-
Karakol (/ˌkærəˈkoʊl/; Kyrgyz: Каракол, IPA: [qɑrɑˈqɔɫ]),
formerly Przhevalsk (Russian: Пржевальск, IPA: [pr̩ʐɨˈvalʲsk]), is the fourth-largest city in...
- and
leisure visitors.[citation needed] The city of
Karakol (formerly
Przhevalsk,
after the
Russian explorer Przhevalsky, who died there) is the administrative...
- year 8 °C (46 °F), for
January −8 °C (17 °F), for July 23 °C (74 °F). At
Przhevalsk (1,660 m, 5,450 ft): for the year 2.5 °C (36.5 °F), for
January −5 °C...
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Kopal (6,183) 69100 136,421
Lepsinsk Lepsinsk (3,230) 87080 180,829
Pishpek Pishpek (6,615) 80480 176,577
Przhevalsk Przhevalsk (8,108) 47760 147,517...
-
China as a
revolutionary martyr.
Abdulkerim Abbas was born in 1921 in
Przhevalsk,
Soviet Union, now Karakol, Kyrgyzstan. His
family was
native to Artush...
-
several Russian settlements of
Ivanitskoe and
Koltsovka in the
region of
Przhevalsk. A
Kyrgyz attack on the
Russian settlers in Sazanovka, near Lake Issyk-Kul...
- with the disease. The Tsar
immediately changed the name of the town to
Przhevalsk.
There are
monuments to him, and a
museum about his life and work there...
-
Rybachye → Ysyk-Kel (1989) →
Balykchy (1992)
Karakol →
Przhevalsk (1889) →
Karakol (1921) →
Przhevalsk (1939) →
Karakol (1991)
Pishpek →
Frunze (1926) → Bishkek...
-
faculty and
students were
evacuated to
Przhevalsk,
Kirgiz SSR.
Training for
shipbuilding continued in
Przhevalsk,
where students and
lecturers of LKI joined...
- 16.
Nikolai Mikhailovich Przhevalskii accessed 28 July 2010 Pristan-
Przhevalsk accessed 28 July 2010 "Po****tion of regions, districts, towns, urban-type...