ABSTRACT

The Republic of Sakha (Yakutiya) is situated in eastern Siberia on the Laptev and Eastern Siberian Seas. Two-fifths of the Republic’s territory lies within the Arctic Circle. It forms part of the Far Eastern Federal Okrug and the Far Eastern Economic Area. To the west it borders Krasnoyarsk Krai. Irkutsk Oblast and Transbaikal Krai lie to the south-west, Amur Oblast to the south, Khabarovsk Krai and Magadan Oblast to the south-east, and the Chukot Autonomous Okrug to the north-east. The main river is the Lena, which drains into the Laptev Sea through a large swampy delta. Apart from the Central Yakut Plain, the region’s territory is mountainous, and four-fifths is taiga (forested marshland). Sakha is the largest federal unit in Russia, occupying an area of 3,083,523 sq km (1,190,554 sq miles), making it larger than Kazakhstan, itself the second largest country, after Russia, in Europe or the former USSR. The north of the

temperate climate. At January 2013 theRepublic had an estimated population of 955,580 and a population density of 0.3 per sq km. Some 64.9% of the population lived in urban areas. The capital is Yakutsk, with an estimated population of 286,456. Of those residents who stated their ethnicity at the 2010 census, 49.9%were Yakut, 37.8% ethnically Russian, 2.2%Ukrainian, 2.2%Evenk and 1.6%Even. From the late 1990s therewas an outflow of population from the Republic, particularly of ethnic Russians, who had accounted for an absolute majority of the Republic’s population at the 1989 census. Orthodox Christianity is the dominant religion in the region. The Yakuts’ native tongue is part of the north-eastern branch of the Turkic family, and is considerably influenced by Mongolian. The Republic spans three time zones: GMT+10 (Yakutsk), GMT+11 (Verkhoyansk) and GMT+12 (Kolyma).