Nookat District

Nookat (also: Naukat) is a raion (district) of Osh Region in south-western Kyrgyzstan. Its area is 3,179 square kilometres (1,227 sq mi), and its resident population was 236,455 in 2009.[1] The capital lies at Nookat.[2]

Nookat
Raion
Coat of arms
CountryKyrgyzstan
RegionOsh Region
Area
  Total3,179 km2 (1,227 sq mi)
Population
 (2009)[1]
  Total236,455
  Density74/km2 (190/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+5 (GMT +5)

Demographics

The population of Nookat District, according to the Population and Housing Census of 2009, was 236,455. 16,125 people live in urban areas, and 220,330 in rural ones.[1]

Historical populations in Nookat District
YearPop.±%
197076,970    
1979108,261+40.7%
1989144,225+33.2%
1999 196,544+36.3%
2009236,455+20.3%
Note: enumerated de facto population; Source:[1]

Ethnic composition

According to the 2009 Census, the ethnic composition of the Nookat District (de jure population) was:[1]

Ethnic groupPopulationProportion of Kemin District population
Kyrgyzs173,92073.6%
Uzbeks61,29925.9%
Khemshils2760.1%
Turks2670.1%
Russians2410.1%
Tatars1230.1%
other groups3290.1%

Towns, rural communities and villages

village Sahaba

In total, Nookat District includes 1 town and 75 settlements in 16 rural communities (aiyl okmotus). Each rural community can consist of one or several villages. The rural communities and settlements in the Nookat District are:[3]

  1. town Nookat
  2. Nayman aiyl okmotu (1: center - village: Nayman)
  3. Bel' aiyl okmotu (2: center - village: Bel; and also village Borbash)
  4. Gulstan aiyl okmotu (2: center - village: Imeni Frunze; and also village Gulstan)
  5. Isanov aiyl okmotu (6: center - village: Jangy-Bazar; and also villages Jar-Korgon, Fedorovo, Chech-Döbö, Kojoke and Kichik-Alay)
  6. Karatash aiyl okmotu (2: center - village: Kara-Tash; and also village Noygut)
  7. Kulatov aiyl okmotu (5: center - village: Kojo-Aryk; and also villages Akchal, Baglan, Kosh-Döbö and Kyzyl-Bulak)
  8. Jangy-Nookat aiyl okmotu (3: center - village: Jangy-Nookat; and also villages Kyzyl-Teyit and Temir-Koruk)
  9. Kenesh aiyl okmotu (5: center - village: Kuu Maydan; and also villages Ak-Terek, Arbyn, Chegeden and Shankol)
  10. Kyrgyz-Ata aiyl okmotu (7: center - village: Kötörmö; and also villages Borko, Kara-Oy, Kara-Tash, Kyrgyz-Ata, Tash-Bulak and Ak-Bulak)
  11. Imeni Toktomata Zulpueva aiyl okmotu (10: center - village: Uchbay; and also villages Aybek, Ak-Chabuu, Internatsional, Karake, Kommunizm, Osor, Tashtak, Chuchuk and Yatan)
  12. Kök-Bel aiyl okmotu (2: center - village: Kök-Bel; and also village Kayyndy)
  13. Kyzyl Oktyabr aiyl okmotu (6: center - village: Kök-Jar; and also villages Alashan, Borbash, Jiyde, Karanay and Sarykandy)
  14. On Eki Bel aiyl okmotu (2: center - village: On Eki-Bel; and also village Naray)
  15. Teeles aiyl okmotu (8: center - village: Murkut; and also villages Ay-Tamga, Gerey-Shoron, Jayylma, Dodon, Kengesh, Merkit and Tolman)
  16. Mirmakhmud aiyl okmotu (6: center - village: Imeni Chapayeva; and also villages Aral, Baryn, Budaylyk, Kapchygay and Kara-Koktu)
  17. Yntymak aiyl okmotu (8: center - village: Yntymak; and also villages Besh-Burkan, Aryk Boyu, Don Maala, Akshar, Tash-Bulak, Chelekchi and Nichke-Suu)
gollark: There are also different WiFi standards for packing higher data rates into whatever frequency range, some of which work, I think, by using several streams at different frequencies combined.
gollark: 2.4GHz and 5GHz are different, er, frequencies, though stuff doesn't run at exactly those frequencies but generally around them.
gollark: That's not really quite accurate.
gollark: You mean 5GHz WiFi or 5G the unneceesary mobile standard?
gollark: RFTools has a builder block thing which can copy areas if you feed in the items, which makes the difficult bit just autoproducing all the items involved, which other mods can do okayishly.

References

  1. "2009 population census of the Kyrgyz Republic: Osh Region" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 August 2011. Retrieved 2011-08-10.
  2. Enrin.grida.no
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-02-09. Retrieved 2010-03-14.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

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