Bilär

Bilär (Tatar: Биләр, meaning as: The Great City) - was a medieval city in Volga Bulgaria and its second capital before the Mongol invasion of Volga Bulgaria. It was located on the left bank of the Small Cheremshan River in Alexeeyevsky District of the Tatarstan. The distance to Bilyarsk is 50 km and 150 km to Kazan.

Bilär
Alternative namePulyar, The Great city.
LocationAlexeyevsky District, Tatarstan, Russia
RegionRussia
Part ofTatarstan
History
Founded10th century
Site notes
ArchaeologistsFayaz Huzin, Albert Khalikov
ConditionSemi-Ruined
OwnershipPublic
Public accessYes

History

The city was founded around 10th century by the indigenous Bilyar tribe of the Volga Bulgars. In the Rus chronicles, it was also known as "Great City" (Великий город), because its population reputedly was in excess of 100,000.[1] Bilyar was one of the main trade centers in the Middle Volga, and alternatively with the Bulgar city and Nur-Suvar served as the capital of Volga Bulgaria in the 12th and 13th centuries. In 1236, the city was sacked by the army of Batu Khan. The city was later rebuilt, but it never regained its former size or power. The city's ruins (nearly 8 km2) were explored by Rychkov, Tatischev, Khalikov and Khuchin.

Near old Bilyar in 1654 was founded a Russian border fort Bilyarsk, which today is an ethnic Russian village. In 1930-1963 Bilyarsk was an administrative center of Bilyar District. By the 2000 census, its population was 2,270. It is a birthplace of chemist Alexander Arbuzov.

Bilyar was the capital of the Volga-Kama-Bulgaria from the 10th century until the early 13th century. It was also one of the largest cities of medieval Eurasia. The end of the city in 1236 also resulted in the loss of its monumental architecture.

Bilyar Point

Bilyar Point on Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica is named after Bilär.[2]

Bilyarsk was the home of a fictional Soviet air force base in Craig Thomas' Firefox novel and subsequent film, about the fictional MiG-31 Firefox aircraft stolen by United States Air Force pilot Mitchell Gant. In reality, Bilyarsk has no airport and the closest full-service airport is in Kazan, Tatarstan in Russia, 98 kilometres (61 mi) northwest of Bilyarsk.

gollark: Well, balancers are symmetric maybe.
gollark: 4 to 8 balancers are entirely valid.
gollark: Also, that's just a balancer, not very accursed.
gollark: * cuprous apiosystem
gollark: HDMI is fairly recent I think and has moderately apioformic license fees going on.

See also

References

  1. Khalikov A.Kh., "Tatar people and its anscestors", Kazan, Tatar Book Publishing, 1989, p.93 (Халиков А. Х., Татарский народ и его предки, Казань, Татарское кн. изд-во, 1989, С.93, In Russian
  2. Bilyar Point. SCAR Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica

Resources

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