Amending Various Legislative Acts of Khabarovsk Krai. Effective as of after 10 days from the official publication day (April 28, 2007).).
  • Правительство Хабаровского края. Постановление №143-пр от 18 июля 2007 г. «Об утверждении реестра административно-территориальных и территориальных единиц Хабаровского края», в ред. Постановления №273-пр от 28 августа 2015 г. «О внесении изменений в Постановление Правительства Хабаровского края от 18 июля 2007 г. №143-пр "Об утверждении реестра административно-территориальных и территориальных единиц Хабаровского края"». Вступил в силу 13 августа 2007 г. Опубликован: "Собрание законодательства Хабаровского края", №7(60), 12 августа 2007 г. (Government of Khabarovsk Krai. Resolution #143-pr of July 18, 2007 On the Adoption of the Registry of the Administrative-Territorial and Territorial Units of Khabarovsk Krai, as amended by the Resolution #273-pr of August 28, 2015 On Amending the Resolution #143-pr of the Government of Khabarovsk Krai of July 18, 2007 "On the Adoption of the Registry of the Administrative-Territorial and Territorial Units of Khabarovsk Krai". Effective as of August 13, 2007.).
  • Законодательная Дума Хабаровского края. Закон №177 от 28 апреля 2004 г. «О наделении муниципального образования города Хабаровска статусом городского округа и об установлении его границы». Вступил в силу со дня официального опубликования (28 мая 2004 г.). Опубликован: "Приамурские ведомости", №95, 28 мая 2004 г. (Legislative Duma of Khabarovsk Krai. Law #177 of April 28, 2004 On Granting Urban Okrug Status to the Municipal Formation of the City of Khabarovsk and on Establishing Its Border. Effective as of the day of the official publication (May 28, 2004).).
  • Законодательная Дума Хабаровского края. Закон №264 от 14 марта 2005 г «Об административных центрах сельских поселений и муниципальных районов Хабаровского края», в ред. Закона №239 от 28 ноября 2012 г. «О преобразовании городского населённого пункта рабочий посёлок Тырма, находящегося на территории Верхнебуреинского района Хабаровского края, путём изменения его статуса в сельский населённый пункт — посёлок Тырма и о внесении изменений в отдельные Законы Хабаровского края». Вступил в силу со дня официального опубликования. Опубликован: "Приамурские ведомости", №57, 1 апреля 2005 г. (Legislative Duma of Khabarovsk Krai. Law #264 of March 14, 2005 On the Administrative Centers of the Rural Settlements and the Municipal Districts of Khabarovsk Krai, as amended by the Law #239 of November 28, 2012 On the Transformation of the Urban Locality the Work Settlement of Tyrma, Located on the Territory of Verkhnebureinsky District of Khabarovsk Krai, by Changing Its Status to That of a Rural Locality—the Settlement of Tyrma, and on Amending Various Laws of Khabarovsk Krai. Effective as of the day of the official publication.).
  • Nikolay P. Kradin. It Is Protected by the State: the Monuments of Architecture in Khabarovsk. Khabarovsk: Chastnaya kollektsiya, 1999. 192 p. ISBN 5-7875-0011-3

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Khabarovsk.
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Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Khabarovsk.
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Look up Khabarovsk in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
  • (in Russian) Official website of Khabarovsk Archived October 10, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
  • (in Russian) Khabarovsk Business Directory
  • (in Korean) Manchu-Korean expedition against Russian expansion (나선정벌 (羅禪征伐)
  • (in Korean) map of the Manchu-Korean expedition against Russian expansion (나선정벌 (羅禪征伐)
  • (in Russian) Major problems of Russian-Korean relationship
  • (in Russian) China and Russia relationship and history
  • Website of Khabarovsk

Author: www.NiNa.Az

Publication date: May 25, 2025 / 08:45

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Khabarovsk Russian Habarovsk xɐˈbarefsk is the largest city and the administrative centre of Khabarovsk Krai Russia located 30 kilometers 19 mi from the China Russia border at the confluence of the Amur and Ussuri Rivers about 800 kilometers 500 mi north of Vladivostok As of the 2021 Russian census it had a population of 617 441 It was known as Khabarovka until 1893 Khabarovsk HabarovskCityView of Khabarovsk looking down the Ussuriysky BoulevardFlagCoat of armsAnthem Anthem of KhabarovskLocation of KhabarovskKhabarovskLocation of KhabarovskShow map of RussiaKhabarovskKhabarovsk Khabarovsk Krai Show map of Khabarovsk KraiCoordinates 48 29 N 135 05 E 48 483 N 135 083 E 48 483 135 083CountryRussiaFederal subjectKhabarovsk KraiFoundedMay 31 1858City status since1880Government Body MayorSergey KravchukArea Total230 km2 90 sq mi Elevation72 m 236 ft Population 2010 Census Total577 441 Estimate January 2023 617 000 Rank26th in 2010 Density2 500 km2 6 500 sq mi Administrative status Subordinated tocity of krai significance of Khabarovsk Capital ofKhabarovsk Krai city of krai significance of KhabarovskMunicipal