Dinskaya

Dinskaja (Russian Динская ) is a Cossack village in the southern Russian Krasnodar region with 34,848 inhabitants (as of October 14, 2010 ).

Geography

The Cossack village is located in the central part of the Kuban area, about 30 km north-east of the regional capital of Krasnodar near the river Kotschety. Dinskaja is the third largest Staniza ( Cossack village ) the region after Kanewskaja and Leningradskaya.

The Staniza Dinskaja is the administrative center of the homonymous Rajons Dinskaja ( Dinskoi ).

Shopping center

Rajonverwaltung

Palace of Culture

Russian Orthodox Church

History

The history of the Cossack village begins in 1794, when the first 40 Cossack settlements were founded in Cuba area. The colonizing here Zaporozhye Cossacks called the Cossack village located south of the present move to their place of origin Dinskoje on the Dnieper River. The term Dinskoje is attributed to the former Cossack name Din the river Don, from which these Cossacks probably originally derived.

1807 settlement ( "cures" ) was relocated to its present location; Since 1842 it is considered Staniza under its present name form.

The economic importance of the Cossack village grew from 1888, when the railway line from the station Tikhoretskaya the main line of the North Caucasus Railway Rostov - Vladikavkaz to Yekaterinodar (present-day Krasnodar ) was passed through the town.

During the Second World War the Cossack village Dinskaja was occupied in August 1942 by the German Wehrmacht during their advance from the Don to the North Caucasus and recaptured on 11 February 1943 by the Red Army.

Demographics

Note: from 1959 census data

Economy and infrastructure

The Cossack village is the center of an important agricultural region. There are a number of establishments for the processing of agricultural products (sugar factory, canning factory, wholesale confectionery " Juschnaja Zvezda " Great slaughterhouse ( " meat plant" ) " Dinskoi ").

Dinskaja is located on the railway line from (Volgograd ) Tikhoretskaya - Krasnodar and on to the Black Sea coast towards Novorossiysk and Sochi ( route 642 km from Volgograd). Located northwest of the Cossack village takes you past the M4 highway Moscow - Rostov - Novorossiysk.

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