Karelian National Okrug was established on July 9, 1937 by the decree of the
Central Executive Committee of the Soviet Union. It included four previously established districts of Kalinin Oblast —
Likhoslavlsky (with the administrative center in the town of Likhoslavl),
Maksatikhinsky (urban-type settlement of
Maksatikha),
Rameshkovsky (
selo of
Rameshki), and
Novokarelsky (selo of
Tolmachi) districts, as well as a newly established one,
Kozlovsky District (selo of
Kozlovo). The Karelian population of the okrug was about 95 thousand, whereas about 25 thousand Tver Karelians lived in districts of Kalinin Oblast which were not included in the okrug. After the creation of the okrug, a large effort started in creation of a written Tver Karelian language, led by the philologist
Dmitry Bubrikh. Tver Karelian first used the Latin alphabet, but in September 1937 central authorities ordered that it should be switched to the Cyrillic alphabet. In January 1938, during the
Great Purge, Bubrikh was arrested and charged with counter-revolutionary activity. He was sentenced to death, but his sentence was subsequently commuted. Later, other specialists working on the Tver Karelian language, as well as the authorities of the okrug, were arrested. Most of them were subsequently acquitted. On February 7, 1939, the okrug was abolished, and the districts were subordinated to Kalinin Oblast. During the subsequent changes in the administrative divisions, Novokarelsky district was split between Likhoslavlsky and
Spirovsky districts, and Kozlovsky district was split between Spirovsky and Maksatikhinsky districts. On July 17, 1990, Kalinin Oblast was renamed Tver Oblast. Thus, the former area of Karelian National Okrug is currently split between Likhoslavlsky, Maksatikhinsky, Rameshkovsky, and
Spirovsky districts. ==References==