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Biçənək

Coordinates: 39°30′10″N 45°46′09″E / 39.50278°N 45.76917°E / 39.50278; 45.76917
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Biçənək
Municipality
Biçənək is located in Azerbaijan
Biçənək
Biçənək
Coordinates: 39°30′10″N 45°46′09″E / 39.50278°N 45.76917°E / 39.50278; 45.76917
Country Azerbaijan
Autonomous republicNakhchivan
RayonShahbuz
Population
 (2005)[citation needed]
 • Total1,172
Time zoneUTC+4 (AZT)
The Stone Bridge, in the east from the Bichanak village (16th-17th centuries)

Biçənək (also, Bichanak and Bichenek) is a village and municipality in the Shahbuz District of Nakhchivan, Azerbaijan. It is located in the near of the Yevlakh-Lachin-Nakhchivan highway, 24 km in the north-east from the district center, on the both bank of the Nakhchivanchay river. Its population is busy with gardening, animal husbandry. There are secondary school, club, library and a medical center in the village. It has a population of 1,172. Nearby in the east is located old Farhad house and the Xınzirək, the place of residence of the Middle Ages.[1]

Etymology

There are different opinions about the meaning of the name of "Bichanak". The present population of the village, explains the meaning of the name of "Bichanak" as "the place which cuts the grass". But all the researchers deny this idea and explains, the origin of the name with the name of an ancient Turkish "Pecenek // Becenek" tribe. Pecenek tribe is the one of the Oghuz tribes which Mahmud al-Kashgari has mentioned in his work "Dīwānu l-Luġat al-Turk". The fact is reflected in the work "Secerei-terakime" of the Turkish Sultan Əbulqazi Bahadur Khan. For the first time acad. Ziya Bunyadov wrote that in the "Bichanak" toponym is reflected the name of the ancient Turkish tribe of "Pecenek // Becenek". The word of "Bichanak" as an ancient toponym preserves the name of the "Pecenek // Becenek" tribe.[2]

History

The modern village was founded in the second half of the 1800s as Karmalinovka by Spiritual Christians from Russia, some of whom were Pryguny. In 1919 they abandoned the village, and in 1920 it was renamed to Biçənək, after a mediaeval village that existed here, and repopulated mostly by Azeris from the neighbouring village of Khynzirak and Zarnatun, later from the Almaly.[3]

Xınzirək (Khynzirak) - is a village which existed in the district of the Shahbuz. It was located in the west bank of the Bichanak River. In 1920, its population moved to the Bichanak village. Near to the village there is a place of residence built in the Middle Ages (14th to 17th centuries); the area is 2000 square metres. There are the ruins of houses and the remains of the buildings in the village.[1]

Almalı (Almaly) - according to the administrative-territorial division, was the settlement area of the Shahbuz region of Nakhchivan AR. The Armenians were always having territorial claims against Azerbaijan, and if they had the chance, annexed areas to their own land in parts of the lands of the Nakhchivan. One of them is the Almaly. In accordance of the decision of the Transcaucasian Central Executive Committee dated February 18, 1929, the Almaly village of the district of the Shahbuz, together with other nine villages of Nakhchivan ASSR, with their arable and pasture lands, were illegally annexed to the Armenian SSR. It is claimed to have been a flagrant violation of the terms of the Treaty of Moscow (1921) and the Treaty of Kars (1921) and the norms of international law.[1]

Zərnətün (Zarnatun) - is a village which existed in the district of the Shahbuz, in the north-west from the Bichanak village, on the bank of the Zarnatun River. Its population has moved to the Bichanak in 1962.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d ANAS, Azerbaijan National Academy of Sciences (2005). Nakhchivan Encyclopedia. Vol. volume I. Baku: ANAS. p. 88. ISBN 5-8066-1468-9. {{cite book}}: |volume= has extra text (help)
  2. ^ Encyclopedic dictionary of Azerbaijan toponyms. In two volumes. Volume I. p. 304. Baku: "East-West". 2007. ISBN 978-9952-34-155-3.
  3. ^ Elkhan Nuriyev. Toponyms as an Aide in Studying Animal Husbandry. Baku Slavic University publications, #4, 2011.