Top: Orsha Saint Joseph Church, Mill Museum (Muzey Mlyn), Orsha Trinitarian Monastery,Center: The complex Jesuit Collegium of Orsha,Bottom: Orsha Holy Trinity Church, Orsha Centralnaja Railroad Station (all item from left to right)
Coat of Arms, 1781Coat of Arms, 1967, made for the 900th anniversary of the city
Orsha was first mentioned in 1067 as Rsha, making it one of the oldest towns in Belarus. The town was named after the river, which was originally also named Rsha, probably from aBaltic root *rus 'slowly flowing.'[2]
In 1555,Mikołaj "the Black" Radziwiłł founded aCalvinist (Protestant) order in Orsha, one of the first in the Belarusian lands. From the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries Orsha was a notable religious centre, with dozens of Orthodox, Protestant and Catholic churches and orders. The town was also home to a largeJewish population.[4]
Orsha was grantedMagdeburg Rights in 1620. In 1630,Spiridon Sobol opened the first printing house at theKuciejna monastery, which became a well-known centre ofCyrillic-alphabet publishing. The town was damaged during theRusso-Polish War (1654-1667), which was a disaster for the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. During theFirst Polish partition the city was taken over by theRussian Empire in 1772, and became part of theMogilyovGubernia. Under Russian rule, it was stripped of its Magdeburg Rights in 1776 and went into cultural and economic decline.[citation needed] The population dropped sharply to just about 2,000 inhabitants.[citation needed] The city symbol in 1781 was changed to one which included the symbol of theRussian empire and five arrows.
In 1812, the city was badly burned duringNapoleon's invasion. At the time of Orsha had been taken under control of French troops, there was a French writerMarie-Henri Beyle (also known under thepen nameStendhal) in a rank ofintendant.[5]According to the census of 1897, on a total population of 13,161, about 7,000 are Jews.[4]During theFirst World War, the city was occupied by German forces in February–October 1918. From 2 February 1919, Orsha became a part of Homyel region (Vitebsk region, 1920) ofSoviet Russia. After the formation of the Soviet Union, it was transferred to theByelorussian SSR in 1924.
The population beforeWorld War II was about 37,000. The city was occupied by Germany on 16 July 1941. The occupiers founded several concentration camps in the city, where an estimated 19,000 people were killed. The city was liberated by theRed Army on the 26th of June 1944 as a part ofOperation Bagration. The city was almost totally destroyed.
St. Elijah's Orthodox church
Orsha was one of the centers of theBelarusian strikes in April 1991. Hundreds of thousands of coal miners had been on strike across the Soviet Union since March 1. On April 3, the day after the central government had imposed consumer price increases, workers at severalMinsk factories walked out raising the miners' demand for wages indexed to inflation. Virtually the entire labor force of that city followed on the 4th, joined soon thereafter by strikes across the Belarusian SSR. Mass demonstrations voted for additional demands (including the dissolution of the Union and Belarusian governments and the end of theCommunist Party's privileges) and elected delegates from each enterprise to citywide strike committees, which in turn sent representatives to a central Belarusian Strike Committee (SKB). On April 23, the SKB resumed the general strike after the deadline for its demands to be met had passed. The next morning,Gorbachev,Yeltsin, and leaders of eight of the otherSoviet republics published a joint declaration in the papers agreeing to democratic elections for the Soviet parliament and the presidency, a new union treaty that would "radically increase the role of the union republics," and measures to soften the impact of the price increase, but also the introduction of a "special work regime" in many industries.[6]
In response, the Orsha strike committee issued a proposal for all local workers to block the railway junction, strategically located on the line linkingMoscow andLeningrad to Eastern and Western Europe. This was quickly endorsed by votes to "lie down on the rails" at a citywide meeting at the railway station. On the 25th, the Belarusian authorities concentrated the republic's KGB and riot police forces on Orsha, but were resisted by the strikers who sent fuel trains primed to explode down the tracks. Gorbachev mobilized the nearby military forces inPskov with instructions to restore order over the railway; however many officers declared their refusal to comply, and brigade commander Gennady Sidorov professed a "lack of understanding" of the mission. Meanwhile, workers in other cities throughout Belarus held rallies threatening to retaliate if a drop of blood was shed in Orsha.Fearing a clash, and seizing on the government's offer to negotiate with its representatives and grant it radio and air time, the SKB suspended the general strike that evening.[7]
Orsha became an important transportation center after the construction of a Dnieper River port. The coming ofrailway lines in the second half of the nineteenth century greatly contributed to the city growth:
Today, Orsha is a major railway node where the Minsk–Moscow crosses the northern Vitebsk line, which branches south toMogilev andKrychaw. All trains from Moscow andSaint-Petersburg bound forWestern Europe pass through Orsha.
The city is also a junction of the important motorways: The M1 (E30) Moscow-Brest and the M8/M20 (E95) Saint Petersburg - Odessa.
OSGOEINT reported on the 571st Aircraft Repair Plant (ARP) located at Orsha Airfield (Balbasovo Air Base). Accordingly, the 571st ARP repairs Mi-8-17 HIP, Mi-24-35 HIND, as well as the Tu-134 CRUSTY and possibly the IL-76 CANDID. The report goes on to mention recent investment agreements withUkraine where private firms planned on providing $12 million to finance facility upgrades during the 2012-2016 period. Press reporting stated that the investors planned on building a modern warehouse terminal as well as office buildings for customs services, banking, and a leasing company.[11]