
Lenin Street (formerly Lyubinsky
Avenue) with the Moscow Merchant Rows in the foreground.
Omsk ( ) is a Russian
city located
in southwestern Siberia
and the
administrative center of Omsk Oblast
. It is Russia's second-largest city east of
the Ural
Mountains
. The distance from Omsk to Moscow
is
.
In
imperial
times, Omsk
was the seat of the Governor General of Western Siberia, and later
of the Governor General of the Steppes. For a brief period
during the
Russian Civil War in
1918–1920, it served as the capital of the anti-Bolshevik
Russian State and held the imperial gold
reserves.
Omsk is
the administrative centre of Siberian Cossack
Voisko, it also serves as the see
of the bishop of Omsk and Tara
, as well as
the administrative seat of the Imam of
Siberia.
Location
Omsk is
situated on the banks of the north-flowing Irtysh
, at its
confluence with the smaller
Om River. The city has an altitude
of above sea level.
Both branches of the
Trans-Siberian railway pass through
the city, which also serves as a major junction for the regional
highway network.
River port facilities handle both passengers
and freight, giving the city access to the extensive navigable
waterways of the Irtysh
and Ob rivers. The waterways connect Omsk with the coal
and mineral-mining towns in Kazakhstan
, as well as with the oil, natural gas and lumber
operations of northern Siberia. Omsk is served by the
Tsentralny
Airport
, which offers access to domestic and international
(primarily, German and Kazakh) destinations, making the city an
important aviation hub for Siberia and the Russian Far East.
Climate
The climate is dry and continental, characterized by dramatic
swings of weather. The average daily temperatures, taken over the
past three decades, are for July and for January, although
temperatures can reach in the summer and drop to in the winter. On
average Omsk sees over 300 sunny days in any given year.
Average annual rainfall is .
History
In 1714
Peter the Great sent Ivan Bukholts (Johann Buchholz) up the Irtysh
to Lake
Zaysan
to search for gold and build a fort. They
were driven out by the
Oirats and retreated
downriver to Omsk.
The wooden fort of Omsk was erected in 1716
to protect the expanding Russian frontier, along the Ishim and the Irtysh
rivers
against the Kyrgyz nomads of the Steppes. In the late 1700s, stronger works of brick
were erected on the right bank of the Om; of these, the original
Tobolsk
and the restored Tara
gates still
stand, along with the original German Lutheran Church, an armoury,
a military jail, and commandant's house.

Krestovozdvizhensky cathedral
In the
19th and early 20th century, Omsk became the administrative center
of Western Siberia and the Steppes (Kazakhstan
), acquiring a few churches and cathedrals of
various denominations, mosques, a synagogue, the governor-general's
mansion, a military academy. Ink was joked to have been sold
by the buckets. As the frontier receded and military importance
diminished, the town fell into lethargy; it was during the
mid-1800s that
Dostoevsky lived and wrote
in exile here.
The new boom began with the construction of the
Trans-Siberian railway in 1890s, when
the merchants flocked to the city on the rail/river junction. Many
a trade companies opened stores and offices here, building an
elaborately decorated district of the city, and bringing the
hustle-and-bustle of modern transportation, means of communications
and entertainment. Foreign powers, including the British, Dutch and
Germans, opened consulates to represent their commercial interests.
The pinnacle came with the lavish Siberian Exposition of
Agriculture and Industry in 1910, for which a complex of buildings
and fountains was constructed. In line with the popularity of World
Fairs of the day, the exposition influenced observers to foretell
the wonders of the "Chicago of Siberia".Many of the period's
buildings survive (though none from the expo), and the architecture
gives the city centre a distinguished historical Siberian town
flavour.
Shortly after the 1917 revolution, the pro-monarchy "white" forces
seized control of the city. The "Provisional Government of Russia"
was established in 1918, headed by the polar explorer and decorated
war hero
Admiral Kolchak. Omsk was
proclaimed the Capital of Russia, and its central bank kept the
Imperial gold reserves, guarded by the Czechoslovakian garrison
trapped in the chaos of
World War I.
The city
proved to be a key to power in Siberia; eventually, Kolchak, the
government, and the gold retreated along the Trans-Siberian
eastward to Irkutsk
, and the bolshevik "red" forces took control in
1919.
Soviet era

