Aktyubinsk/Aktobe: a city on a Great Silk Way.
Reverse side of the postcard.
More information
Aktyubinsk/Aktobe: a city on a Great Silk Way.
In 1932 Aktyubinsk was named capital city of Aktyubinsk Region. The city developed extensively during World War II as a result of the evacuation and reconstruction of factories from Ukraine and from Moscow, including a worker's cooperative, a ferroalloy factory, and an X-ray factory. Chromium also began to be mined and processed in the region.
In the 1960s, an extensive expansion of the city was undertaken by Soviet authorities, resulting in the construction of a city center and a sports stadium.
The city's society and economy have dramatically changed since Kazakhstan's independence in 1991. Older heavy industries have declined and been replaced in importance with the energy sector. The city has continued to expand with new construction and with many Kazakh immigrants moving to the city from the surrounding countryside.
In 1999, the official name was changed from Aktyubinsk to Aktobe by presidential decree, as part of a nationwide effort to support the Kazakh language.
Object data
Title
Aktyubinsk/Aktobe: a city on a Great Silk Way.
Artist
Sherer & Nabholz Co., Moscow.
Founder
Art Co., A.S. Suvorin.
Date
1916.
Culture
Kazakhstan.
Classification
Postcard.