Qostanay

Kazakhstan
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Also known as: Kostanay, Kustanai, Kustanay
Russian:
Kostanay
Also spelled:
Kustanay, or Kustanai

Qostanay, city, northern Kazakhstan, on the Tobyl River. Founded by Russian settlers from the Volga region in 1879, it became a centre of trade in the Steppe, particularly in grain, a role that was enhanced by the construction of a branch railway in 1913. Qostanay was made an administrative centre in 1933 under the Soviets, but its greatest expansion dates from the mid-1950s and the Virgin and Idle Lands Campaign, which extended agriculture and hastened the exploitation of mineral wealth, and the construction of rail lines in the region. The city’s most economically important industries are food processing and other light enterprises; there are also vehicle and agricultural-equipment repair shops, and spare parts are produced for excavators and mining equipment. Qostanay has a teacher-training institute. Pop. (2006 est.) 207,802.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Michael Ray.