Yurshor
Yurshor (Komi and Russian: Юршор) was a northern outpost of Vorgashor, a mining town in Russia, and part of the Vorkuta Ring of settlements. By 2018 the town had been abandoned.[1]
There is a possibility that the village's name originates from the abbreviation of the geographical toponym Izyurvozh, which is a tributary of the Vorkuta river. The name in the Komi language can be translated as "stream-tributary at the stone-head."[2]
There is a monument to the Lithuanian victims of the shooting during the Vorkuta uprising at Mine 29 "Yurshor". The monument is the bronze mourning figure surrounded by iron pillars with tops joined by arcs. The composition stands on huge granite slabs. The sculpture of the mourning figure (1990) was designed by sculptor Vladas Vildžiūnas and the monument design (2009) is by architects Rimantas Dičius, Vitaliy Troshin and Vasoly Barmin.[3] The pedestal bears the inscriptions, in the front: in Lithuanian «Tėvynė Lietuva didžiuojasi», same in Latin: «Patria Lituania superbit» [Fatherland Lithuania is proud], in the back: «Tėvynė Lietuva verkia» and «Patria Lituania flet» [Fatherland Lithuania is mourns]. A memorial plaque is attached at the supporting granite slab.
References
- ^ "The last town in Sovietland – in pictures", The Guardian, 2018-04-18
- ^ "Словарь народных географических терминов М., Мысль, 1984 г.", Wayback Machine, 3-10-2013
- ^ TOMAS KAZULĖNAS, IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF THE GULAG