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Krasna Hora
View on WikipediaKrasna Hora (Ukrainian: Красна Гора; Russian: Красная Гора, romanized: Krasnaya Gora) is a rural settlement in Bakhmut Raion, Donetsk Oblast, eastern Ukraine. The name is derived from the local red clay deposit used in bricks production.[3] Administratively, it is part of Bakhmut urban hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine.[4] Population: 584 (2022 estimate).[2] Since 2023, it has been under Russian occupation.
Key Information
History
[edit]20th century
[edit]Krasna Hora originated from a ceramics factory named "Krasna Hora" built in 1906. Initially, only seasonal employees worked in the plant, but by the 1930s, barracks were built for permanent workers to live there. These workers were migrants from Kharkiv Oblast to the north. During World War II, the Krasna Hora factory was occupied by Nazi Germany between October 1941 and September 1943 and was completely destroyed. It was eventually restored in 1944. Actual houses began to be built in the area in 1949, and it received official rural settlement status in 1964 under the name Krasna Hora.[3]
21st century
[edit]On 30 October 2014, the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine placed Krasna Hora on a list of settlements within the Anti-Terrorist Operation Zone, a term used to identify Ukrainian territory occupied by Russian forces and their proxies during the war in Donbas.[5]
During the eastern Ukraine campaign of the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine, Krasna Hora was attacked by Russian forces. By summer of 2022, electricity and water services were completely knocked out. There were still many elderly people living in the village then.[6] Krasna Hora came under direct assault amid the battles for Soledar and Bakhmut. Geolocated footage from 11 February 2023 showed Russian troops walking around freely in parts of the town, indicating that Ukrainian troops likely withdrew from the settlement.[7][8]
Education
[edit]There is a kindergarten in the town.[3]
Demographics
[edit]| Historical population | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year | 1970 | 1979 | 1989 | 2001 | 2022 |
| Pop. | 800[3] | 800[3] | 700[3] | 690[3] | 584[2] |
| ±% | — | +0.0% | −12.5% | −1.4% | −15.4% |
References
[edit]- ^ "Krasna Hora (Donetsk Oblast)". weather.in.ua. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
- ^ a b c Чисельність наявного населення України на 1 січня 2022 [Number of Present Population of Ukraine, as of January 1, 2022] (PDF) (in Ukrainian and English). Kyiv: State Statistics Service of Ukraine. Archived (PDF) from the original on 4 July 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Красна гора". Encyclopedia of Modern Ukraine (in Ukrainian). Archived from the original on 30 September 2017. Retrieved 17 September 2023.
- ^ "Красна Гора - Донецька область". decentralization.gov.ua. Retrieved 2023-09-17.
- ^ "Населені пункти у зоні АТО - Донецька область [СПИСОК] | ОГО". Retrieved 2023-09-17.
- ^ "У селищі Красна Гора на Донеччині вже тиждень немає світла та води". Retrieved 2023-12-11.
