The Chonhar Peninsula (Russian and Ukrainian: Чонгар; Crimean Tatar: Çonğar)[1] is on the northern coast of the Syvash, and in the Kherson province of Ukraine.[2]
Chonhar Peninsula | |
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Coordinates: 46°03′40″N 34°31′33″E / 46.06111°N 34.52583°E | |
Location | Chonhar, Syvash, Ukraine |
Part of |
Administratively, the whole peninsula houses the Chonhar rural community of Henichesk Raion. Together with the Tup-Dzhankoi part of the Crimean peninsula which reaches towards it, the Chonhar Peninsula divides the Syvash lagoons into two parts: eastern and western.
Several bridges and embankments connect the Chonhar Peninsula with the Crimean Peninsula to the south. The Chonhar Peninsula has one of the three main road connections between Crimea and mainland Europe, the others being on the Perekop Isthmus to the west and the Arabat Spit to the east. The main Chonhar road bridge crosses the narrowest gap, the Chonhar Strait near the village of Chonhar. It runs more or less parallel to the old road bridge, which is nearby to the south-southwest. The Novooleksiivka–Dzhankoi railway line runs over a bridge and embankment across the lagoon near the village of Syvash.
History
editChonhar Peninsula was occupied by Russian forces during the Russo-Ukrainian War.[3][4]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ The article's name is transliterated in accordance to the official and academical romanization of Ukrainian. Due to lack of corresponding phoneme (/ɣ/) in Russian language, Chonhar is transliterated in Russian as Chongar.
- ^ "Chonhar". Mapcarta. Retrieved 22 June 2023.
- ^ "Russians Move Beyond Crimea, Plant Mines, Ukrainians Say". www.ibtimes.com. 2014-10-03. Retrieved 22 June 2023.
- ^ "Russians enter town north of Crimea, say Ukrainians". Fox News. 11 December 2015. Retrieved 22 June 2023.