status Urban okrugKhabarovsk Urban Okrug Capital ofKhabarovsk Urban Okrug Khabarovsky Municipal DistrictTime zoneUTC 10 MSK 7 Postal code s 680000 680003 680006 680007 680009 680011 680015 680017 680018 680020 680023 680025 680026 680028 680033 680035 680038 680040 680043 680045 680047 680051 680052 680054 680055 680700 680880 680890 680899 680921 680950 680960 680967 680970 680999 901183 901185Dialing code s 7 4212OKTMO ID08701000001City DayLast Sunday of MayWebsitekhabarovskadm wbr ru The city was the administrative center of the Far Eastern Federal District of Russia from 2002 until December 2018 when the status was given to Vladivostok As is typical of the interior of the Russian Far East Khabarovsk has an extreme climate with strong seasonal swings resulting in strong cold winters and relatively hot and humid summers HistoryNative villages near the site of the future Khabarovsk according to an English map of 1773 The village closest to today s Khabarovsk is labeled Hitcha Maack s Cape Kyrma site thought by B P Polyakov to be the site of Stepanov s Kosogorsky Ostrog is Heremo Earliest record Historical records indicate that a city was founded on the site in the eighth century The Tungusic peoples are indigenous to the city s vicinity The city was named Boli 伯力 Boli in Chinese when it was part of the Chinese empire During the Tang dynasty Boli was the capital of Heishui Protectorate called Heishui Duhufu In AD 722 Emperor Xuanzong of Tang 唐玄宗 established Heishui Protectorate and gave self rule to Heishui Mohe tribes The seat of this administrative region was then established near today s Khabarovsk 17th century Russian exploration In the mid 17th century the Amur Valley became the scene of hostilities between the Russian Cossacks who tried to expand into the region and collect tribute from the natives and the rising Manchu Qing dynasty who were intent on securing the region for themselves citation needed The coastal areas had historically been the native home of the Manchu people Khabarov s Achansk Monument to Yerofey Khabarov in Khabarovsk The Russian explorers and raiders of the 1650s set up a number of more or less fortified camps ostrogs on the Amur Most of them were in use for only a few months and later destroyed It is usually thought that the first such camp in the general area of today s Khabarovsk was the fortified winter camp named Achansk Achansk or Achansky gorodok Achanskij gorodok built by the Cossacks of Yerofey Khabarov in September 1651 after they had sailed to the area from the upper Amur The fort was named after the local tribe whom Khabarov s people called Achans On October 8 the fort was unsuccessfully attacked by joint forces of Achans and Duchers who had good reasons to hate the Cossacks due to their rather heavy handed tribute extraction tactics while many Russians were away fishing In late November Khabarov s people undertook a three day campaign against the local chief Zhakshur Zhakshur whose name is also known in a more Russian version Zaksor Zaksor collecting a large amount of tribute and announcing that the locals were now subjects of the Russian Czar A similar campaign was waged later in winter against the Ducher chief Nechiga Nechiga farther away from Achansk On 24 or 26 March 1652 Fort Achansk was attacked by Manchu cavalry led by Ninguta s commander Haise reinforced by Ducher auxiliaries but the Cossacks stood their ground in a day long battle and even managed to seize the attackers supply train Once the ice on the Amur broke in the spring of 1652 Khabarov s people destroyed their fort and sailed away The exact location of Khabarov s Achansk has long been a subject for debate among Russian historians and geographers A number of locations both upstream and downstream of today s Khabarovsk have been proposed since Richard Maack one of the first Russian scholars to visit the region identified Achansk in 1859 with the ruins on Cape Kyrma which is located on the southern Chinese shore of the Amur upstream of Khabarovsk The most widely accepted point of view is probably that of Boris Polevoy who believed that Khabarov s Achansk was located in the Nanai village later known as Odzhal Bolon Russian Odzhal Bolon located on the left bank of the Amur closer to Amursk than to Khabarovsk One of his arguments was that both Khabarov s Achan sometimes also spelt by the explorer as Otshchan Otshan and Wuzhala 乌扎拉 of the Chinese records of the 1652 engagement are based on the name of the Nanai clan Odzhal Odzhal corresponding to the 20th century name of the village as well The name of the clan was also written as Uzala as in the name of its best known member Dersu Uzala Polevoy s view appeared to gain wide support among the Russian geographer community petitioned by the Amur Branch of the Russian Geographical Society the Russian Government renamed the village of Odzhal to Achan in 1977 to celebrate its connection with Khabarov s raid As to the Cape Kyrma ruins thought by Maack to be the remains of Achansk B P Polevoy identified them