- ^ Bailey, Riley; Stepanenko, Kateryna; Mappes, Grace; Howard, Angela; Kagan, Frederick W. "Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment, February 11, 2023". ISW. Institute for the Study of War. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
- ^ Russak, Igor. "Wagner founder Prigozhin says Russian forces take Ukraine village Krasna Hora, north of Bakhmut". Reuters. Thomson Reuters. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
Krasna Hora
View on GrokipediaGeography
Location and Terrain
Krasna Hora is a rural settlement in Bakhmut Raion, Donetsk Oblast, eastern Ukraine, within the Donbas region. Its geographic coordinates are approximately 48°39′33″N 38°00′58″E, positioning it about 10 kilometers south of Bakhmut city along the Bakhmutka River basin.[7][1] The terrain features undulating steppe plains typical of the Pontic-Caspian steppe, with the settlement situated at an elevation of 139 meters above sea level. Local soils are rich in red clay deposits, contributing to the area's name—derived from "red mountain" in Ukrainian—and supporting historical industrial activities such as brick manufacturing.[1] The landscape includes gently rolling hills and ravines, with average regional elevations around 123 meters, dissected by shallow river valleys.[8]Environmental Features
Krasna Hora is located in the steppe zone of Donetsk Oblast, within the broader Donbas industrial region, where the terrain consists primarily of flat plains and gently undulating plateaus formed by sedimentary deposits of the Dnieper-Donets Basin. Elevations in the immediate vicinity remain low, typically under 200 meters above sea level, supporting agricultural use prior to conflict intensification. The area features chernozem soils, characteristic of Ukrainian steppes, which are highly fertile but vulnerable to erosion and contamination from historical extractive industries.[7][9] The climate is classified as warm-summer humid continental (Köppen Dfb), with cold winters averaging -5°C to -10°C in January and warm summers reaching 20–25°C in July, accompanied by moderate annual precipitation of 400–500 mm concentrated in spring and summer. This regime supports steppe grasslands and scattered forest-steppe vegetation, including species adapted to continental conditions such as feather grasses and herbs, though industrial legacies have reduced native biodiversity. Fauna includes rodents, birds of prey, and occasional larger mammals like foxes, but habitat fragmentation from mining limits populations.[7][10] Significant environmental degradation stems from decades of coal mining and related activities in Donbas, resulting in acid mine drainage that contaminates groundwater and rivers with heavy metals like iron, manganese, and sulfates; pH levels in affected waters often drop below 4, persisting even in inactive sites. Abandoned mines, numbering over 100 in the oblast, flood with water that discharges pollutants into local hydrological systems, including tributaries of the Siverskyi Donets River basin near Krasna Hora. Air quality has historically suffered from dust and emissions tied to quarrying for ceramics and bricks, with particulate matter exceeding safe thresholds during operations.[9][11] Ongoing military operations since 2022 have introduced acute threats, including unexploded ordnance and landmines covering up to 26% of Ukraine's territory, rendering vast areas ecologically inert and prohibiting natural recovery; in Donbas, this compounds pre-existing pollution, with chemical residues from shelling further acidifying soils. Restoration efforts remain hampered by access restrictions, underscoring the interplay of geological inheritance and conflict in shaping the locale's environmental profile.[12][13]History
Establishment and Early Industrial Development (1906–1930s)
The settlement of Krasna Hora originated in 1906, deriving its name from prominent local deposits of red clay essential for brick production. That spring and summer, workers from nearby industrial sites in the Donbas region assembled on the territory for rallies and discussions, initiating organized community activity around the area's extractive resources.[14] Early industrial development centered on a brick factory situated in the estate of nobleman Sabo, which exploited the red clay to manufacture ceramic bricks. By the early 20th century, the facility produced 1 million bricks annually, sold at 10 rubles per thousand, establishing it as a key local enterprise amid the broader coal- and metal-dominated growth of the Donbas. This operation, later rebranded under the Krasna Hora name, supported settlement expansion through employment in clay extraction and firing processes into the interwar period.[15]Soviet Era Expansion (1930s–1991)
