Tomsk () is a city on the Tom River in the southwest of Siberian Federal District, Russia, the administrative centre of Tomsk Oblast. It is located about twenty kilometres south-east of the town of Seversk, a major centre of plutonium and uranium enrichment in Russia. One of the oldest towns in Siberia, Tomsk celebrated its 400th anniversary in 2004. Population: 487,838 (2002 Census).
Geography
Tomsk is divided into four city districts: Kirovsky, Leninsky, Oktyabrsky, and Sovetsky. The historical areas of Tomsk include: Voskresenskaya Gora (
Resurrection Hill), the Swamp, Belozerye, Greater and Lesser Yelany, Zaistochye (
Tatar settlement), the Lakeside, Kashtak, Kirpichi, and Mukhin Mound.
In 2005, the city annexed the settlements of Eushta, Dzerzhinsky, Timiryazevskoye, Zonalny, Loskutovo, Svetly, Kirgizka, and Kopylovo.
Climate
Tomsk has a
continental climate. The annual average temperature is −1.3°C. Winters are severe and lengthy, and the lowest recorded temperature was −55°C in January 1969. However, the average temperature in January is between −21°C and −19°C. The average temperature in July is 17°C to 18°C. The total yearly rainfall is 435 mm.
History
In
1604, the
Russian
tsar Boris Godunov ordered
Cossack leader
Gavril Pisemsky and
boyar son and
strelets officer Vasiliy Tyrkov to found a fort on the
Tom River, on
Tatar land, to protect the river crossing and Eushta population from Kalmyk and Kyrghiz tribes. It became important as a military center for pacifying the native people and evolved into a regional administrative center. Beginning in the late
1830s, its population grew quickly thanks to the intensifying
gold-
mining activity in
Siberia.
Politics and government
Tomsk is governed by a mayor and a 33-member city
Duma. The current mayor is
Aleksandr Makarov and the current Duma chairman is
Nikolai Nikolaichuk, both members of
United Russia. Of the 33 members, 16 are elected from the eight
double mandate districts while 17 are chosen from
party lists.
In the October 2005 local elections, United Russia was expected to cruise to a solid victory, however, the Pensioners Party put up a strong showing. The final count was:
=Proportional representation
=
=Double Mandates
=
- 10 seats - No party affiliation
- 4 seats - United Russia
- 1 seat - Pensioners Party
- 1 seat - Liberal Democratic Party of Russia
Education
Tomsk has a number of prominent universities:
Thanks to its strong university presence, Tomsk has become a center of the IT industry in Russia.
Culture
Tomsk has many local cultural institutions including drama theaters, a children's theater and a puppet theater. One can find music at the city concert hall, home of the local orchestra, or the sports palace where pop and rock stars perform. The city also has centers of
German,
Polish and
Tatar culture where residents can study languages or learn about other countries.
Unfortunately, one of Tomsk's theaters was destroyed in a bloody act of terrorism in 1905. The Korolevskii Theater (built in 1884-85) was being used by a group of communist revolutionaries one evening, when members of the Black Hundred struck. The Black Hundred was a hardline organ of the tsar and brutally stamped out opposition. The theater was set on fire with Black Hundred members shooting those who tried to escape the flames. Estimates of casualties ranged from 200 to 1000 people.
There are a number of museums in Tomsk including those devoted to art, local history and wood carving. Tomsk State University has a number of small museums with exhibits on archaeology, paleontology, zoology as well as a herbarium and botanical garden.
As in many other cities in the Former Soviet Union, the government destroyed a number of old churches in the city including two that had existed since the 17th century. However, Tomsk managed to retain some of its churches by creating alternative uses for them such as machine shops, warehouses, archives, and even residences. Since the end of communism, some of the churches have been renovated and handed back to their congregations.
Tomsk is well-known for its (gingerbread) carved wooden houses. The quantity of these wooden houses is constantly decreasing due to fire and new construction.
Trud (Labor) Stadium, in central Tomsk, plays host to FC Tom' Tomsk, the city's soccer team. Thanks to the team's promotion to the Russian Premier League in 2005, local fans have the opportunity to see Russia's best soccer teams when they visit each year.
Tomsk does have many local media outlets including a television station TV2, radio stations (Radio Siberia and Echo Moscow - Tomsk) and newspapers (Tomskii Vestnik, Tomskaya Nedelya, Krasnoye Znamya and Vechernii Tomsk).
Tomsk received notoriety thanks to a major economic cooperation summit to be held in Tomsk between Russian President Vladimir Putin and German Chancellor Angela Merkel in April 2006.
Famous people
- Mikhail Andreev - poet
- Mikhail Bakunin - anarchist
- Gavriil Batenkov - Decembrist, philosopher
- Nikolai Burdenko - surgeon, the first president of the USSR's Academy of Medical Science
- Edison Denisov - composer, musicologist, public servant
- Yekaterina Dolgorukova - Duchess (see knyaz), bride of Peter II from (Old Style)22 December 1740 until 10 January 1742.
- Nikolai Erdman - dramatist
- Abram Petrovich Gannibal - famous as "The Negro of Peter the Great" and great-grandfather of Alexander Pushkin, from December 1729 to February 1730
- Nikolai Garin-Mikhailovskiy - writer
- Leonid Govorov - Marshal of the Soviet Union
- Nikolai Il'yich Kamov - chief engineer of the Kamov helicopter
- Sergei Kirov - revolutionary
- Nikolai Klyuev - poet
- Vladimir Korolenko - writer
- Valerian Kuybyshev - revolutionary
- Yegor Ligachev - second in command to Mikhail Gorbachev (name pronounced "Ligachyov")
- Pyotr Makushin - founded Tomsk's first public library and helped found Tomsk University
- Mikhail Mil' - helicopter engineer
- Nikolai Nikitin - scientist involved in oblast' creation
- Vladimir Obruchev - geologist, geographer, writer, academic
- Grigoriy Potanin - geographer, ethnographer, publicist, folklorist, oblast' supporter
- Alexander Radishchev - writer, philosopher
- Nikolai Rukavishnikov - cosmonaut
- Vyacheslav Shishkov - writer
- Gustav Shpet - philosopher
- Konstantin Staniukovich - writer
- Kanysh Satpaev - Soviet geologist
- Leontiy Usov - actor, sculptor
- Mikhail Usov - geologist, academic
- Alexandr Volkov - writer
- Lyubov Yegorova - six-time Olympic cross-country ski champion
- Yakov Yurovsky - Bolshevik, chief executioner of the last Romanovs
Tomsk Sister Cities
External links
Cities and towns in Tomsk Oblast | 1604 establishments
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