
A map with the Isthmus of Perekop.
The 'Isthmus of Perekop' (;
translit. ''Perekops'kyy pereshyyok''; ;
translit. ''Perekopskiy peresheek'' ) is the narrow, three- to four-mile-wide strip of land that connects the
peninsula of
Crimea to the continent. The isthmus is located between the
Black Sea to the west and the
Azov Sea the the east.
The isthmus takes its name from the Tatar fortress of
Perekop. Its original name, in
Crimean Tatar, is ''Or''.
The border between the Crimea republic an the
Kherson Oblast runs though the northern part of the isthmus. The cities of
Perekop,
Armjansk,
Suvorovo and
Krasnoperekopsk are situated on the isthmus and the Crimean channel though the isthmus secures Crimea watersupplies with deliveries from
Dnieper River.
South of Perekop, there are rich salt ores which still are very important commercially for the region.
The strategic and commercial value of this area has made the isthmus a place for some heavy and bloody fightings, especially as the gateway til Crimea. Both ancient
Greeks and
Crimean Tatars fortified the area, and from the 15th century the area was a
colony under
Genova. From
1783, the area became a part of Russia, and from
1954 on, together with Crimea it was transferred to the Ukrainian Soviet Republic. For that reason, it still is a part of Ukrainian territory.
In the
Russian Civil War, there was in 1920 a battle here between
Red Army and
White movement. The Red Army turned out victorious, but 140.000 civilians fled over the Black Sea to
Istanbul.
During
Second World War, the combined forces of German and Romanian Troops under the command of
Erich von Manstein entered Crimea though the Isthmus of Perekop. The battle of the isthmus took five days from
24 September 1941 before the isthmus was secured by the Axis forces.
18 October, the Axis forces advanced further into Crimea and could launch the
Battle of Sevastopol.
9 May 1944, Red Army regained Crimea.