| Perekop Перекоп Перекоп Or Qapı |
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![]() Perekop
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| Coordinates: 46°9′42″N 33°41′34″E / 46.16167°N 33.69278°E | |
| Country | |
| Territory | Crimea |
| Region | Armiansk municipality |
| Elevation | 5 m (16 ft) |
| Population (2001) | |
| - Total | 894 |
| Time zone | EET (UTC+2) |
| - Summer (DST) | EEST (UTC+3) |
| Postal code | 96011 |
| Area code(s) | +380-6567 |
Perekop (Ukrainian and Russian: Перекоп; Crimean Tatar: Or Qapı) is a village commanding the Perekop Isthmus connecting Crimea to the Ukrainian mainland. It was formerly the northernmost town in Crimea. The local fort used to be of great military importance as the key to the Crimean Khanate. Population: 894 (2004).
During the Russo-Turkish War (1735–1739), Russian Field Marshal Burkhard Christoph von Munnich successfully stormed the fortifications on June 17, 1736 and left the Tatar fortress in ruins. This was a serious, if not mortal, blow to the independence of the Crimean Khanate.
The town was virtually wiped out during the Siege of Perekop by the Red Army in 1920. The siege was a key episode of the Russian Civil War. The success of the Bolsheviks allowed them to oust Pyotr Wrangel's White Army from the Crimea. Twelve years later, the Soviets founded the new town of Krasnoperekopsk 32 km (20 mi) to the south.
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Coordinates: 46°9′42″N 33°41′34″E / 46.16167°N 33.69278°E
PEREKOP, a town of Russia, in the government of Taurida, 60 m. S.E. of Kherson, on the isthmus which connects the Crimea with the Continent, and commanding the once defensive ditch and dike which cross from the Black Sea to the Sivash (putrid) lagoon. Pop. about 5000. It was formerly an important place, with a great transit trade in salt, obtained from salt lakes in the immediate neighbourhood. Since the opening of the railway route from Kharkov to Simferopol in the Crimea Perekop has greatly declined. In ancient times the isthmus was crossed (about i z m. south of the present town) by a ditch which gave the name of Taphros to a Greek settlement. This line of defence having fallen into decay, a fort was erected and a new ditch and dike constructed in the, 5th century by the Tatar khan of the Crimea, Mengli Ghirai, and by his son and successor Sahib Ghirai. The fort, known as Kapu or Or-Kapu, became the nucleus of the town. In the middle ages Perekop was known as Tuzia. In 1736 it was captured by the Russians under Miinnich, and again in 1738 under Lascy (Lacy), who blew up the fort and destroyed a great part of the dike. In 1 754 the fort was rebuilt by Krim Ghirei; but the Greek and Armenian inhabitants of Perekop formed a new settlement at Armyanskiy Bazar (Armenian Market), 3 m. farther south. Captured by the Russians in 1771, the town passed into Russian possession with the rest of the Crimea in 1783.
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Categories: PEO-PET
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