Almaty (Алматы; formerly known as Alma-Ata, also Vernyj, Vyernyi (Верный) in Imperial Russia) is the largest city in Kazakhstan, with a population of 1,185,900 (2004) (8% of the population of Kazakhstan) citizens.
The name "Almaty" means "appled" (the place with apples), the older version of its name, Alma-Ata, literally means "father-apple". In the surrounding region, unrivalled genetic diversity among the alma, the wild apples, implies that south-east Kazakhstan is where the domesticated apple is native.
A troop of Siberian Cossacks from Omsk founded the fort Zailiysky in 1854 at the foot of the Tian Shan mountain range, and renamed it one year later to Vernyj, a name that remained until 1921. In 1921, the artificial and improper name Alma-Ata ("father-apple") was created by the Bolsheviks. In a devastating earthquake in 1911, almost the only large building that remained standing was the Russian Orthodox cathedral. In the 1920s, after the completion of the Turkestan-Siberia Railway, Alma-Ata, as it was then known, became a major stopping point along the track.
In 1929, Almaty became the capital of the Kazakh SSR. In late 1991, Almaty became the capital of the Republic of Kazakhstan, a designation it kept until 1998, when the capital was moved to Astana. Almaty, however, remains the largest city in Kazakhstan and the country's major commercial center. In 2005, the city launched an Olympic application to host the XXII Olympic Winter Games in the year 2014, which failed, as the IOC did not select the city as a candidate.
A short bus ride into the Tian Shan mountains brings one to Medeo, a popular tourist destination, with several hotels and an olympic-size skating rink.
On 21 December, 1991, the Charter that ended the Soviet Union creating the Commonwealth of Independent States was signed there.
Cities along the Silk Road | Cities in Kazakhstan
Almaty | Almaty | Almatõ | Almaty | Almato | آلماآتی | Almaty | Almati - Алматы | 알마티 | Almaty | Almaty | אלמטי | Алматы | Alma Ata | Almati | Alma-Ata | アルマトイ | Almaty | Ałmaty | Almaty | Алма-Ата | Alma-Ata | Almaty | Almaty | Алмати | 阿拉木圖