Timeline of Vladivostok
The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Vladivostok, Primorsky Krai, Russia.
19th century
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- 1858 - Territory ceded to Russia by China per Treaty of Aigun.
 - 1860 - June: Russian ship Manchzhur arrives; military barracks constructed under command of Nikolay Vasilyevich Komarov.
 - 1864 - Kunst & Albers in business.[1]
 - 1865 - Vladivostok designated a free port.[2]
 - 1870 - Korean settlers arrived in Vladivostok for the first time.[3]
 - 1871
- Okhotsk Military Flotilla based in Vladivostok.
 - Japan-Vladivostok telegraph cable installed.
 - Amerikanskaya Street laid out.
 
 - 1877 - Maritime navigation light established.[4]
 - 1880
- Vladivostok designated a city.[5]
 - Population: 7,300.
 
 - 1881 - Vladivostok Police directorate formed.
 - 1883
 - 1884 - Society for the Study of the Amur Region established.[7]
 - 1887 - Public reading-hall opens.
 - 1888 - Oblast governor's residence related to Vladivostok from Khabarovsk.
 - 1890 - Amurskiy Regional Museum opens.[8][9]
 - 1891 - May: Nicholas II visits city.[10]
 - 1892 - Far East newspaper begins publication.[7]
 - 1894 - State Bank branch opens.[7]
 - 1897 - Population: 28,896.
 - 1898 - Russo-Chinese Bank branch opens.[7]
 - 1899
- Oriental Institute opens.[11]
 - Advertiser newspaper begins publication.[7]
 
 - 1900
 
20th century

- 1902 - Vladivostok Sea School of Far Navigation founded.[12]
 - 1903 - Trans-Siberian Railway begins operating.
 - 1906 - January: Armed revolt.
 - 1907
- Siberian Bank branch opens.[13]
 - October: Armed revolt.
 - Winter: After a multitude of alleged paranormal incidents and multiple crew deaths, the Ivan Vassili is burned by drunken sailors.[14]
 
 - 1908 - Tram begins operating.
 - 1909 - Population: 90,100.[15]
 - 1911 - Korean enclave Shinhanchon is established.[3]
 - 1912
- Train station built.[9]
 - Theater and Music begins publication.
 
 - 1917 - December: Japanese military occupies railroad.[16]
 - 1918
- Vladivostok Fortress finishes construction.
 - April 4: Three Japanese killed.[17]
 - April 5: United States,[5] Japanese, and British military stationed in city.
 
 - 1920 - April: United States military withdraws from city.[17]
 - 1922 - October 25: Red Army in power.
 - 1930s - Transit prisons established.
 - 1930
- Far Eastern Politechnical Institute established.
 - Moscow-Vladivostok automotive rally conducted.[18]
 
 - 1931 - Maxim Gorky Academic Theater founded.
 - 1932 - Airfield begins operating.
 - 1937 - Shinhanchon is dissolved after the forced deportation of Koreans to Central Asia.[3]
 - 1942 - A Doolittle Raid B-25 makes an emergency landing in Vladivostok.
 - 1954 - Krushchev visits city.[19]
 - 1957 - Dynamo Stadium opens.
 - 1958
- Vladivostok designated a closed city.[19]
 - Vladivostok State Medical Institute established.
 - Football Club Luch formed.
 
 - 1960 - Centennial Prospect (street) laid out.
 - 1965 - Population: 367,000.[20]
 - 1967 - Far Eastern Technological Institute founded.[21]
 - 1974 - November: USA-USSR arms control summit held.
 - 1985 - Population: 600,000.[22]
 - 1988 - City opens to Soviet citizens.[5]
 - 1990 - Vladimir Yefremov becomes mayor.
 - 1991
- Sister city relationship established with San Diego, USA.[23]
 - Vladivostok's closed city status ends.[19]
 
 - 1992
 - 1993 - Viktor Cherepkov becomes mayor.
 - 1994 - Tolstoshein Konstantin Borisovich becomes mayor.
 - 1996
- September 21: VladiROCKstok music festival held.
 - Viktor Cherepkov becomes mayor again.
 
 - 1998 - Youry Kopylov becomes mayor.
 - 1999 - Spartak Primorye basketball club formed.
 - 2000 - City becomes part of the Far Eastern Federal District.
 
21st century
- 2003 - Pacific Meridian film festival begins.
 - 2004 - Vladimir Nikolayev elected mayor.[26]
 - 2005 - Czechoslovak Legions Graveyard renovated.
 - 2006 - Vladivostok Times news site begins publication.
 - 2008
- Igor Pushkaryov becomes mayor.
 - December: Protest.[27]
 
 - 2009 - Protests.[28]
 - 2010
 - 2011 - Sakhalin–Khabarovsk–Vladivostok pipeline opens.
 - 2012
- Zolotoy Rog Bridge and Russky Bridge built.
 - September: Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit held on Russky Island.[31]
 
 
See also
- History of Vladivostok
 - Pacific Fleet (Russia)
 - List of mayors of Vladivostok
 - Other names of Vladivostok
 - List of cities and towns in the Russian Far East
 
