Cape Aya
Cape Aya 44°25′44″N 33°38′56″E / 44.42889°N 33.64889°E / 44.42889; 33.64889 | |
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Location | Sevastopol, Crimea |
Native name |
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Cape Aya (Crimean Tatar: Ayya; Ukrainian: Мис Айя; Russian: Мыс Айя) is a rocky promontory jutting out into the Black Sea southeast of Balaklava. This 13-km-long spur of the Crimean Mountains separates Laspi Bay (to the east) from Balaklava Bay (to the west).
The name of the cape derives from "holy one" in Greek, “Άγια”.
The highest point, Kokiya-Kiya (literally "Blue Cliff") is 559 m (1,834 ft). The headland is full of grottoes; it is protected as a national zakaznik.[1]
A storm off Cape Aya is the subject of one of Ivan Aivazovsky's paintings. A Soviet guided missile system was located on Cape Aya.
Viktor Yanukovych, the former President of Ukraine, ordered the construction of a luxurious private residence on Cape Aya. The "New Mezhyhyria", or popularly known as "Mezhyhirya 2"[2] closed locals off from the coast, and was still unfinished when the Revolution of Dignity ousted Yanukovych from his post.[3]
References
- ^ Marine Protected Areas for Whales, Dolphins and Porpoises Erich Hoyt - 2012 "The area between Cape Aya and Cape Fiolent, included in this MPA proposal, has also been identified as important habitat for all three cetaceans.
- ^ "Yanukovych used network of UK shell companies to hide private empire". www.intellinews.com. 2014-02-24. Retrieved 2022-10-29.
- ^ "В Крыму открыли доступ к мысу Айя, где строили Межигорье-2 - "УДАР"".
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- Arabat [uk]
- Belbek yew grove [uk]
- Kanaka [uk]
- Little Phyllaphora Field [uk]
- Mykhailivskyi [uk]
- Novela Vavylova juniper grove [uk]
- Novyi Svit [uk]
- Panayanıñ Qayası [uk]
- Paragilmen [uk]
- Pozharske [uk]
- Prysyvash [uk]
- Qarabiy yayla
- Qastel [uk]
- Qubalaç [uk]
- South Coast Oak Groves [uk]
- Tarkhankut Peninsula steppe area [uk]
- Tirke yayla [uk]
- Töpe Oba [uk] massif
- Crimean Mountain karst
- Kachynskyi canyon [uk]
- Çoqraq lake [uk]
- Khapkhalskyi [uk]
- Ay Petri yayla
- Ayu-Dag
- Baydar
- Canğul
- Cape Aya
- Cape Fiolent
- Demirci yayla
- Grand Canyon of Crimea
- Hryhorivka steppe area [uk]
- Klepynine steppe area [uk]
- Northeastern Lake Donuzlav
- Osovynskyi steppe [uk]
- Sasıq [uk]
- Shkilne steppe area [uk]
- Soniachne steppe area [uk]
- Subatkan yayla [uk]
- Weeping Rock [uk]
- Green circle
- Astaninski plains [uk]
- Karkinitsky Reserve
The Crimean peninsula is recognised internationally as part of Ukraine, but is under Russian occupation since 2014.
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