as the remains of another ostrog namely Kosogorsky Ostrog where Onufriy Stepanov stayed a few years later Qing Empire After the Treaty of Nerchinsk 1689 between the Tsardom of Russia and the Qing Empire the area became an uncontested part of China for the next century and a half Modern historical maps of the Qing period published in China mark the site of future Khabarovsk as Boli Chinese 伯力 All of the middle and lower Amur region was nominally part of the Jilin Province run first out of Ninguta and later out of Jilin City French Jesuits who sailed along the Ussuri and the Amur Rivers in 1709 prepared the first more or less precise map of the region According to them the indigenous Nanai people were living on the Ussuri and on the Amur down to the mouth of the Dondon River i e in the region including the site of the future Khabarovsk These people were known to the Chinese as Yupi Dazi Fish skin Tartars From Khabarovka to Khabarovsk Khabarovsk residence of the governor general of Amur region 1895 In 1858 the area was ceded to Russia under the Treaty of Aigun The Russians founded the military outpost of Khabarovka Haba rovka named after Yerofey Khabarov The post later became an important industrial center for the region Town status was granted in 1880 In 1893 it was given its present name Khabarovsk In 1894 a department of the Russian Geographical Society was formed in Khabarovsk and to found libraries theatres and museums in the city Since then Khabarovsk s cultural life has flourished Much of the local indigenous history has been well preserved in the Regional Lore Museum and Natural History Museum and in places like near the Nanai settlement of Sikachi Alyan where cliff drawings from more than 13 000 years ago can be found The Khabarovsk Art Museum exhibits a rare collection of old Russian icons In 1916 the Khabarovsk Bridge across the Amur was completed allowing Trans Siberian trains to cross the river without using ferries or temporary rail tracks over the frozen river in winter During the Russian Civil War Khabarovsk was occupied by Japan in September 1918 Soviet era Khabarovsk 1950 By the Decree of the Council of Labor and Defense of December 11 1933 the Directorate of Road Construction of Eastern Siberia and the Far East Daldorstroy was created in Khabarovsk with the task of constructing strategic highways according to the list of the government of the USSR in the regions of Eastern Siberia and the Soviet Far East The construction plans were announced at the 17th Congress of the All Union Communist Party Bolsheviks held in Moscow from January February 1934 when the Second Five Year Plan for the development of the Soviet Union was adopted In accordance with it it was planned to build a Vladivostok Khabarovsk highway with a hard gravel surface 600 kilometers long After the defeat of Japan in World War II Khabarovsk was the site of the Khabarovsk War Crime Trials in which twelve former members of the Japanese Kwantung Army and Unit 731 were put on trial for the manufacture and use of biological weapons during World War II Chinese Emperor Puyi captured by Soviet troops in Manchuria was relocated to Khabarovsk and lived there from 1945 up to 1950 when he was returned to China When Japan fell in September 1945 the United States reached an agreement with Stalin to build two U S Naval Advance Bases Fleet Weather Centrals in the USSR The U S built one 10 miles 16 km outside Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky on the Kamchatka Peninsula with the code name TAMA The other was 20 miles 32 km outside Khabarovsk in buildings provided by the Soviets code named MOKO For mail Khabarovsk was assigned U S Navy number 1168 FPO San Francisco The American use of these two bases was short lived citation needed On 5 November 1956 the first phase of the city tram was commissioned The Khabarovsk television studio began broadcasting in 1960 On 1 September 1967 the Khabarovsk Institute of Physical Education now the opened On 14 January 1971 Khabarovsk was awarded the Order of October Revolution In 1975 the first stage of the urban trolley opened In 1976 the city hosted an international ice hockey tournament with the ball for the prize of the newspaper Sovietskaya Rossia In 1981 the Bandy World Championship was played in the city Russian Federation In 1996 Khabarovsk held its first mayoral elections Paul D Filippov whose candidacy was supported by Governor Viktor Ishayev was defeated In 1998 reconstruction of the central square of Khabarovsk was completed In May 2000 President of Russia Vladimir Putin decreed that new federal districts be formed and Khabarovsk became the center of the Far Eastern Federal District In 2006 the Center for Cardiovascular Surgery a high tech medical center was constructed according to a Russian national health project In 2008 the train station was completely renovated and the adjacent square was reconstructed to include fountains and an underground passage In 2009 Khabarovsk hosted the EU Russia summit In 2010 the city hosted a meeting