| En name | Murmansk |
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| Ru name | Мурманск |
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| Coordinates | 68°58′″N33°05′″N |
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| Map label position | left |
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| Holiday | October 4 |
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| Federal subject | Murmansk Oblast |
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| Federal subject ref | |
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| Adm data as of | April 2011 |
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| Adm city jur | City of Murmansk |
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| Adm city jur ref | |
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| Adm ctr of | City of Murmansk, Murmansk Oblast |
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| Adm ctr of ref | |
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| Inhabloc cat | City |
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| Inhabloc cat ref | |
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| Mun data as of | December 2004 |
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| Urban okrug jur | Murmansk Urban Okrug |
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| Urban okrug jur ref | |
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| Mun admctr of | Murmansk Urban Okrug |
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| Mun admctr of ref | |
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| Leader title | Head |
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| Leader name | Alexey Veller |
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| Representative body | Council of Deputies |
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| Area km2 | 150.55 |
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| Pop 2010census | 307664 |
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| Pop 2010census rank | 61st |
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| Pop 2010census ref | |
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| Pop 2002census | 336137 |
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| Pop 2002census rank | 52nd |
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| Pop 2002census ref | |
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| Established date | October 4, 1916 |
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| Established title | Official foundation(''see text'') |
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| Established date ref | |
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| Current cat date | July 19, 1916 |
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| Current cat date ref | |
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| Prev name1 | Romanov-on-Murman |
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| Prev name1 date | April 16, 1917 |
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| Postal codes | 183000..183099 |
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| Postal codes ref | |
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| Dialing codes | 8152 |
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| Website | http://www.citymurmansk.ru/ |
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| Commonscat | Murmansk |
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| Date | June 2010
}} |
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Murmansk (; ; ; ) is a city and the administrative center of Murmansk Oblast, Russia. It serves as a seaport and is located in the extreme northwest part of Russia, on the Kola Bay, from the Barents Sea on the northern shore of the Kola Peninsula, not far from Russia's borders with Norway and Finland. Population: Despite its rapidly declining population, Murmansk remains the largest city north of the Arctic Circle.
History
Murmansk was the last city founded in the
Russian Empire. In 1915,
World War I needs led to the construction of the railroad from
Petrozavodsk to an ice-free location on the
Murman Coast in the
Russian Arctic, to which Russia's allies shipped military supplies. The terminus became known as the Murman station, and soon boasted a port, a naval base, and an adjacent settlement with a population which quickly grew in size and soon surpassed the nearby towns of
Alexandrovsk and
Kola.
On , 1916, Russian Transport Minister Alexander Trepov petitioned to grant urban status to the railway settlement. On , 1916, the petition was approved, and the town was named Romanov-on-Murman (, ''Romanov-na-Murmane''), after the royal Russian dynasty of Romanovs. On , 1916, the official ceremony was performed, and the date is now considered the official date of the city's foundation. After the February Revolution of 1917, on , 1917, the town was given its present name.
From 1918 to 1920, during the Russian Civil War, the town was occupied by the Western powers, who had been allied in World War I, and by the White Army forces.
On February 13, 1926, local self-government was for the first time organized in Murmansk during a plenary session of the Murmansk City Soviet, which elected a Presidium. Prior to this, the city was governed by the authorities of Alexandrovsky Uyezd and later of Murmansk Governorate. On August 1, 1927, the All-Russian Central Executive Committee (VTsIK) issued two Resolutions: "On the Establishment of Leningrad Oblast" and "On the Borders and Composition of the Okrugs of Leningrad Oblast", which transformed Murmansk Governorate into Murmansk Okrug within Leningrad Oblast and made Murmansk the administrative center of Murmansk Okrug.
In 1934, the Murmansk Okrug Executive Committee developed a redistricting proposal, which included a plan to enlarge the city by merging the surrounding territories in the north, south, and west into Murmansk. While this plan was not confirmed by the Leningrad Oblast Executive Committee, in 1935–1937 several rural localities of Kolsky and Polyarny Districts were merged into Murmansk anyway.
Per the Presidium of the Leningrad Oblast Executive Committee resolution of February 26, 1935, the administrative center of Polyarny District was moved from Polyarnoye to Sayda-Guba. However, the provisions of the were not fully implemented, and due to military construction in Polyarnoye, the administrative center was instead moved to Murmansk in the beginning of 1935. In addition to being the administrative center of Murmansk Okrug, Murmansk also continued to serve as the administrative center of Polyarny District until September 11, 1938. On February 10, 1938, when the VTsIK adopted a Resolution changing the administrative-territorial structure of Murmansk Okrug, the city of Murmansk became a separate administrative division of the okrug equal in status to that of the districts. This status was retained when Murmansk Okrug was transformed into Murmansk Oblast on May 28, 1938.
During World War II, Murmansk was a link with the Western world for Russia, with large quantities of goods important to the respective military efforts traded with the Allies: primarily manufactured goods and raw materials into the Soviet Union. The supplies were brought to the city in the Arctic convoys.
