
A 10th-century Alanian church in
Arkhyz, as photographed in 1897.
The '
Republic of North Ossetia-Alania' is a
federal subject of
Russia (a
republic), located in the
Caucasus region.
Early history
Main articles: Alania
The territory of North Ossetia has been inhabited for thousands of years by
Vainakh tribes, being both a very fertile agricultural region and a key trade route through the
Caucasus Mountains. The ancestors of the present inhabitants were a people called the
Alans, a warlike nomadic people who spoke an
Iranian language. Part of the Alan people eventually settled in the Caucasus around the
7th century AD. By about the
9th century, the kingdom of
Alania had arisen and had been converted to
Christianity by
Byzantine missionaries. An archbishopric was established in western Alania under the authority of the
Patriarchate of Constantinople, and many large churches were constructed (
Arkhyz churches,
Shoana Church,
Senty Church). Alania became a powerful state in the Caucasus, profiting greatly from the legendary
Silk Road to
China, which passed through its territory.
From the
Middle Ages onwards, Alania was beset by external enemies and suffered repeated invasions. The invasions of the
Mongols and
Tatars in the
13th century decimated the population, who were now known as
Ossetians.
Islam was introduced in the
17th century through the
Kabardians, a Muslim Caucasian people. Incursions by the
Khanate of Crimea and the
Ottoman Empire eventually pushed Alania/Ossetia into an alliance with Russia in the
18th century. North Ossetia was among the first areas of the northern Caucasus to come under
Russian domination, starting in
1774, and the capital,
Vladikavkaz, was the first Russian military outpost in the region. By
1806, Ossetia was completely under Russian control.
==
Imperial Russia==
The arrival of the Russians led to the rapid development of the region, with industries founded and road and rail connections built to overcome Ossetia's isolation. The
Georgian Military Road, which is still a crucial transport link across the mountains, was built in
1799 and a railway line was built from Vladikavkaz to
Rostov-on-Don in Russia proper. The Ossetians' traditional culture inevitably underwent some russification, but their new connections with Russia and the West helped to boost local culture; the first books in the Ossetian language were printed in the late 18th century. Ossetia became part of the Terskaya Region of Russia in the mid-
19th century.
Russian Revolution and USSR
After the
Russian Revolution, North Ossetia became part of the short-lived
Soviet Mountain Republic in
1921. It became the
North Ossetian Autonomous Oblast on
July 7,
1924 and was then made the
North Ossetian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (
ASSR), within the
Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic, on
December 5,
1936. In
World War II, North Ossetia saw the high water mark of the invasion of Russia by
Nazi Germany; the Germans attempted to seize Vladikavkaz in November
1942 but were repulsed.
During and after the war Stalin undertook
massive deportations of whole ethnicities explaining this by anti-Sovietism, separatism and collaboration with
Nazi Germany. In particular, this affected
Balkars,
Chechens, and
Ingushs As of
1944, the part of the Prigorodny District on the right bank of the
Terek River had been part of
Chechen-Ingush ASSR, but it was granted to North Ossetia in following
Stalin's deportation of the Chechens and Ingush to
Central Asia. Although they were eventually allowed to return from the exile, they were generally not allowed to settle in the original territories. Instead, in
1957, three districts of
Stavropol Krai were granted to Chechen-Ingush ASSR. A local law passed in
1982 actually prohibited ethnic Ingush from obtaining residency permits in North Ossetia.
After the USSR
North Ossetian SSR finally became the first autonomous republic of the RSFSR to declare national sovereignty, on
June 20,
1990 (although it still remains firmly part of
Russia). In
1991 North Ossetian SSR was renamed the Republic of North Ossetia-Alania.
The dissolution of the
Soviet Union posed particular problems for the Ossetian people, which were divided between North Ossetia, which was part of the
Russian SFSR, and
South Ossetia, part of the
Georgian SSR. In December 1990 the Supreme Soviet of Georgia abolished the autonomous Ossetian enclave amid the rising
ethnic tensions in the region, and much of the population fled across the border to North Ossetia or Georgia proper. Some 70,000 South Ossetian refugees were resettled in North Ossetia, sparking clashes with the predominantly Ingush population in the
Prigorodny District. That led to
Ossetian-Ingush conflict.
As well as dealing with the effects of the conflict in South Ossetia, North Ossetia has had to deal with refugees and the occasional spillover of fighting from the war in neighboring
Chechnya. The bloodiest incident by far was the September
2004 Beslan hostage crisis, in which
Chechen Muslim separatists of
Shamil Basayev seized control of a school. In the firefight between the terrorists and Russian forces that ended the crisis, 335 civilians, the majority of them children, died.