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Feodosiya

Feodosiya (Russian: Феодосия; Ukrainian: Феодосія) is a port and resort city in southern Ukraine, located on the Black Sea coast of Crimea at coordinates 45.0333 N, 35.3833 E. Its name is also transliterated as Feodosiia (Ukraine's official romanized spelling - see Romanization of Ukrainian), Feodosija or Feodosia.

History

The city was founded under the name of Theodosia by Greek colonists from Miletos in the 6th century BC. Noted for its rich agricultural lands, on which its trade depended, it was destroyed by the Huns in the 4th century AD. For the next nine hundred years it existed as little more than a village until traders from Genoa arrived in the 13th century and purchased it from the ruling Golden Horde. They established a flourishing trading settlement called Caffa or Kaffa, which virtually monopolised trade in the Black Sea area and served as the chief port and administrative centre for the Genoese settlements around the Sea.

When the Genoese started intervening in the internal affairs of the Crimean Khanate, the Ottoman commander Gedik Ahmet Pasha seized the city in 1475. Renamed Kefe, it became one of the most important Turkish ports on the Black Sea. It remained under Turkish/Tatar control until the expanding Russian Empire conquered the Crimea in 1783. It was renamed Feodosiya in 1802, a Russian adaptation of the ancient Greek name.

Feodosiya was captured twice by the forces of Nazi Germany during World War II, sustaining significant damage in the process. In 1954, it was transferred to the control of the Ukrainian SSR.

The city today

Modern Feodosiya is a popular resort city with a population of about 85,000 people. It has beaches, mineral springs, and mud baths, and is renowned for its many sanatoria and rest homes. Apart from tourism, its economy rests on agriculture and fisheries, with local industries including fishing, brewing and canning. As is the case in much of the rest of the Crimea, most of its population is ethnically Russian and the Ukrainian language is relatively little used there.

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