Place:Chita, Sibirsky, Russia

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NameChita
Alt namesChitasource: Getty Vocabulary Program
Čitasource: Rand McNally Atlas (1994) I-37
TypeOblast
Coordinates52.0°N 117.0°E
Located inSibirsky, Russia
Contained Places
Autonomous district
Agin-Buryat ( 1937 - )
Historical town
Nerchinsk
Inhabited place
Abagaytuy
Adrianovka
Akima
Aksenovo-Zilovskoye
Aksha
Aleksandrovskiy Zavod
Algachi
Altan
Amazar
Anikino
Arbagar
Atamanovka
Bada
Baley
Bazar
Beklemishevo
Bilchir
Borz'a
Boty
Bukachacha
Bukuka
Bukukun
Bushuley
Byrka
Chaldonka
Chara
Chernovskiye Kopi
Chernyshevsk
Chicatka
Chita ( 1653 - )
Darasun
Dauriya
Davenda
Dosatuy
Drovyanaya
Dunajevo
Etyka
Firsovo
Gazimurskiy Zavod
Gorbitsa
Gulya
Gutay
Iljinskij
Imeni Il-Go Okt'abr'a
Itaka
Kalakan
Kalanguy
Kalga
Kangil
Karaksar
Karymskoye
Katajevo
Kavykuči-Gazimurskije
Khadabulak
Khapcheranga
Kharagun
Kharanor
Khilok
Kholbon
Khushenga
Klička
Klyuchevskiy
Kokuj
Kommunalnaya
Krasnyy Chikoy
Ksenyevka
Kubukhay
Kumakanda
Kurleya
Kurort-Darasun
Kurunzulay
Kutomara
Kyra
Lomy
Ložnikovo
Makkaveyevo
Maleta
Maloarchangel'skoje
Mangut
Mikhaylovka
Mogocha
Mogzon
Moklakan
Muchikan
Mukhor-Konduy
Naminga
Narasun
Nelyaty
Nerchinsk ( 1568 - )
Nerchinsk
Nerchinskiy Zavod
Nikolajevskoje
Nizhneye Giryunino
Nizhniy Tsasuchey
Nizhnyaya Shaktama
Nižnij Stan
Novodoroninskoye
Novokruchininskiy
Novopavlovka
Novopavlovskoye
Oktyabr'skiy
Olinsk
Olochi
Olovyannaya
Osinniki
Pervomayskiy
Petrovsk-Zabaykalskiy
Priargunsk
Priiskovyj
Razmakhnino
Savvo-Borzya
Semiozernyy
Semiozerye
Shargaldzhin
Shelopugino
Sherlovaya Gora
Shilka
Sobolino
Sokhonda
Solovyevsk
Sredniy Kalar
Srednyaya Olekma
Sretensk
Starocuruchajtuj
Staryy Chindant
T'omnyj
Tanga
Tarbagatay
Tataurovo
Tungokochen
Tupik
Tyrgetuj
Ubur-Tochtor
Ukurejskij
Ukyr
Ul'atuj
Ul'chun-Partija
Ulety
Unda
Urluk
Urulga
Uryupino
Ust'-Ozernaya
Ust'-Undurga
Ust'-Čornaja
Ust-Ilya
Ust-Karenga
Ust-Karsk
Ust-Lubiya
Usugli
Verchnij Ul'chun
Verkhniy Shergoldzhin
Verkhnyaya Khila
Vershino Darasunskiy
Vershino Shakhtaminsky
Voskresenskaya
Yablonovo
Yamarovka
Zabaykalsk
Zapokrovskiy
Zel'onoje Ozero
Zyulzya
Šiškino
Žegdoči
Žipkovšino
Unknown
Aginskiĭ Buri︠a︡tskiĭ
source: Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names
source: Family History Library Catalog


the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

Chita Oblast was a federal subject of Russia (an oblast) in southeast Siberia, Russia. Its administrative center was the city of Chita. It had extensive international borders with China (998 km) and Mongolia (868 km) and internal borders with Irkutsk and Amur Oblasts, as well as with the republics of Buryatia and Yakutia. Its area was . Population:

The oblast was established on September 26, 1937. On March 1, 2008, Chita Oblast merged with Agin-Buryat Autonomous Okrug to form Zabaykalsky Krai.

The territory that made up the former Chita Oblast was first explored by Cossacks led by Pyotr Beketov in 1653. People began to move into and develop the area in order to strengthen Russia's border with China and Mongolia, extract mineral resources, and build the Trans-Siberian Railway. In 1920, Chita became the capital of the Far East Republic, which merged with Russia in November 1922, a month before the USSR was constituted.

The oblast was rich in ferrous, non-ferrous, rare, and precious metals, coal, charcoal, and mineral waters. Russia's estimated reserves of ores with a high uranium content are 145,400 tons. Most of these deposits are located in the former Chita Oblast, near Krasnokamensk, site of the Priargunsky Mining and Chemical Combine (PMCC).[1] Forests cover about 60% of its territory. As a result, the oblast's main industries were metallurgy, fuel, and timber. It also had advanced light and food industries. Local agriculture focused on cattle, sheep, and reindeer breeding.

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