During the Soviet industrialization drive of the 1930s, the Artemivsk Brick Factory "Krasna Hora" was established in 1937 to exploit the local red clay deposits, marking a key expansion of the settlement's ceramics and brick production capabilities as part of the Second Five-Year Plan's emphasis on construction materials for regional infrastructure.[16] The factory utilized Upper Permian red-brown argillites, characterized by high iron oxide content that yielded strong, frost-resistant red bricks suitable for heavy industrial and transport construction projects across the Ukrainian SSR.[16] World War II disrupted operations, with Krasna Hora falling under German occupation alongside much of Donbas from late 1941 to September 1943, resulting in infrastructure damage from fighting and scorched-earth retreats. Post-liberation reconstruction, aligned with the Fourth Five-Year Plan (1946–1950), prioritized restoring extractive and manufacturing sites in the region, enabling the factory to resume production and contribute to the rapid rebuilding of Soviet heavy industry. By the late Soviet period, output reached 35 million bricks per year, supporting national demands under the USSR Ministry of Transport Construction, with the quarry's overburden removal and extraction processes mechanized to sustain grades 100, 125, and 150 bricks.[16] A major factory reconstruction in 1971 further modernized facilities, enhancing efficiency amid the Brezhnev-era focus on resource extraction in eastern Ukraine. The settlement's population grew modestly to reflect industrial needs, numbering 734 in the 1989 census, predominantly workers tied to the factory and ancillary mining support.[17] This era solidified Krasna Hora's role as a specialized node in Donbas's building materials sector, though output remained constrained by the deposit's estimated 35 million cubic meters of viable raw material.[16]Post-Independence Period (1991–2014)
Following Ukraine's declaration of independence on August 24, 1991, which was affirmed by a nationwide referendum on December 1 where Donetsk and Luhansk regions recorded 83.9% approval, Krasna Hora integrated into the administrative structure of independent Ukraine as an urban-type settlement (smtt) in Bakhmut Raion, Donetsk Oblast.[18] The settlement's economy remained anchored in brick production, leveraging local red clay deposits that had sustained the industry since the factory's establishment in 1906.[19] No major infrastructural or political events specific to Krasna Hora are recorded during this era, reflecting its status as a modest industrial outpost amid broader regional shifts. The 1990s brought severe economic dislocation to Donbas, as Ukraine transitioned from central planning to market mechanisms, resulting in hyperinflation peaking at 10,155% in 1993 and a cumulative GDP decline of over 60% from 1991 to the late 1990s. Industrial output in heavy sectors like those in Donetsk Oblast plummeted by up to 70%, driven by lost Soviet markets, energy shortages, and incomplete privatization that fostered oligarchic control rather than efficient restructuring. For resource-extraction industries such as Krasna Hora's clay-based brick manufacturing, operations persisted but under strained conditions, with reduced demand from collapsing construction and export sectors; the factory likely underwent voucher-based privatization under Ukraine's 1992 mass privatization program, though outcomes included asset stripping and inefficiency common to small state enterprises.[20] Recovery accelerated in the 2000s amid a global commodity boom, with Ukraine's GDP growing at an average 7.2% annually from 2000 to 2008, buoyed by steel and raw material exports from Donbas. Brick production in settlements like Krasna Hora benefited indirectly from domestic construction upticks, though the sector remained low-tech and vulnerable to regional corruption and underinvestment. Population stability or slight decline mirrored Donbas trends, with outmigration to urban centers amid persistent unemployment averaging 10-15% in the oblast; by 2014, the settlement's modest scale—serving local and regional needs—positioned it as peripheral to the escalating political tensions in Donetsk.[21][22]Prelude to Conflict: Donbas Tensions (2014–2022)
