Aka-Bass

Aka-Bass (Chechen: Акха-Басс), (Russian: Акха-Басс) is a non-residential village in Galanchozhsky District, Chechnya.

Aka-Bass before it was abandoned in 1944.

Administrative and municipal status

Municipally, Aka-Bass is incorporated into Gekhi-Chuyskoye rural settlement. It is one of the three settlements included in it.

Until 31 December 2019, Aka-Bass was included in Achkhoy-Martanovsky District, but on 1 January 2020 - was transferred to the control of Urus-Martanovsky District.

At the same time, Aka-Bass is the administrative center of Galanchozhsky District. The district is formally restored, but it is not a part of the administrative-territorial structure of the Chechen Republic.

Name

Sometimes, Aka-Bass is wrongly called as Galanchozh. However, no village called Galanchozh exists, and Galanchozh is the name of the area in Aka-Bass and surrounding auls.

Geography

Map of Urus-Martanovsky District with Gekhi-Chu rural settlement highlighted. Aka-Bass is in the south

Aka-Bass is located in the center of Galanchozhsky District, on the left bank of the Osu-Khi river. It is located less than 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) north-west from Lake Galanchozh. It is 60 kilometres (37 mi) south-west of the city of Grozny.

The closest settlements and ruins to Aka-Bass are 'Amka to the north-west, Körga to the north-east, Ker-Bi-Te and 'Amye to the south-east, Chikondi-Pkhäda and Äkka to the south-west, and Ittar-Källa to the west.[1]

History

In 1929, a rebel government was established in Aka-Bass against the Bolshevik government in the mountains of Chechnya. During the next wave of resistance, a provisional rebel government was established in 1940 by members of the local armed forces.

In 1942, the Soviet Air Force carried out two large-scale bombings in the Chechen mountains, and Galanchozhsky District was particularly hard-hit by the attacks.

In 1944, after the genocide and deportation of the Chechen and Ingush people and the Chechen-Ingush ASSR was abolished, the aul of Aka-Bass was abandoned and destroyed.

In 1957, after the Vaynakh people returned and the Chechen-Ingush ASSR was restored, former residents of Galanchozhsky District were forbidden to resettle there. As a result, most former residents of Aka-Bass resettled in the flat lands of the republic, mostly in the Achkhoy-Martanovsky, Sernovodsky and Groznensky districts.[2]

In 2019, Aka-Bass was named as one of the first settlements in Galanchozhsky District to be rebuilt in order to resettle the area.[3][4]

Infrastructure

On 31 August 2019, the newly rebuilt mosque in Aka-Bass was opened.[5] The mosque stands on the very same place that the old mosque stood before it was destroyed in 1944. However, there was still no permanent population in Aka-Bass at this time.

gollark: Flash stuff can be stacked somehow, which makes it cheaper, but also not sure why.
gollark: I think the flash memory is denser than DRAM, not sure why.
gollark: You could try calculating digits of tau, the cool and underappreciated circle constant.
gollark: Maybe try computing comparatively small things, like the... millionth Fibonacci number? Or try and find a different way to do this. Maths seems to have lots of those.
gollark: That's probably quite a big number, then.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.