(Redirected from Mogilev)
Coat of Arms
'Mogilev', or 'Mahilyow' (;
Åacinka: MahiloÅ; ,
translit. ''Mogilev'', ''Mogilyov''; ) is a city in eastern
Belarus, about 76 km from the border with
Russia's
Smolensk oblast and about 105 km from the border with
Russia's Bryansk oblast. It has more than 367,788 inhabitants (2007 estimate).
[1] It is the centre of
Mahilyow voblast and the third largest city in Belarus.
History
The city was founded in
1267. Since
14th century a part of the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania, after the
Union of Lublin and creation of the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, it was transferred to
The Crown as ''Mohylew'' or ''Mogilew''. The city flourished as one of the main nodes of the east-west and north-south trading routes. In
1577 king
Stefan Batory granted it with
city rights. After the
First Partition of Poland it came into the hands of
Imperial Russia and was the centre of the
Mogilev guberniya. In years
1915-
1917, during
World War I, the headquarters of the Russian army functioned in the city and the Tsar,
Nicholas II, spent long periods here as Commander-in-Chief. In
1918 occupied by
Germany and transferred to the short-lived
Belarusian People's Republic. In
1919 captured by the forces of
Bolshevist Russia and incorporated into
Byelorussian SSR. Between
1941 and
1944 under German occupation. Since
Belarus gaining its independence in
1991 Mogilev remains one of its principal cities.
Economy
Mogilev is one of the main economical and industrial centres of Belarus. After World War II a huge metallurgy centre with several major steel mills was built. Also, there was several major factories of
cranes,
cars,
tractors and a chemical plant. The city is home to a major inland port at the
Dnieper river and a domestic airport.
Sites of interest
The most striking building of Mogilev is the six-pillared St. Stanislaw's Cathedral (
picture), built in the
Baroque style in 1738-52 and distinguished by its energetic murals. The convent of St. Nicholas (
picture) preserves its magnificent cathedral from 1668, as well as original iconostasis, belltower, walls, and gates. Minor landmarks include the archiepiscopal palace and memorial arch, both dating from the 1780s, and the enormous theatre in the blend of the
Neo-Renaissance and
Russian Revival styles.
Notable natives of Mogilev
★
Leonid Isaakovich Mandelshtam, physicist
★
Issai Schur, mathematician
★
Modest Altschuler, orchestra conductor
★ Grandparents of former
Canadian professional
ice hockey player
Wayne Gretzky
★
Otto Schmidt, scientist, mathematician, astronomer, geophysicist, statesman, academician.
★
Matest M. Agrest, ethnologist and mathematician
★
MikaÅ‚aj SudziÅ‚oÅski, revolutionary and scientist
★
Lev Polugaevsky, International Grandmaster of chess
★
Irving Berlin, American composer
★
David Pinski, Yiddish playwright
Sister cities
★

Serbia
'
Kragujevac',
Serbia
★

Bulgaria
'
Gabrovo',
Bulgaria
★

France
'
Villeurbanne',
France
External links
★
Coat of Arms
★
Mogilev on wikimapia
★
Photos on Radzima.org
★
Mahilev City Executive Committee
★
Historic images of Mogilev
★
Jewish Encyclopedia on Moghilef (Mohilev)
References
1. ''Mahiljow'' – Stefan Helders www.world-gazetteer.com.Retrieved on 2007-08-10.