Following the Euromaidan Revolution, which ousted President Viktor Yanukovych on February 22, 2014, pro-Russian protests escalated in eastern Ukraine's Donbas region, fueled by opposition to the new Kyiv government's policies on language and decentralization. On April 6–7, 2014, armed groups seized government buildings in Donetsk and Luhansk, proclaiming the self-styled Donetsk People's Republic (DPR) and Luhansk People's Republic (LPR), which claimed sovereignty over parts of Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts. These entities received military support from Russia, including personnel and equipment, despite Moscow's denials of direct involvement. Ukraine responded by launching an Anti-Terrorist Operation (ATO) on April 14, 2014, deploying regular army units alongside volunteer battalions to reclaim territory.[23][24] Intense fighting erupted in spring and summer 2014, with Ukrainian forces initially recapturing some areas but suffering setbacks due to separatist advances bolstered by Russian cross-border incursions. The Battle of Ilovaisk in August 2014 saw Ukrainian troops encircled, resulting in over 1,000 deaths and the capture of hundreds, marking a turning point that prompted the first Minsk Protocol ceasefire on September 5, 2014, mediated by the OSCE, Russia, and Ukraine. Violations persisted, leading to further escalation around Donetsk airport and the Debaltseve salient in early 2015, where separatists, with Russian backing, overran Ukrainian positions by February 18, 2015. The Minsk II agreements, signed February 12, 2015, called for heavy weapons withdrawal, prisoner exchanges, local elections, and constitutional reforms granting special status to Donbas, but implementation stalled amid mutual accusations of non-compliance.[25][24][26] From mid-2015 to 2022, the conflict settled into a frozen stalemate along a 420-kilometer front line, with sporadic artillery duels, sniper fire, and mining causing around 14,000 total deaths, including approximately 3,400 civilians, though annual casualties dropped significantly post-Minsk II to fewer than 100 per year by 2021. In Donetsk Oblast, separatists controlled roughly one-third of the territory by late 2014, including major cities like Donetsk and Horlivka, while Ukrainian forces held the remainder, including Bakhmut Raion and its villages such as Krasna Hora, situated about 20 kilometers northwest of Bakhmut near the front lines. This positioning exposed government-held areas to intermittent shelling from DPR positions, disrupting civilian life, agriculture, and infrastructure without direct ground assaults on Krasna Hora itself during this period. Economic blockades and restricted movement across the contact line compounded hardships, with over 1.5 million internally displaced from Donbas by 2022. Tensions reignited in late 2021 with Russian military buildup along Ukraine's borders, culminating in DPR/LPR mobilization orders and Russia's recognition of the republics' independence on February 21, 2022.[25][27][28]Russian Military Operations and Capture (2022–2023)
Russian forces, primarily from the Wagner Group private military company, intensified assaults on Ukrainian positions around Krasna Hora in January 2023 as part of the broader Battle of Bakhmut, following their capture of the nearby town of Soledar on January 16. The village, located approximately 5 kilometers northeast of Bakhmut, served as a key defensive outpost for Ukrainian forces defending the city's northern flank, with fighting involving heavy artillery barrages, infantry assaults, and Wagner-recruited convicts leading frontal attacks. Ukrainian defenders, including elements of the 93rd Mechanized Brigade, reported repelling multiple waves of Russian advances amid reports of high casualties on both sides, though independent verification of losses remained limited.[5][29] On February 12, 2023, Yevgeny Prigozhin, founder of the Wagner Group, announced that his forces had fully captured Krasna Hora after days of street fighting, releasing a video purportedly showing Wagner fighters at the village entrance as evidence.[4] [5] Ukrainian military officials initially denied the claim, stating that Russian assaults had been halted and that the village remained contested, with ongoing shelling reported on February 13.[30] However, subsequent territorial assessments indicated Russian control over the settlement by mid-February, enabling Wagner units to use it as a staging point for further pushes toward Bakhmut's northern outskirts.[31] The capture marked a incremental Russian gain in the protracted Bakhmut campaign, which by early 2023 had resulted in tens of thousands of casualties, predominantly among Wagner recruits, according to estimates from Western intelligence and Ukrainian sources. Prigozhin publicly criticized regular Russian army units for insufficient support, highlighting inter-force tensions that delayed broader advances. Ukrainian forces conducted counterattacks in the area through March 2023 but were unable to dislodge the Russians, with Krasna Hora remaining under occupation as of late 2023 amid continued attrition warfare.[32][29]Economy
Ceramics and Brick Industry