German forces in Finnish territory launched an offensive against the city in 1941 as part of Operation Silver Fox, and Murmansk suffered extensive destruction, the magnitude of which was rivaled only by the destruction of Leningrad and Stalingrad. However, fierce Soviet resistance and harsh geography prevented the Germans from capturing the city and cutting off the vital Karelian railway line and the ice-free harbor. For the rest of the war, it served as transit point for weapons and other supplies entering the Soviet Union from other Allied nations. This unyielding resistance was commemorated at the 40th anniversary of the victory over the Germans in the formal designation of Murmansk as a Hero City on May 6, 1985. During the Cold War Murmansk was a center of Soviet submarine and icebreaker activity and, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the nearby city and naval base of Severomorsk remains the headquarters of the Russian Northern Fleet.
In 1974, a massive 35.5-meter-tall statue ''Alyosha'', depicting a Russian World War II soldier, was installed on a high foundation. In 1984, the Hotel Arctic, the tallest building above the Arctic Circle, opened.
To commemorate the 85th anniversary of the city's foundation, the snow-white church of the Savior-on-the-Waters was modeled after the White Monuments of Vladimir and Suzdal and built on the shore for the sailors of Murmansk (see photograph).
Administrative and municipal status
Administratively, it is incorporated as the
City of Murmansk—an administrative unit with the status equal to that of the
districts.
Municipally, the City of Murmansk is incorporated as
Murmansk Urban Okrug.
Transport
The port of Murmansk remains ice-free year round due to the warm North Atlantic Current and is an important fishing and shipping destination. It is home port to Atomflot, the world's only fleet of nuclear-powered icebreakers.
The port is the headquarters of Sevmorput (Northern Sea Route), and the administration of Russian Arctic maritime transport.
Murmansk is linked by the Murman Railway to St. Petersburg and is also linked to the rest of Russia by the M18 Kola Motorway. Murmansk Airport provides air links to Moscow and St. Petersburg, as well as an international connection to Tromsø, Norway.
Local public transport consists of buses and trolleybuses.
Arctic Bridge
Murmansk is set to be the Russian terminus of the Arctic Bridge (or Arctic Sea Bridge), a sea route linking it to the Canadian port of Churchill, Manitoba. The passage has not been fully tested for commercial shipping yet but Russia has shown interest in it. It is believed that, once developed (along with the Northwest Passage), the bridge will serve as major trade route between Europe and Asia.
Climate
Murmansk features a
subarctic climate, with long and cold winters and short but relatively mild summers. In the city, sub-freezing temperatures are routinely experienced from October through May. Average temperatures exceed 0 degrees Celsius only from May through October. The average low during the coldest part of the year in Murmansk is approximately . However temperatures routinely plunge below during the winter. Murmansk's brief summer is mild, with average highs in July exceeding . Murmansk is slightly wetter during the summer than the winter, seeing on average roughly of precipitation each year.
Education
Murmansk is home to
Murmansk State Technical University, the Murmansk State Pedagogical University and the Murmansk Institute of Humanities. The city also has eighty-six primary schools and fifty-six secondary schools, two boarding schools, and three reform schools.
Media
Murmansk's evening newspaper is ''
Vecherny Murmansk'', published since 1991.
Sports
The city association football team,
FC Sever Murmansk, plays in the Russian Second Division.
Bandy club Murman plays in the highest division of the Russian Bandy League. The city is one of only three places with representation in the female league, through the team Arktika.
Culture
Murmansk has two main (and several small) museums: Murmansk Oblast Museum and Murmansk Oblast Art Museum. There are also three professional theaters, libraries, and an
aquarium in Murmansk.
Notable people
Nikita Alexeev, ice hockey player
Aleksey Goman, pop singer
Irina Kovalenko, supermodel and Miss Russia winner
Vladimir Konstantinov, ice hockey player
Larisa Kruglova, sprinter
Sergey Kuryokhin, actor and musician
Irina Malgina, triathlete
Sergey Rozhkov, biathlete
Alexei Semenov, ice hockey player
Twin towns and sister cities
Murmansk is
twinned or has sister city relationships with:
{| cellpadding="10"
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
|
Kaliningrad, Russia
Akureyri,
Iceland
Vadsø,
Norway
Groningen,
Netherlands
Jacksonville,
Florida,
United States
||
||
Luleå,
Sweden
Rovaniemi,
Finland
Tromsø, Norway
Szczecin,
Poland
Curitiba,
Brazil
|}
References
Notes
Sources
External links
Official website of Murmansk
News of Murmansk
Interactive map of Murmansk
Barentsnova.com, Murmansk business news, statistics
Atomic ice breaker fleet
Murmansk's gorgeous garages — a photo journal by BBC news journalist Jorn Madslien
Murmansk travel guide
Views of Murmansk group on Flickr
Video overview of Murmansk in English, 4½ minutes, 2009
Murmansk State Technical University
British North Russian Expeditionary Force 1918–1919 (based at Murmansk)
"Big-dollar deals tempt Arctic firms" BBC article on the energy industry's effect on Murmansk
Category:Arctic convoys of World War II
Category:Barents Sea
Category:Hero Cities of the Soviet Union
Category:Populated coastal places in Russia
Category:Populated places established in 1916
Category:Populated places of Arctic Russia
Category:Port cities and towns in Russia
Category:Russian and Soviet Navy bases
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