Mytishchi, Moscow Oblast, Central Federal District, Russia

History | Population | Geography : Administrative status | Economy | Culture : Heritage | Monuments | Media | Theatres

🇷🇺 Mytishchi is a city and the administrative centre of Mytishchinsky District in Moscow Oblast, Russia, which lies to the north-east of Russia's capital Moscow, on the Yauza River and the Moscow–Yaroslavl railway. The city was an important waypoint for traders on the Yauza River, the Yaroslavl Highway passes through the city. Mytishchi is famous for its aqueduct, built in 1804, the first water supply pipeline to supply the growing population of Moscow.

History The first settlement of ancient hunters and fishermen in this location dates back to the 6th–8th millennia BCE, i.e., in the late Stone Age. In the 8th–9th centuries, first Slavic tribes (Vyatichi and Krivichs) began settling here. In and around Mytishchinsky District about a dozen of such settlements from the 11th–13th centuries have been discovered.

The modern settlement has been known as the village Mystiche since 1460, and Bolshiye Mytishchi (Большие Мытищи) since the 19th century. The name comes from the so-called mytnaya (or "myta") duty that was levied on merchants hauling ships (by wheels, rollers or skids) between the Yauza and Klyazma Rivers, collected at the place now known as Yauza mytishche. The word "Mytische" is a portmanteau of myt (мыта) and a place where there was a residential building with a kiln and a hearth.

In 1804, the Mytishchi-Moscow aqueduct was built by order of Catherine the Great. It was the first water supply constructed in Russia to provide the Kremlin with pure water.

The first enterprises were organized in Mytischi in the middle of the 19th Century. Mytischi station, on the Moscow-Yaroslavl railway, opened in 1861, SI Mamontov's car building plant opened in 1896, and Viskova, Russia's first artificial silk company, began work in 1908. Mytischi and its district became a popular summer retreat for Russian holidaymakers from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Mytischi gained city status on August 17, 1925.

In 1932, the territory of the city was significantly expanded, according to the decree of the Presidium of the Moscow Regional Executive Committee No. 8 (minutes No. 56) of October 4, 1932 and the decree of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of November 20, 1932 that approved it. The settlement merged with the villages of Bolshie Mytishchi, Rupasovo, Sharapovo, Zarechnaya Sloboda, Leonidovka, Perlovka, Taininsky settlements, Druzhba and Taininka.

Population Mytishchi is the fourth largest city in Moscow Oblast after Balashikha, Podolsk, and Khimki in terms of population.

Geography: Administrative status Within the framework of administrative divisions, Mytishchi serves as the administrative centre of Mytishchinsky District. As an administrative division, it is, together with twenty-four rural localities, incorporated within Mytishchinsky District as the Town of Mytishchi. As a municipal division, the Town of Mytishchi is incorporated within Mytishchinsky Municipal District as Mytishchi Urban Settlement.

Economy Shopping mall "June"

The city is the oblast's largest centre for industry (machine building, arms industry in particular) and education. The Mytishchi Machine-Building Plant and Metrovagonmash (a manufacturer of train cars) are two large employers.

Culture: Heritage The city has a number of cultural heritage sites • Settlement "Mytishchi-1" (a monument of archeology of the XV-XVIII centuries) - Yaroslavl highway, 60–88, 61–91. • The complex of buildings of the Mytishchi car-building plant (part of the Metrovagonmash plant (MMZ)) (late 19th - early 20th century). • Two dachas in the dacha village of Perlovka: a wooden dacha of the Ageev merchants (architectural monument, 1900s) - Pionerskaya st., 10. • The Mytishchi pumping station (part of Catherine the Great's Mytishchi water pipeline) in the Losiny Ostrov National Park. • Church of the Vladimir Icon of the Mother of God (architectural monument, 1713) - Yaroslavskoe shosse, 93. • Church of the Annunciation in Taininsky (architectural monument, 1675–1677). • Church of the Don Icon of the Mother of God in Perlovka.

In 2005, the Church of the Nativity of Christ was built in the city center. On the central square, there are 4 lanterns of the late 1950s, presumably the project of M. A. Minkus. Identical lights were installed at the lobby of the Kropotkinskaya metro station (Prechistenka St.) and at the Nikulin Moscow Circus on Tsvetnoy Boulevard.