The economy of Krasna Hora centers on the brick manufacturing sector, which exploits abundant local deposits of red clay suitable for ceramic production. The settlement's name, translating to "Beautiful Mountain" or "Red Mountain," directly references these clay resources, which form the basis of its primary industrial output.[33] The key facility is the Artemivsk Wall Materials Plant (Артемівський завод стінових матеріалів), a state-affiliated enterprise located in Krasna Hora on Pershotravneva Street. Established to produce construction materials from fired clay, the plant's main activity falls under NACE code 23.32, encompassing bricks, tiles, and related building products. It specializes in ceramic bricks, including the M-150 grade, which features standard dimensions and compressive strength suitable for general construction. These bricks are produced via traditional firing processes using the local red clay as feedstock, yielding a durable product marketed under the "Krasna Hora" trademark.[34][35][36][33] The underlying clay deposit, known as the Krasna Hora brick raw material field, supports sustained extraction, with estimated reserves of 35 million cubic meters enabling long-term operations. This resource endowment positions the plant as a regional supplier, though production capacity details remain limited in public records, reflecting the area's pre-2014 industrial focus amid broader Donbas extractive economies.[16][33]Post-War Economic Disruptions
The capture of Krasna Hora by Russian Wagner Group forces on February 12, 2023, amid the Battle of Bakhmut, marked a turning point that inflicted immediate and profound economic disruptions on the village's primary industries, including ceramics and brick production.[37] Intense artillery barrages and ground assaults preceding the occupation destroyed much of the local infrastructure, halting operations at factories dependent on nearby clay deposits and forcing the evacuation or flight of residents, which depleted the workforce essential for manual labor-intensive sectors.[38] Under Russian occupation, the village's economy faced further challenges from enforced Russification policies, including the redirection of industrial outputs toward Russian markets and the imposition of ruble-based transactions, which disrupted pre-war supply chains tied to Ukrainian and European networks.[39] Depopulation exacerbated these issues; at least 1.5 million residents fled Donbas since the 2022 invasion, creating acute labor shortages that impeded any potential resumption of brick and ceramics manufacturing, historically reliant on skilled local labor.[40] Broader regional trends in occupied Donbas reflect similar patterns, with industrial facilities—once contributing significantly to Ukraine's output—experiencing operational halts due to war damage, followed by partial repurposing under Russian control, though at reduced capacity amid ongoing security risks and sanctions.[41] These disruptions compounded the loss of export revenues for clay-based products, as Ukraine's ceramic raw material supplies, including from Donetsk sources, were severed from global markets during the conflict's early phases.[42] Recovery remains stalled, with the area's pre-invasion economic vitality eroded by militarization and isolation from Ukrainian governance.[43]Demographics
Population Trends
The population of Krasna Hora, a small urban-type settlement in Donetsk Oblast, exhibited a gradual decline consistent with deindustrialization and rural out-migration patterns in the Donbas region following Ukraine's independence. Local administrative records listed approximately 686 residents in the early 2010s, reflecting a contraction from Soviet-era peaks driven by factory closures and economic shifts away from ceramics production. This trend accelerated after the 2014 outbreak of conflict in Donbas, as heightened insecurity prompted further emigration to safer urban areas like Bakhmut. The full-scale Russian invasion in February 2022 intensified depopulation, with Krasna Hora's strategic position north of Bakhmut placing it on the frontline. Intense fighting from late 2022 through early 2023 led to the systematic evacuation of civilians by Ukrainian authorities, reducing the resident population to near zero by the time Russian forces claimed control in February 2023.[44] Broader regional data indicate that Donbas settlements experienced mass outflows, with over 2 million displaced from Luhansk and Donetsk oblasts combined since 2014 due to combat, destruction, and economic collapse. Under subsequent Russian occupation, no verifiable civilian population figures exist from independent sources, though occupied frontline villages typically sustain minimal habitation amid militarization and infrastructure ruin.| Year/Period | Approximate Population | Key Factors |
|---|---|---|
| Early 2010s | 686 | Post-Soviet migration, industrial slowdown |
| 2014–2021 | Declining to ~600 | 2014 conflict onset, economic stagnation |
| 2022–2023 | Near-total evacuation | Russian offensive, frontline battles[44] |
| Post-2023 (occupied) | Minimal/unknown | Militarized zone, lack of independent data |


