Ruzayevka (; , Orozaj; , Orazaj oà ¡) is a town in the Republic of Mordovia, Russia, located on the Insar River, southwest of Saransk. Population:
The town was founded on the land given to murza Uraza Tankacheev in 1631 by Russian tsar Michael Fedorovich and is believed to be named after him. The Tatar princes and murzas were owners of Ruzayevka up to 1715. In 1725, the land and peasants were given to the Lieutenant Tikhon Lukin, who owned it for more than 30 years, and then went bankrupt and in 1757 sold it to the court Councilor Yeremey Struysky. For more than a hundred years (1757âÂÂ1861) Ruzayevka belonged to landowners from the Struysky noble family.
During the 1905 Russian revolution, it became one of the centers of the revolutionary movement, supporting the uprising of Moscow workers. On , a committee headed by the engineer of the locomotive depot Afanasiy Petrovich Baykuzov took power in the town and cut off the MoscowâÂÂKazan railway line, proclaiming the "Ruzayevka Republic".
The railway station of Ruzayevka is mentioned in the poetry of the Latvian author Aleksandrs ÃÂaks ( "Touched by eternity"). The poetry is about Latvian military riflemen in return from the Russian Civil War in 1920.
Within the framework of administrative divisions, Ruzayevka serves as the administrative center of Ruzaevsky District, even though it is not a part of it. As an administrative division, it is incorporated separately as the town of republic significance of RuzayevkaâÂÂan administrative unit with the status equal to that of the districts. As a municipal division, the town of republic significance of Ruzayevka is incorporated within Ruzayevsky Municipal District as Ruzayevka Urban Settlement.
Ruzayevka is the second biggest industrial center of the republic after Saransk. Primary branches of the industry are mechanical engineering (Ruzkhimmash), vacuum tube mechanical engineering, instrumentation, food processing, and railway transportation.
The town is a large railway hub of the Kuybyshev Railway.
There are several museums in Ruzayevka:
In 1952, a railway club (a cultural center adjacent to the station) was built in the Stalin's Empire style. The club was named after Alexey Ukhtomskiy, a revolutionary who took part in the 1905 uprising.
There are nine secondary schools, five children's schools of arts, an orphanage, five vocational schools, and Ruzaevsky Institute of Mechanical Engineering of Mordovian State University in Ruzayevka.
There are several hospitals in Ruzayevka, including Ruzaevsky Central Regional Hospital and Ruzayevka's Railway Central Hospital.