Firaira Ziyatdina Biography
Karadwan-a postal station on the road, King Babushki Karadwan-a postal station on the road Tsar-grandmother Karadwan-a postal station on the road Tsar Babushki says, through this Tatar village, granted shackles, colleagues were doomed to Siberia ... A route of the Siberian tract passed through Caradovan from the middle of the 19th century. Today is a museum of his history.
And although the village with its own museum is not so rare in Tatarstan we have seen a lot of rural museums, this one always aroused special interest among the Tatarstans. They went there. With the latest autumn flowers in the front garden and sunny bunnies on the surface of the local lake Bucky-Kul. Now on the second floor there is a museum of the history of the Siberian tract, and on the first - the Musa Museum of Jalil.
Interestingly, the roof then also proceeded? It dates from a year. Firaira Ziyatdinova is the director of the museum. In addition to other household, the ancestors of the current Caradovans were treated with fur and skin, hats and sheepskin coat were sewn. One of them is Abdrakhman Ishmuratov. Here, in Karaduvan and Urnyakovo, there was a dyeing factory and a manor.
They say that the road to the merchant of the first guild was inferior no worse than mail wagons. By the way, in this very house. Then there was a school here, and now here is a museum. It's good that he is, right? Created it by Baki Shaimulovich Ziythdinov in the year. Honored Teacher of Russia and Tatarstan, a mathematician and physicist, director of the Karaduban secondary school, he loved the history of his native village so much that he had been engaged in educational work all his life.
Energy was indefatigable! It is now called now-Bucky-Kul. So, “Kara” means “North”. Dugans probably appeared in our area along with Kipchaks, in particular, with the Nogais. There were also stage huts, which were located at almost all postal stations. Sometimes, of course, the prisoner could get sick or die. The royal decree commanding to equip the path connecting Moscow with Siberia was issued in the year.
However, only in the year Russia took up the construction of the Siberian tract. The work was completed by the middle of the 19th century. In addition to establishing ties with China, the Siberian tract was necessary for Russia to organize the state postal service. For the purpose of the uninterrupted organization of delivery throughout the Siberian tract, many postal stations were built.
The Siberian tract is also a shackle path with stages every 25-40 miles. According to administrative reform, the prison parties followed the path, divided into 61 stages.