of the Great Circle of Ussuri Cossacks On 3 November 2012 Khabarovsk was awarded the honorary title of City of Military Glory On 9 July 2020 the governor of the region Sergei Furgal was arrested and flown to Moscow The 2020 Khabarovsk Krai protests began on 11 July 2020 in support of Furgal Flag Flag of the city of Khabarovsk The flag of Khabarovsk displays a bear on the right Red side and a Siberian tiger on the left blue side holding a yellow shield with a blue reversed pall and a red fish The flag is a representation of the coat of arms of Khabarovsk The flag was adopted on 30 October 2007 and is 2 3 in ratio GeographyThe city is located 30 kilometers 19 mi from the China Russia border at the confluence of the Amur and Ussuri Rivers about 800 kilometers 500 mi north of Vladivostok Climate Khabarovsk experiences a monsoonal dry winter humid continental climate Koppen climate classification Dwb borders on Dwa Trewartha climate classification Dcbc bordering on Dcac Its climate is strongly continental featuring very warm summers and bitterly cold winters The average annual precipitation is 696 millimeters 27 4 in mainly concentrated in the summer In a few years November to March hardly receive any precipitation The driest year was 2001 with only 381 millimeters 15 0 in of precipitation and the wettest was 1981 when 1 105 millimeters 43 5 in of precipitation fell The wettest month was August 1981 with a total precipitation of 434 millimeters 17 1 in Due to high summer humidity overnight lows remain mild to warm during several months Snowfall is common though light with an average maximum snow height of 16 centimeters 6 3 in During peak winter highs above freezing are very rare The city s extreme climate sees daily average high and low temperatures vary by around 50 C 90 F over the course of the year The average temperature in January is 19 2 C 2 6 F and the average for July is 21 4 C 70 5 F Extremes have ranged from 36 4 C 97 5 F in June 2010 to 40 C 40 F in January 2011 Climate data for Khabarovsk 1991 2020 extremes 1878 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 0 6 33 1 6 3 43 3 17 0 62 6 28 6 83 5 31 5 88 7 36 4 97 5 35 7 96 3 35 6 96 1 29 8 85 6 26 4 79 5 15 5 59 9 6 6 43 9 36 4 97 5 Mean daily maximum C F 14 9 5 2 9 9 14 2 1 0 30 2 10 5 50 9 19 2 66 6 23 8 74 8 26 8 80 2 24 9 76 8 19 7 67 5 10 6 51 1 2 8 27 0 13 6 7 5 7 8 46 0 Daily mean C F 19 2 2 6 14 9 5 2 5 9 21 4 4 8 40 6 12 9 55 2 18 0 64 4 21 4 70 5 19 9 67 8 14 1 57 4 5 4 41 7 6 9 19 6 17 4 0 7 2 7 36 9 Mean daily minimum C F 23 1 9 6 19 6 3 3 10 7 12 7 0 1 31 8 7 3 45 1 12 8 55 0 16 8 62 2 15 7 60 3 9 4 48 9 1 0 33 8 10 4 13 3 20 9 5 6 1 8 28 8 Record low C F 40 0 40 0 35 1 31 2 28 9 20 0 15 1 4 8 3 1 26 4 2 2 36 0 6 8 44 2 4 9 40 8 3 3 26 1 15 6 3 9 27 7 17 9 38 1 36 6 40 0 40 0 Average precipitation mm inches 13 0 5 12 0 5 22 0 9 37 1 5 70 2 8 84 3 3 137 5 4 143 5 6 85 3 3 48 1 9 26 1 0 19 0 7 696 27 4 Average extreme snow depth cm inches 14 5 5 16 6 3 12 4 7 1 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 4 5 2 0 10 3 9 16 6 3 Average rainy days 0 0 1 10 16 15 15 17 15 11 2 0 102Average snowy days 14 11 11 6 1 0 0 0 0 1 4 12 14 73Average relative humidity 75 72 68 63 65 74 79 83 78 67 69 73 72Mean monthly sunshine hours 147 181 231 213 242 262 248 217 212 189 159 145 2 446Source 1 Pogoda ru netSource 2 NOAA sun 1961 1990 Map including Khabarovsk AMS 1950 Administrative and municipal statusKhabarovsk is the administrative center of the krai and within the framework of administrative divisions it also serves as the administrative center of Khabarovsky District even though it is not a part of it As an administrative division it is incorporated separately as the city of krai significance of Khabarovsk an administrative unit with the status equal to that of the districts As a municipal division the city of krai significance of Khabarovsk is incorporated as Khabarovsk Urban Okrug DemographicsHistorical populationYearPop 189714 971 192649 704 232 0 1939199 172 300 7 1959322 744 62 0 1970435 962 35 1 1979527 848 21 1 1989600 623 13 8 2002583 072 2 9 2010577 441 1 0 2021617 441 6 9 Source Census data Ethnic composition 2010 Russians 92 6 Ukrainians 1 8 Koreans 1 1 Chinese 0 6 Tatars 0 5 Uzbeks 0 5 Others 2 9 Economy and infrastructureKhabarovsk monument to Nikolay Muravyov Amursky obverse and Khabarovsk Bridge over the Amur River reverse are prominently featured on the 5000 ruble banknote Primary industries include iron processing steel milling Khabarovsk shipyard Daldizel machinery petroleum refining flour milling pharmaceutical industry meatpacking and manufacturing of various types of heavy and light machinery A high speed international fiber optic cable connects the city of Khabarovsk with the city of Fuyuan in China TransportationTrolleybus near Lenina SquareAmur waterfrontThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message The city is a principal railway center and is located along the Trans Siberian Railway the rail distance of Khabarovsk railway station from