Omsk Cathedral

Nightlife around the Mayakovsky
entertainment complex

Irtysh in Omsk
The
Soviet government preferred the young Novonikolayevsk, now Novosibirsk
, to be the designated centre of Western Siberia,
prompting the mass transfer of administrative, cultural and
educational functions from Omsk, dampening the city's growth and
sparking a rivalry between the two cities continuing to this
day. It was during and after
World
War II that Omsk received a new boost: many industries were
evacuated away from Russia's western front in 1941.
In the event of a
German victory during the Battle of Moscow
, Omsk was to become the provisional Soviet
capital. However, the concentration of military enterprises
also had negative effects, as until 1990, the city stayed closed to
foreigners, and, after 1990, the collapse of the Soviet military
demand led to high unemployment.
Military industries which moved here included part of the
OKMO tank design bureau in 1941, and
S.M. Kirov Factory no. 185 from
Chelyabinsk
, in 1962. The Kirov Factory and
Omsk Transmash design bureau (KBTM) produced
T-80 tanks from the 1970s, and were responsible
for the
BTR-T,
TOS-1, and
prototype
Black Eagle tank. Omsk
Transmash declared bankruptcy in 2002.
In the
1950s, following the development of oil and natural gas field in
Siberia, an oil-refining complex was built, along with an entire
"town of oilworkers", expanding Omsk northward along the Irtysh
. It
is currently the largest complex in Russia, and third such in
Europe.
Gazprom Neft, the parent
company, is the largest employer in the city, wielding its tax
address as leverage in negotiations with municipal and regional
authorities.
Omsk today
Since the 1990s and the fall of Soviet Union, the former party
elite, new businessmen and the criminal world mixed together and
fought for control of the city's most profitable enterprises. The
most notorious cases involved
Sibneft, and
were reported by
The New York
Times, yet nothing was ever resolved. Until 2000, the feud
between the regional and the municipal authorities made at least
two points of view available to the public, and some work was done
for the public good. This includes the establishment of the annual
Siberian International
Marathon (SIM), the celebration of City Days, construction of
new leisure parks and renovation of the historic centre.
Nevertheless, the feud drained the city's resources, and two mayors
were forced to leave, with a replacement all but appointed by the
region's governor, in his post since the communist era.Currently,
all of the region's important power levers, including the courts
and the media, are in the hands of the regional government. The
city is underperforming the Russian averages on economic growth and
quality of life. The Omsk hockey team (Avangard) has also recently
acquired former New York Ranger Jaromir Jagr from The NHL of North
America.
On March 2, 2005, the Consulate General of the Republic of
Kazakhstan was opened. Previously in 1943, the Free India
Government in Exile has opened its consulate in Omsk as well.

Omsk Drama Theater
Main sights
The centrepiece of the city is an ensemble of buildings along
Lyubinsky prospekt/Lenin Street. This is the former
Gostiny Dvor, flanked by two chapels. Close at
hand are a bourse and a drama theatre, all dating from late
1800s – early 1900s.
Side streets are lined with stately mansions of former insurance
companies, trusts and banks from the same period. Hidden closer to
the river confluence are the few surviving somber buildings of the
18th-century fortress. The largest and most opulent church in the
city is the Dormition Cathedral, a five-domed edifice in the
Russian Revival style, consecrated
in 1896, blown up by the Soviets, and meticulously restored in the
early 2000s.
Another area of interest is Nikolsky prospekt/Krasnykh Zor Street,
where a line of merchants' wooden houses still stands. The street
leads to the
Neoclassical cathedral of
St Nicholas, which was commissioned by
the
Cossacks, designed by
Vasily Stasov and consecrated in 1840. It
contains various relics of the Siberian Cossacks. Various other
landmarks are scattered throughout the city.
The major museums in Omsk are the
Omsk Vrubel Art Gallery and the
State Historical Museum,
located in the former bourse building and the governor-general's
mansion, respectively.
Among the attractions of city — more than several dozen
churches, monuments, including the style of "l’art nouveau",
historic sites, and sculptures devoted to the famous people, and
lots of other
interesting places
Demographics
The population in Omsk rose from 31,000 in 1881 to 53,050 in 1900
and to 1,148,418 in
1989
Census. The
2002 Census
recorded that the population declined to 1,134,016.
Metro

Planned metro network
A
subway system, proposed in the late
1980s, but postponed for lack of funds, is currently under
construction, with the Metro bridge over the Irtysh river
. The bridge is already opened for cars
(upper level), but the metro (lower level) is still under
construction. As a first step one short line will connect the
districts in the northwest with the city centre. The first line of
the metro is scheduled to be finished in 2010.
Sports
Notable citizens
Athletes
Education

Omsk Kadetten School, military
school
Omsk is home to many institutions of higher learning and several
universities:
International relations
Twin towns — Sister cities
Omsk is
twinned with:
- Puchov
, Slovakia
- Karlovy Vary
, Czech
Republic
- Kaifeng
, People's Republic of China
- Jinju
, South Korea
- Petropavl
, Kazakhstan
- Pavlodar
, Kazakhstan
- Novosibirsk
, Russia
- Kaliningrad
, Russia
- Chelyabinsk
, Russia
- Milwaukee
, United
States
- Ontario
, Canada
- York Region
, Canada
Honors
References
External links