Jambyl Region
Jambyl Region Жамбыл облысы Жамбылская область | ||
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Province | ||
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Map of Kazakhstan, location of Jambyl Province highlighted | ||
Coordinates: 44°0′N 72°0′E / 44.000°N 72.000°ECoordinates: 44°0′N 72°0′E / 44.000°N 72.000°E | ||
Country | Kazakhstan | |
Capital | Taraz | |
Government | ||
• Akim | Karim Kokirekbaev | |
Area[1] | ||
• Total | 144,264 km2 (55,701 sq mi) | |
Population (2013-02-01)[2] | ||
• Total | 1,071,645 | |
• Density | 7.4/km2 (19/sq mi) | |
Time zone | East (UTC+6) | |
• Summer (DST) | not observed (UTC+6) | |
Postal codes | 080000 | |
Area codes | +7 (726) | |
ISO 3166 code | KZ-ZHA | |
Vehicle registration | 08, H | |
Districts | 10 | |
Cities | 4 | |
Villages | 367 | |
Website |
www |
Jambyl Region (Kazakh: Жамбыл облысы, Jambıl oblısı) is a region of Kazakhstan. Its capital is Taraz. The population of the region is 1,000,000; the city is 335,100. The provinceregion borders Kyrgyzstan, and is very near Uzbekistan (all to the south). Jambyl also borders three other provinces: Karagandy Province (to the north), South Kazakhstan Province (to the west) and Almaty Province (to the east). The total area is 144,200 square kilometres (55,700 sq mi). The province borders Lake Balkhash to its northeast. The province (and its capital during the Soviet era) was named after the Kazakh akyn (folk singer) Jambyl Jabayev.
Population
An estimated 1.2 million people lived in the province in 2010. The population contains than 100 nationalities and nationalities. Kazakhs comprise about 65% of the population. The lowest concentration of Kazakhs is in Taraz (Dzhambul) though there their share has grown from 23% in 1989 to 60% in 2009.
History
See Taraz for a detailed account of the history of the provincial capital.
Administrative divisions
The province is administratively divided into ten districts and the city of Taraz.[3]
- Bayzak District, with the administrative center in the the auyl of Sarykemer;
- Jambyl District, the auyl of Asy;
- Korday District, the auyl of Korday;
- Merki District, the auyl of Merki;
- Moiynkum District, the auyl of Moiynkum;
- Sarysu District, the town of Janatas;
- Shu District, the auyl of Tole bi;
- Talas District, the town of Karatau;
- Turar Ryskulov District, the auyl of Kulan;
- Zhualy District, the auyl of Bauyrjan Momyshuly.
Janatas, Karatau, Shu, and Taraz have the administrative status of a town.[3]
Economy
Important industries include rock phosphate mining (around Karatau). The Shu River valley is one of Kazakhstan's important areas of irrigated agriculture.
The core of the rail transportation network in the region is based on the east-west Turksib rail line, which runs through Taraz and Shu toward Almaty, and the north-south Transkazakhstan line, which runs north from Shu toward Astana. CIS Highway M 39 (which in this area forms part of European route E40) comes from Tashkent, Uzbekistan over Shymkent (capital of neighbouring province South Kazakhstan) and runs further over Taraz to Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan; then it comes to Jambyl Province again through Korday border crossing and continues east toward Almaty.
Gallery
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In the steppe north of the town of Shu
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Entering Kazakhstan (and Jambyl Province) via Korday Bridge over the Chu
References
- ↑ Official site - General Information
- ↑ Agency of statistics of the Republic of Kazakhstan: Численность населения Республики Казахстан по областям с началa 2013 года до 1 февраля 2013 года (russisch; Excel-Datei; 55 kB).
- 1 2 "Характеристика" (in Russian). The official portal of akimat of Jambyl Region. Retrieved 13 July 2013.
External links
Karagandy Province | ||||
South Kazakhstan Province | Almaty Province | |||
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Talas Province, Kyrgyzstan | Chuy Province, Kyrgyzstan |
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