Moscow is 8 523 kilometers 5 296 mi Khabarovsk is served by the Khabarovsk Novy Airport with international flights to East Asia Southeast Asia European Russia and Central Asia Road links include the Trans Siberian Highway M58 and M60 Highways and water transport links are provided by the Amur River and Ussuri River Public transport includes tram 8 routes trolleybus 4 routes bus and fixed route taxi marshrutka approximately 100 routes Transborder travel to China in winter ice road in summer boat on Amur river to Fuyuan and train to Harbin In 2021 the construction of a paid high speed bypass of the city was completed EducationThere are the following institutions of higher education in Khabarovsk Pacific National University former Khabarovsk State University of Technology or Polytechnic Institute Far Eastern State University of Humanities former Khabarovsk State Teachers Training University Far Eastern State Medical University Khabarovsk State Academy of Economics and Law Far Eastern State Transport University Far Eastern Academy of Public Service Far Eastern State Physical Education University Khabarovsk State Institute of Arts and CultureTourismThe Cathedral of the Saviour s TransfigurationIce sculptures on the central square of Khabarovsk A key street in Khabarovsk is the broad with its many shops and a local market The city s five districts stretch for 45 kilometers 28 mi along the Amur River The similar boulevard Ussuryisky is located between the two main streets Muravyov Amursky and Lenin street and runs to the city s artificial lakes Gorodskie Prudi with the sport complex Platinum Arena The lakes are famous for their fountains with the light show The Military History Museum of the Far Eastern Military District is located in the city the only such museum in the Russian Far East There is a walking tour from the Lenin Square to Utyos on Amur via Muravyov Amursky Street where visitors find traditional Russian cuisine restaurants and shops with souvenirs citation needed There are a number of night clubs and pubs in this area In wintertime ice sculptures are on display on the cities squares and parks Artists come from as far as Harbin in China Unlike Vladivostok the city has never been closed to foreigners despite it being the headquarters of the Far East Military District and retains its historically international flavor Once the capital of the Soviet Far East from 1926 to 1938 since the demise of the Soviet Union it has experienced an increased Asian presence It is estimated by whom that over one million Chinese travel to and through Khabarovsk yearly and foreign investment by Japanese and Korean corporations have grown in recent years The city has a multi story shopping mall and about a dozen hotels Aleksandr Fedosov the Khabarovsk Krai Minister of Culture estimates that the city became more attractive to tourists following the 2015 Bandy World Championship Khabarovsk is the closest major city to Birobidzhan which is the administrative center of the Jewish Autonomous Oblast Russia located on the Trans Siberian Railway close to the border with China The Jewish Autonomous Oblast is a federal subject of Russia in the Russian Far East bordering Khabarovsk Krai and Amur Oblast in Russia and Heilongjiang province in China Its administrative center is the town of Birobidzhan and it is the only region in the world in which Yiddish is the official language Khabarovsk provides the closest major airport to Birobidzhan which is Khabarovsk Novy Airport KHV UHHH 198 km from the center of Birobidzhan citation needed MilitaryThe Khabarovsk Honour Guard The headquarters of the Russian Ground Forces s Eastern Military District is located at 15 Serysheva Street The district was preceded by the Far Eastern Military District which was located in the same location The following component units of the district are stationed in the city 104th Chuj Headquarters Brigade Honour Guard Company of the Khabarovsk Garrison 17th Independent Electronic Warfare Brigade 118th Independent Pontoon Bridge Railway Battalion 392nd Pacific Training Center for Junior Specialists 11th Air and Air Defence Forces Army Military Band of the Eastern Military District All 5 of these units make up the Khabarovsk Garrison The Russian Navy s Pacific Fleet maintains a presence in the city as well There is also an airbase located 3 km 1 9 mi to the east of the city The main public relations asset for the military in the city is the Military History Museum of the Far Eastern Military District and the district military band citation needed SportsStamp depicting 1981 Bandy World Championship in KhabarovskA corner during the final of the 2015 Bandy World ChampionshipAmur Khabarovsk a professional ice hockey club of the international Kontinental Hockey League and plays its home games at the Platinum Arena It used to be the furthest team from the European based teams in the league until Admiral Vladivostok joined the KHL in 2013 as an expansion team FC SKA Khabarovsk a professional association football team playing in