Monuments • Monuments to Vladimir Lenin • Monument "Bayonet" in honor of the victory in the Great Patriotic War • Memorial of the Great Patriotic War • Monument to the partisan V. D. Voloshina • Monument to the pilots of the Mytishchi flying club (an exact copy of the U-2 [Po-2] aircraft). Artist-architect Valery Androsov • Monument to the Hero of the Soviet Union pilot N. M. Raspopova • Monument to cosmonaut G. M. Strekalov • Monument to A. V. Suvorov • SU-76M • ZSU-23-4 "Shilka" (a monument to the designer N. A. Astrov, 1906–1992) • Monument to V. M. Kolontsov (1888-1920), the commander of the Red Guard detachment, who died during the Civil War in battles with the White Guards, the central street of old Mytishchi, Kolontsova Street, is named after him • Monument to D. M. Kedrin • Monument to the Mytishchi water pipeline • Monument to the ancient portage that existed on the site of the modern city (wooden sculpture "Ladya" near the Central Park of Culture and Culture of Mytishchi) • Monument to the employees of the Mytishchi police, participants of the Great Patriotic War • Monument to military signalmen • Monument to the citizens of Mytishchi who died in the line of military and official duty and in local conflicts • Sculpture "A cat without a tail" from the sister city of Gabrovo • Monument to Olya Lukoya at the puppet theater "Ognivo" • Monument to the Family, love and fidelity • Monument to Nicholas II • Monument to the subway car • Monument to the samovar • Monument to General Pyotr Deinekin at the Federal War Memorial Cemetery. Opened in August 2018.

Media There are three local TV channels: "Our Mytishchi" - the channel that belongs to the town, "The first Mytishchinsky", and "TV Mytishchi" (on the TV channel of Moscow region 360°) - district television.

Theatres There is Ognivo puppet theatre, FEST drama and comedy theatre, and youth theater Domoy (Homewards).

Europe/Moscow/Moskva 
<b>Europe/Moscow/Moskva</b>
Image: Adobe Stock Zayne C. #217271996

Mytishchi has a population of over 262,702 people. Mytishchi also forms part of the wider Moscow Oblast which has a population of over 17,300,000 people.

To set up a UBI Lab for Mytishchi see: https://www.ubilabnetwork.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/UBILabNetwork

Twin Towns, Sister Cities Mytishchi has links with:

🇷🇺 Angarsk, Russia 🇺🇦 Bakhchysarai, Ukraine 🇧🇾 Baranavichy, Belarus 🇧🇾 Baranovichi, Belarus 🇧🇾 Barysaw, Belarus 🇩🇪 Düren, Germany 🇧🇬 Gabrovo, Bulgaria 🇮🇹 Lecco, Italy 🇱🇹 Panevėžys, Lithuania, until 2022 🇵🇱 Płock, Poland, until 2022 🇧🇾 Smalyavichy, Belarus 🇧🇾 Zhodzina, Belarus
Text Atribution: Wikipedia Text under CC-BY-SA license

Antipodal to Mytishchi is: -142.264,-55.911

Locations Near: Mytishchi 37.7364,55.9105

🇷🇺 Mytischi 37.767,55.917 d: 2  

🇷🇺 Korolyov 37.811,55.921 d: 4.8  

🇷🇺 Sokolniki 37.677,55.792 d: 13.6  

🇷🇺 Pushkino 37.845,56.011 d: 13.1  

🇷🇺 Reutov 37.857,55.763 d: 18.1  

🇷🇺 Moscow 37.617,55.75 d: 19.3  

🇷🇺 Zapadnoye Degunino 37.533,55.85 d: 14.3  

🇷🇺 Dmitrovsky 37.517,55.883 d: 14  

🇷🇺 Dolgoprudny 37.515,55.934 d: 14  

🇷🇺 Koptevo 37.517,55.833 d: 16.2  

Antipodal to: Mytishchi -142.264,-55.911

🇵🇫 Papeete -149.566,-17.537 d: 15703.9  

🇹🇴 Nuku'alofa -175.216,-21.136 d: 15289.5  

🇦🇸 Pago Pago -170.701,-14.279 d: 14788  

🇼🇸 Apia -171.76,-13.833 d: 14699.8  

🇨🇱 Port Montt -72.933,-41.467 d: 14917.8  

🇨🇱 Puerto Montt -72.933,-41.467 d: 14917.8  

🇨🇱 Valdivia -73.233,-39.8 d: 14808.3  

🇨🇱 Coyhaique -72.067,-45.567 d: 15168.2  

🇨🇱 Punta Arenas -70.91,-53.162 d: 15609.1  

🇨🇱 Temuco -72.667,-38.733 d: 14690.4  

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