Orsha ( , ; Lithuanian:
Orša) is a city in Belarus
in Vitebsk voblast on the fork of the Dnieper and Arshytsa
rivers.
Facts
- Location:
- Population: 125,000 (est. 2004)
- Phone code: +375 216
- Postal codes: 211030, 211381 – 211394, 211396 – 211398
History

Orsha.
Orthodox church of Saint Illa (1880).
Coat of Arms, 1781.
Orsha was first mentioned in 1067 as "Rsha" (Рша), making it one of
the oldest towns in Belarus.
In 1320, Orsha became a part of the
Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
In 1398-1407, the Orsha castle was built.
In 1555,
Mikołaj "Czarny" Radziwiłł
founded a
Calvinist (Protestant) order in
Orsha, one of the first in the Belarusian lands. From the sixteenth
to eighteenth centuries Orsha was a notable religious centre, with
dozens of Orthodox, Protestant and Catholic churches and orders.
The town was also home to a large
Jewish
population.
Orsha was granted
Magdeburg Rights
in 1620.
In 1630, S. Sobal opened the first printing house at the
Kuciejna monastery, which became a well-known
centre of
Cyrillic-alphabet
publishing.
On
September 8 1514 the
famous Battle of Orsha occurred,
between allied Grand Duchy of
Lithuania with Kingdom of Poland and
Russian
army. Russians suffered significant defeat,
however victorious Lithuania did not fully avail its victory.
The town was damaged during the
Russo-Polish War , which was a
disaster for Lithuania.
During the First Polish partition the city was
taken over by the Russian
Empire
in 1772, and became part of the Mogilyov
Gubernia. Under Russian rule, it was
stripped of its Magdeburg Rights in 1776 and went into cultural and
economic decline. The population dropped sharply to just about
2,000 inhabitants.
The city symbol in 1781 was changed to one
which included the symbol of the Russian empire
and five arrows.
In 1812, the city was badly burned during
Napoleon's invasion.

Coat of Arms, 1967, made for 900th
anniversary.
During the
First World War, the city
was occupied by German forces in February–October 1918. From
February 2,
1919,
Orsha became a part of Homyel region (Vitebsk region, 1920) of
Soviet Russia. After the formation of
the Soviet Union, it was transferred to the
Byelorussian SSR in 1924.
The population before
World War II was
about 37,000. The city was occupied by Germany on
July 16,
1941. The occupiers
founded several concentration camps in the city, where an estimated
19,000 people were killed .
The legendary
Katyusha
multiple rocket launcher was used here for the first time by Soviet
forces on
July 14,
1941.
The Soviets encouraged and co-ordinated undercover anti-fascist
resistance groups, and one of the most famous was a partisan
brigade under the command of
Kanstantsin Zaslonau (Konstantin
Zaslonov), operating from the Orsha train depot. His group planted
ninety-three bombs on German trains in just three months. After
March 1942, he went in hiding in the forests, where he and his
group continued guerilla warfare. He was killed on
November 14,
1942.
Soviet troops liberated Orsha on
June 27,
1944.
Sports
The
bandy club
Start has produced players for the
Belarus national bandy
team.
Population change
- 16th-17th century: est. 5,000
- 1776: less than 2,000
- 1939: 37,000
- 1970: 100,000
- 2004: 125,000
Transportation

Railway station.
Orsha became an important transportation center after the
construction of a Dnieper River port. The coming of
railway lines in the second half of the nineteenth
century greatly contributed to the city growth:
Today,
Orsha is a major railway node where the Minsk–Moscow crosses the
northern Viciebsk line, which branches south to Mogilev
and Kryčaŭ
. All
trains from Moscow and
Saint-Petersburg bound for
Western Europe pass through Orsha.
The city is also a junction of the important motorways: The M1
(E30) Moscow-Brest and the M8/M20 (E95) Saint Petersburg -
Odessa.
Health problems
Recently, a high rate of
oncological
diseases attracted attention to this city. Before 1987 there were
less than 100 new cancer patients registered each year. Since then
the number grew five-fold, with more than 500 new patients
registered per year as of 2004. The biggest growth was registered
in 2003–04 (178%). This was widely reported in independent media,
but Belarusian officials are silent about the alarming health
situation and possible reasons for this high cancer rate.
Two
possible factors mentioned in the independent media are old Soviet
military installations in Orsha, and the Chernobyl
disaster
.
Famous people from Orsha
- Uladzimir Karatkievich,
Belarusian writer
- Lev Vygotsky, psychologist
- Mikhail Marynich, opposition
politician, who was imprisoned in Orsha
- Igor Zhelezovsky (Ihar
Zhalezouski), Olympic medalist speed skater
- Dmitriy Snezhko (Dzmitry
Sniazhko), Esperanto activist, author of
the first Belarusian-Esperanto dictionary
- Kanstantsin Zaslonau
(Konstantin Zaslonov), Soviet
partisan (there is a monument of Zaslonau in Orsha)
- Sergei Kolevatykh, artist
- Paul Phillip Levertoff
(born Feivel Levertoff), pioneering
Hebrew-Christian scholar of the late nineteenth and early
twentieth-century
- Abraham Dob Baer Ben
Solomon, rabbi in Orsha in the second half of the eighteenth
century
- Francis Dzierozynski,
Polish pioneer Jesuit in America [57083]
- Piotra Holub (Golub Petr
Semionovich) (1913-1953), artist, author of many well-known
Soviet propaganda posters, such as
"болтун находка для шпиона" and many others[57084];
- Nathan Zarkhi (1900-1935), Soviet
playwright and film writer ( profile on
IMDB);
- Boris Laskin (1914-1983), Soviet
writer and poet, author of many Soviet propaganda hit songs ("Броня
крепка, и танки наши быстры!", "Три танкиста, три веселых
друга...", "Помирать нам рановато - есть у нас еще дома
дела");
- Boris
Zakharchenya (1928-2005), physicist, academician, a member of
the praesidium of the Russian Academy of Sciences
, specialist in optics and
spectroscopy;
- Frida Vigdorova, Soviet writer
and journalist, famous for writing "White book" after Joseph Brodsky trial, in support of human
rights in USSR (:ru:Вигдорова,
Фрида Абрамовна);
References
- Tomas Baranauskas. Oršos mūšis – didžiausia
Lietuvos karinė pergalė prieš Rusiją (Battle of Orsha -
biggest military victory of Lithuania against Russia).
Retrieved on 2008-01-18
-
http://www.bandy2008.ru/by-z-z-z-z-z-z-z-blr-teamroster-eng.pdf
External links