Evidence of prehistoric settlement has been found on the Southern Coast, particularly
Oldowan tools found at ,
Gaspra,
Ai-Petri, and near Sevastopol. The
Tauri lived on the Southern Coast, where they intermingled with the Greeks and Romans. Today, several remnants of these interactions remain, such as the fortress of
Charax and various toponyms (Simeiz, Gaspra, and
Koreiz, among others). The
Republic of Genoa also colonised the coast, under the territory of
Genoese Gazaria. In 1475, the area was conquered by the
Ottoman Empire and subjugated before becoming part of Russia following the
Russo-Turkish War of 1768–1774, along with the rest of Crimea. Historically, the Southern Coast was the region of the Crimean Peninsula most inhabited by
Crimean Tatars; as of the 1939 Soviet census,
Yalta Municipality was 29.51% Crimean Tatar,
Alushta Municipality was 63.14% Crimean Tatar, and
Sudak Municipality was 70.34% Crimean Tatar. However, since the
deportation of the Crimean Tatars it has been extensively settled and is now relatively more extensively populated by
Russians; according to the
2001 Ukrainian census, Yalta Raion is 66% Russian, Alushta Municipality is 67% Russian, and Sudak Municipality is 59% Russian (compared to 58.5% of the population of the
Autonomous Republic of Crimea as a whole). Ethnic
Ukrainians account for 20-30% of the population and make up the largest minority in Southern Crimea. They constitute a majority in some settlements, yet most Ukrainians living on the Southern Coast speak
Russian as their first language. For instance, only 35.7% of all Ukrainians living in the
Yalta municipality speak
Ukrainian as their primary language, slightly higher percentages were recorded in
Sudak (47.0%),
Alushta (41.4%) and
Feodosia (38.5%). == Administration ==