the Russian First League the second tier of Russian association football SKA Neftyanik a professional bandy club which plays in the top tier Russian Bandy Super League at its own indoor venue Arena Yerofey It is both the easternmost and southernmost team in the top division In the 2016 17 season the club became Russian champion for the first time As of 2019 the team has won the title three years in a row International events The city was a host to the 1981 Bandy World Championship It also hosted the 2015 Bandy World Championship which was visited by Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev Khabarovsk organised the 2018 tournament as well but not Division B that time around which was held in Chinese Harbin The event was named by the Federal Agency for Tourism as one of the best 200 events of the year A delegation from the 2022 Winter Olympics organising committee visited Khabarovsk to watch matches in the bandy league to study the plans if the sport was to be added to the Games program Notable peopleKristina Akheeva actress and model Oleksandr Aliyev association football player Nikita Balakhontsev association football player Sergei Bodrov filmmaker Evgeny Grachev ice hockey player Mikhail Grigorenko ice hockey player Alexandra Ivanovskaya 2005 Miss Russia winner Denis Kenzo music producer Ivan Koumaev dancer Alexander Mogilny ice hockey player Evgeni Plushenko Olympic figure skater Vita Sidorkina model Ivan Skobrev speed skater Andrei Tchmil professional cyclist Evgeny Tsaregorodtsev professional ice hockey player Daria Usacheva figure skater Vladimir Volegov painter Andrey Zamkovoy boxer Efim Zelmanov mathematician Artem Zub ice hockey playerTwin towns sister citiesKhabarovsk is twinned with Niigata Japan 1965 Portland United States 1988 Victoria Canada 1990 As of March 4 2022 Victoria City Council voted to suspend the city s relationship with Khabarovsk as a result of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Harbin China 1993 Bucheon South Korea 2002 Sanya China 2011 AwardsKhabarovsk placed first in different categories of Most Developed and Comfortable City of Russia in 2006 2008 and 2009 In 2010 Khabarovsk won the second place in the Forbes list of most suitable cities for private business in Russia First place went to Krasnodar See alsoSiberia portalRussia portalBolshoy Ussuriysky Island 2020 Khabarovsk Krai protestsReferencesNotes Citations Resolution 143 pr Law 109 Decision 856 Charter of Khabarovsk Article 2 Enciklopediya Goroda Rossii Moscow Bolshaya Rossijskaya Enciklopediya 2003 p 503 ISBN 5 7107 7399 9 Charter of Khabarovsk Article 19 Official website of Khabarovsk Sergei Anatolyevich Kravchuk Archived December 10 2020 at the Wayback Machine Mayor of Khabarovsk in Russian Official website of Khabarovsk Brief Reference Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine in Russian Russian Federal State Statistics Service 2011 Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2010 goda Tom 1 2010 All Russian Population Census vol 1 Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2010 goda 2010 All Russia Population Census in Russian Federal State Statistics Service Khabarovsk Krai Territorial Branch of the Federal State Statistics Service Chislennost naseleniya Habarovskogo kraya po municipalnym obrazovaniyam na 1 yanvarya 2015 goda Archived March 5 2016 at the Wayback Machine in Russian Gosudarstvennyj komitet Rossijskoj Federacii po statistike Komitet Rossijskoj Federacii po standartizacii metrologii i sertifikacii OK 019 95 1 yanvarya 1997 g Obsherossijskij klassifikator obektov administrativno territorialnogo deleniya Kod 08 401 v red izmeneniya 278 2015 ot 1 yanvarya 2016 g State Statistics Committee of the Russian Federation Committee of the Russian Federation on Standardization Metrology and Certification OK 019 95 January 1 1997 Russian Classification of Objects of Administrative Division OKATO Code 08 401 as amended by the Amendment 278 2015 of January 1 2016 Law 177 Law 264 Ob ischislenii vremeni Oficialnyj internet portal pravovoj informacii in Russian June 3 2011 Retrieved January 19 2019 Pochta Rossii Informacionno vychislitelnyj centr OASU RPO Russian Post Poisk obektov pochtovoj svyazi Postal Objects Search in Russian Ocenka chislennosti postoyannogo naseleniya po subektam Rossijskoj Federacii Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved September 1 2022 Putin perenes stolicu Dalnevostochnogo federalnogo okruga vo Vladivostok meduza io Retrieved December 13 2018 hellotravel https www hellotravel com russia khabarovsk 新唐書 北狄傳 記載 黑水西北又有思慕部 益北行十日得郡利部 東北行十日得窟說部 亦號屈設 稍東南行十日得莫曳皆部 The New Tang Dynasty Book of Beidi records There is also a tribe called Dream Tribe in the northwest of Heishui Yibei travels on the 10th days to the County Tribe and the northeast travels on the 10th days to the Cave Tribe 10th days to the Mo Mo Tribe 黑龙江古代道路交通史 in Chinese 人民交通出版社出版 发行 1988 ISBN 978 7 114 00315 8 Arheologi obnaruzhili na Amure tainstvennyj gorodok Vozmozhno eto pervoe russkoe poselenie v dannom regione