References
- ^ "Zwölf Deutsche, die in Russland Karriere machten". Russland Heute (in German). 2011. Archived from the original on 2013-01-05.
 - ^ a b c Britannica 1910.
 - ^ a b c 예, 지숙, "신한촌 (新韓村)", Encyclopedia of Korean Culture (in Korean), Academy of Korean Studies, retrieved 2024-04-01
 - ^ Findlay (1879). Description and list of the lighthouses of the world (19th ed.). London: Laurie.
 - ^ a b c Hudgins 2004.
 - ^ "WorldCat". USA: Online Computer Library Center. Retrieved March 2, 2013.
 - ^ a b c d e Ministry of Ways of Communication 1900.
 - ^ "Russianmuseums.info". Russian Cultural Heritage Network. Retrieved 30 March 2013.
 - ^ a b "Vladivostok". Russia. Lonely Planet. Retrieved March 2, 2013.
 - ^ "Сколько "Царских ворот" на Дальнем Востоке? Память о путешествии Николая II" [How many "king's gates" in the Far East? The memory of the journey of Nicholas II]. Школа Жизни (Shkolazhizni.ru) (in Russian). St. Petersburg: Ройбер (Roiber). 2009.
 - ^ Baedeker 1914.
 - ^ "Maritime State University". Retrieved March 2, 2013.
 - ^ Lester Maynard (1909). "Russia in Asia". Commercial Relations of the United States with Foreign Countries.
 - ^ Nautical Nightmares | Part 1 | For Those In Peril
 - ^ Madrolle 1912.
 - ^ "Japanese Occupy Vladivostok Terminal; Foil Bolshevist Plan to Seize Supplies". New York Times. December 12, 1917. 
{{cite web}}: Missing or empty|url=(help) - ^ a b Paul E. Dunscomb (2006). "'A Great Disobedience against the People': Popular Press Criticism of Japan's Siberian Intervention, 1918-22". Journal of Japanese Studies. 32.
 - ^ Lewis H. Siegelbaum (2008), Cars for comrades: the life of the Soviet automobile, Ithaca, USA: Cornell University Press, ISBN 9780801446382, 0801446384
 - ^ a b c Brunn 2008.
 - ^ "Population of capital cities and cities of 100,000 and more inhabitants". Demographic Yearbook 1965. New York: Statistical Office of the United Nations. 1966.
 - ^ "Vladivostok State University Economics and Service". Retrieved March 2, 2013.
 - ^ United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Statistical Office (1987). "Population of capital cities and cities of 100,000 and more inhabitants". 1985 Demographic Yearbook. New York. pp. 247–289.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ "Sister Cities". USA: City of San Diego. Retrieved December 1, 2015.
 - ^ Christoffersen 1994.
 - ^ "Shaman and the Epic Theatre". New Theatre Quarterly. Cambridge University Press. 2004.
 - ^ "Vladivostok mayor stripped of power amid corruption investigation". New York Times. March 1, 2007.
 - ^ "Car duty protests challenge Russia's Putin". Reuters. December 16, 2008.
 - ^ "Protests against Putin sweep Russia as factories go broke". The Guardian. UK. June 6, 2009.
 - ^ "International Youth Tiger Summit opens in Vladivostok". Xinhuanet. Xinhua News Agency. November 19, 2010. Archived from the original on April 12, 2013.
 - ^ "Population of capital cities and cities of 100,000 or more inhabitants". Demographic Yearbook 2011. United Nations Statistics Division. 2012.
 - ^ "APEC Russia 2012". Retrieved March 2, 2013.
 
This article incorporates information from the Russian Wikipedia and German Wikipedia.
Bibliography
- Published in 19th century
 
- Edmond Cotteau (1885), "De Vladivostok a Nagasaki", De Paris au Japon a travers la Siberie: voyage exécuté du 6 mai au 7 aout 1881 (in French) (2nd ed.), Paris: Librairie Hachette
 - Isabella Lucy Bird (1898). "Nagasaki-Wladivostock". Korea and her neighbors: a narrative of travel, with an account of the recent vicissitudes and the present position of the country. London: John Murray.
 - "Ussuri Railway: Vladivostok". Guide to the Great Siberian Railway. St. Petersburg: Ministry of Ways of Communication. 1900.
 
- Published in 20th century
 
- "(Vladivostok)", Asiatic Pilot: East coast of Siberia, Sakhalin Island and Korea, Washington, DC: United States Navy. Hydrographic Office., 1909
 - . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). 1910. pp. 169–170.
 - Claudius Madrolle (1912), "Vladivostok", Northern China, Paris: Hachette & Company, OCLC 8741409
 - "Vladivostok", Russia with Teheran, Port Arthur, and Peking, Leipzig: Karl Baedeker, 1914, OCLC 1328163
 - "Siberia: Vladivostok". Pacific Ports Manual (7th ed.). Los Angeles, USA: Terminal Publishing Company. 1921.
 - Gaye Christoffersen (1994–1995). "The Greater Vladivostok Project: Transnational Linkages in Regional Economic Planning". Pacific Affairs. 67.
 - William Richardson (1995). "Vladivostok: City of three eras". Planning Perspectives. 10. International Planning History Society.
 
- Published in 21st century
 
- Sharon Hudgins (2004), "Vladivostok: Capital of Russia's Wild East", Other Side of Russia: A Slice of Life In Siberia and the Russian Far East, USA: Texas A&M University Press, ISBN 9781585444045
 - Stanley D. Brunn; et al., eds. (2008). "Vladivostok". Cities Of The World: World Regional Urban Development (4th ed.). USA: Rowman & Littlefield.
 
External links
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