- Ayan
:"For the feudal lords of Anatolia, see
Derebey ." :"For theTamil film currently under production, seeAyan (film) . Ayan (Russian: Аян) is a village on the shore of a well-protected bay of theSea of Okhotsk , located 1,447 km (899 mi) fromKhabarovsk and 631 km (392 mi) by sea fromNikolayevsk-on-Amur . It is the administrative centre of theAyano-Maysky District ofKhabarovsk Krai ,Russia and is served byMunuk Airport . Population: 1,325 (2002).The settlement was founded by the
Russian-American Company in 1843 in hopes of establishing a port serving theAmga-Ayan Highway . This was the shortest route fromYakutsk to thePacific Ocean and was used for shipping furs from the heartland ofYakutia .At the behest of
Vasily Zavoyko , the government decided to move the entire port ofOkhotsk to Ayan, because the village was advantageously sited inside the finest harbour of the Sea of Okhotsk. In the 1850s Ayan was visited by countless people of science, teaching and medical profession.After the sale of the Russian North American territories, life was brought to a standstill. By 1867 the Russian-American Company was no longer in business. Many leading experts of diverse profession joined the exodus of merchants that had discontinued commercial traffic resulting from the trade in the region.
In the last decades of the 19th century and in the beginning of the 20th century assistance amounted to a few steamships a year dispatched from
Vladivostok that brought flour, sugar, and household supplies. The remoteness of Ayan resulted in its steady depopulation.In 1922, Ayan was one of the centres of the
Yakut Revolt againstLenin 's government. TheRed Army besiegedAnatoly Pepelyayev 's forces in Ayan in June 1923. The fall of Ayan on June 16 marked the end of theRussian Civil War . The townlet served as the centre of theOkhotsk-Evenki National District until 1934.
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