Archived May 25 2006 at the Wayback Machine Mysterious fort found by archaeologists on the Amur Possibly this is the first Russian settlement in this region in Russian Oksana Gajnutdinova Oksana Gaynutdinova Zagadka Achanskogo gorodka Archived August 13 2007 at the Wayback Machine The mystery of Fort Achansk B P Polevoy B P Polevoj Izvetnaya chelobitnaya S V Polyakova 1653 g i ee znachenie dlya arheologov Priamurya S V Polyakov s denouncing letter 1653 and its significance for the archaeologists of the Amur Valley in Russkie pervoprohodcy na Dalnem Vostoke v XVII XIX vv Istoriko arheologicheskie issledovaniya First Russian explorers in the Far East in the 17th 19th centuries Historical and archaeological research B P Polevoy s preface to the document vol 2 Vladivostok Russian Academy of Sciences 1995 This article also contains references to Polevoy s earlier publications in Russian B P Polevoj B P Polevoy O podlinnom mestopolozhenii Kosogorskogo ostroga 50 h gg XVII veka About the true location of the Kosogorsky Ostrog of the 1650s in Russian Tang Prize Laureates Yoshinobu Shiba www tang prize org Retrieved January 12 2024 Du Halde Jean Baptiste 1735 Description geographique historique chronologique politique et physique de l empire de la Chine et de la Tartarie chinoise Vol IV Paris P G Lemercier p 7 Numerous later editions are available as well including one on Google Books Campbell Heather Khabarovsk britannica com The Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved October 6 2022 Campaign in Far East Japanese Occupy Kharbarovsk The Northern Star Reuters September 9 1918 Retrieved February 23 2021 via National Library of Australia Working Russell May 6 2001 His last translator PDF South China Morning Post The 114th CB cruise book 1946 U S Navy Seabee Museum Archives Port Hueneme Ca p 123 125 1 Yanks in Siberia U S Navy Weather Stations in Soviet East Asia 1945 G Patrick March Pacific Historical Review Vol 57 No 3 Aug 1988 pp 327 342 Published by University of California Press 2 US Navy Abbreviations of World War II the Navy Department Library U S Navy web site Published Thu Jul 23 14 45 40 EDT 2015 3 Anti Putin Protests in Russia s Far East Gather Steam VOA News July 25 2020 flag habarovska www vexillographia ru Pogoda ru net in Russian Retrieved November 8 2021 Habarovsk Novy Khabarovsk Climate Normals 1961 1990 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved November 2 2021 Gosudarstvennyj komitet Rossijskoj Federacii po statistike Komitet Rossijskoj Federacii po standartizacii metrologii i sertifikacii OK 019 95 1 yanvarya 1997 g Obsherossijskij klassifikator obektov administrativno territorialnogo deleniya Kod 08 255 v red izmeneniya 278 2015 ot 1 yanvarya 2016 g State Statistics Committee of the Russian Federation Committee of the Russian Federation on Standardization Metrology and Certification OK 019 95 January 1 1997 Russian Classification of Objects of Administrative Division OKATO Code 08 255 as amended by the Amendment 278 2015 of January 1 2016 NACIONALNYJ SOSTAV I VLADENIE YaZYKAMI GRAZhDANSTVO NASELENIYa PDF Habstat Retrieved September 24 2020 The Institutions of Higher Education in Khabarovsk Krai Archived December 28 2005 at the Wayback Machine Independent Russian and Ukrainian Interpreters RusMoose com Kokurin Boris February 25 2014 Voennyj muzej v Habarovske gotovitsya k otkrytiyu Komsomolskaya Pravda Retrieved November 1 2017 Dobro pozhalovat na sajt Bandy World Championship 2018 Bandy World Championship 2018 bandy vm2018 ru Rota pochetnogo karaula Luchshee v Habarovske Zakonodatelstvo Habarovskogo kraya Postanovlenie Administracii goroda Habarovska ot 09 10 2015 N 3490 SKA Neftyanik novyj chempion Archived from the original on March 28 2017 Threefold Russian Bandy Championship winners HK SKA Neftyanik skabandy ru 23 kratnye Kak eto bylo Arhiv novostej Federaciya hokkeya s myachom Rossii rusbandy ru Finskaya adaptaciya Arhiv novostej Federaciya hokkeya s myachom Rossii rusbandy ru Novosti Habarovska Goroda pobratimy khabarovskadm ru in Russian Khabarovsk Archived from the original on April 15 2020 Retrieved February 3 2020 Victoria pauses relationship with Russian twin city urges mayor to push back on invasion Vancouver Island March 4 2022 Retrieved August 10 2022 V Moskve nagradili prizerov Vserossijskogo konkursa Samyj blagoustroennyj gorod Rossii Rossijskaya gazeta Segodnya v Moskve na VVC proshla ceremoniya nagrazhdeniya prizerov Vserossijskogo konkursa na zvanie Samyj blagoustroennyj gorod Rossii za 2006 god Rg ru October 26 2007 Retrieved March 26 2013 Habarovsk vnov priznan samym blagoustroennym gorodom Rossii Nina Doronina Rossijskaya gazeta Habarovsk vnov priznan samym blagoustroennym gorodom Rossii Rg ru June 21 2012 Retrieved March 26 2013 Habarovsk zanyal II mesto v rejtinge Forbes Novosti Hbr moigorod ru Archived from the original on August 17 2011 Retrieved March 26 2013 Sources Habarovskaya gorodskaya Duma Reshenie 856 ot 28 yanvarya 2014 g O gimne gorodskogo okruga Gorod Habarovsk Vstupil v silu 28 