Jumgal District

Coordinates: 41°55′N 74°30′E / 41.917°N 74.500°E / 41.917; 74.500
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Jumgal
CountryKyrgyzstan
RegionNaryn Region
Area
 • Total4,803 km2 (1,854 sq mi)
Population
 (2009)
 • Total40,718
 • Density8.5/km2 (22/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+5 (GMT +5)

Jumgal is a raion (district) of Naryn Region in central Kyrgyzstan. The capital lies at Chaek.[1] Its area is 4,803 square kilometres (1,854 sq mi), and its resident population was 40,718 in 2009.[2] The river Jumgal is situated in this district,[3] it is a tributary of Kökömeren River, the latter is tributary to Naryn river.

Populated places

In total, Jumgal District include 28 settlements in 13 rural communities (aiyl okrug). Each rural community includes one or several villages. The rural communities and settlements in the Jumgal District are as follows:[4][5]

  1. Ming-Kush (2: center - village: Min-Kush; and also village Kyzyl-Seok)
  2. Bash-Kuugandy (1: center - village: Bash-Kuugandy)
  3. Jany-Aryk (4: center - village: Jany-Aryk; and also villages Bazar-Turuk, Kyzart and Kyzyl-Emgek)
  4. Jumgal (2: center - village: Jumgal; and also village Lama)
  5. Kabak (7: center - village: Tabylgyty; and also villages Aral, Keng-Suu, Kotur-Suu, Kyzyl-Korgon, Sary-Bulung and Tabylgy)
  6. Kök-Oy (2: center - village: Kök-Oy; and also village Kichi-Aral)
  7. Bayzak (1: center - village: Bayzak)
  8. Kuyruchuk (1: center - village: Kuyruchuk)
  9. Chong-Dobo (1: center - village: Chong-Döbö)
  10. Tyugol-Say (2: center - village: Tyugol-Say; and also village Epkin)
  11. Suyumbay (1: center - village: Tash-Dobo)
  12. Chaek (3: center - village: Chaek; and also villages Ak-Tatyr and Besh-Terek)
  13. Kyzyl-Jyldyz (1: center - village: Kyzyl-Jyldyz)

References

  1. ^ Enrin.grida.no Archived 2009-08-02 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "2009 population census of the Kyrgyz Republic: Naryn Region" (PDF). Archived from the original on 25 October 2012. Retrieved 2016-06-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. ^ Svetlana Jacquesson, « Au cœur du Tian Chan : histoire et devenir de la transhumance au Kirghizstan », Cahiers d’Asie centrale [En ligne], 11/12 | 2004, mis en ligne le 23 juin 2009, Consulté le 19 janvier 2010. URL : http://asiecentrale.revues.org/index700.html
  4. ^ List of Rural Communities of Kyrgyzstan Archived 2010-02-09 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ 2012 Law on the transformation of individual urban settlements of the Kyrgyz Republic and relating them to the category of village or city

41°55′N 74°30′E / 41.917°N 74.500°E / 41.917; 74.500