yanvarya 2014 g Opublikovan Sbornik normativnyh aktov administracii goroda Habarovska i Habarovskoj gorodskoj Dumy No 1 yanvar 2014 g Khabarovsk City Duma Decision 856 of January 28 2014 On the Anthem of the Urban Okrug of the City of Khabarovsk Effective as of January 28 2014 Habarovskaya gorodskaya Duma Reshenie 509 ot 13 iyulya 2004 g Ustav gorodskogo okruga Gorod Habarovsk v red Resheniya 167 ot 22 sentyabrya 2015 g O vnesenii izmenenij i dopolnenij v Ustav gorodskogo okruga Gorod Habarovsk Vstupil v silu 8 oktyabrya 2004 g za isklyucheniem otdelnyh polozhenij Opublikovan Habarovskie vesti 152 8 oktyabrya 2004 g Khabarovsk City Duma Decision 509 of July 13 2004 Charter of the Urban Okrug of the City of Khabarovsk as amended by the Decision 167 of September 22 2015 On Amending and Supplementing the Charter of the Urban Okrug of the City of Khabarovsk Effective as of October 8 2004 with the exception of several clauses Zakonodatelnaya Duma Habarovskogo kraya Zakon 109 ot 28 marta 2007 g Ob administrativno territorialnom ustrojstve Habarovskogo kraya v red Zakona 155 ot 23 dekabrya 2015 g O vnesenii izmenenij v otdelnye zakonodatelnye akty Habarovskogo kraya Vstupil v silu cherez 10 dnej posle oficialnogo opublikovaniya 28 aprelya 2007 g Opublikovan Priamurskie vedomosti 52 17 aprelya 2007 g Legislative Duma of Khabarovsk Krai Law 109 of March 28 2007 On the Administrative Territorial Structure of Khabarovsk Krai as amended by the Law 155 of December 23 2015 On Amending Various Legislative Acts of Khabarovsk Krai Effective as of after 10 days from the official publication day April 28 2007 Pravitelstvo Habarovskogo kraya Postanovlenie 143 pr ot 18 iyulya 2007 g Ob utverzhdenii reestra administrativno territorialnyh i territorialnyh edinic Habarovskogo kraya v red Postanovleniya 273 pr ot 28 avgusta 2015 g O vnesenii izmenenij v Postanovlenie Pravitelstva Habarovskogo kraya ot 18 iyulya 2007 g 143 pr Ob utverzhdenii reestra administrativno territorialnyh i territorialnyh edinic Habarovskogo kraya Vstupil v silu 13 avgusta 2007 g Opublikovan Sobranie zakonodatelstva Habarovskogo kraya 7 60 12 avgusta 2007 g Government of Khabarovsk Krai Resolution 143 pr of July 18 2007 On the Adoption of the Registry of the Administrative Territorial and Territorial Units of Khabarovsk Krai as amended by the Resolution 273 pr of August 28 2015 On Amending the Resolution 143 pr of the Government of Khabarovsk Krai of July 18 2007 On the Adoption of the Registry of the Administrative Territorial and Territorial Units of Khabarovsk Krai Effective as of August 13 2007 Zakonodatelnaya Duma Habarovskogo kraya Zakon 177 ot 28 aprelya 2004 g O nadelenii municipalnogo obrazovaniya goroda Habarovska statusom gorodskogo okruga i ob ustanovlenii ego granicy Vstupil v silu so dnya oficialnogo opublikovaniya 28 maya 2004 g Opublikovan Priamurskie vedomosti 95 28 maya 2004 g Legislative Duma of Khabarovsk Krai Law 177 of April 28 2004 On Granting Urban Okrug Status to the Municipal Formation of the City of Khabarovsk and on Establishing Its Border Effective as of the day of the official publication May 28 2004 Zakonodatelnaya Duma Habarovskogo kraya Zakon 264 ot 14 marta 2005 g Ob administrativnyh centrah selskih poselenij i municipalnyh rajonov Habarovskogo kraya v red Zakona 239 ot 28 noyabrya 2012 g O preobrazovanii gorodskogo naselyonnogo punkta rabochij posyolok Tyrma nahodyashegosya na territorii Verhnebureinskogo rajona Habarovskogo kraya putyom izmeneniya ego statusa v selskij naselyonnyj punkt posyolok Tyrma i o vnesenii izmenenij v otdelnye Zakony Habarovskogo kraya Vstupil v silu so dnya oficialnogo opublikovaniya Opublikovan Priamurskie vedomosti 57 1 aprelya 2005 g Legislative Duma of Khabarovsk Krai Law 264 of March 14 2005 On the Administrative Centers of the Rural Settlements and the Municipal Districts of Khabarovsk Krai as amended by the Law 239 of November 28 2012 On the Transformation of the Urban Locality the Work Settlement of Tyrma Located on the Territory of Verkhnebureinsky District of Khabarovsk Krai by Changing Its Status to That of a Rural Locality the Settlement of Tyrma and on Amending Various Laws of Khabarovsk Krai Effective as of the day of the official publication Nikolay P Kradin It Is Protected by the State the Monuments of Architecture in Khabarovsk Khabarovsk Chastnaya kollektsiya 1999 192 p ISBN 5 7875 0011 3External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Khabarovsk Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Khabarovsk Look up Khabarovsk in Wiktionary the free dictionary in Russian Official website of Khabarovsk Archived October 10 2021 at the Wayback Machine in Russian Khabarovsk Business Directory in Korean Manchu Korean expedition against Russian expansion 나선정벌 羅禪征伐 in Korean map of the Manchu Korean expedition against Russian expansion 나선정벌 羅禪征伐 in Russian Major problems of Russian Korean relationship in Russian China and Russia relationship and history Website of Khabarovsk

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