In the 10th to 16th centuries, the city of
Saray-Jük (or Saraichik, meaning "small Sarai") on the Ural River (now in Atyrau Province of Kazakhstan) was an important trade center on the
Silk Road. In the 13th century, it became a stronghold of the
Golden Horde. It was destroyed in 1395 by the army of
Timur but then rebuilt to become the capital of
Nogai Horde in the 15th and 16th centuries. It was finally reduced to a village in 1580 by the
Ural Cossacks. After the Russian conquest of the Ural basin in the late 16th century, the shores of the Ural became home to the
Yaik Cossacks. One of their main activities was fishing for the sturgeon and related fishes (including the true sturgeon,
starry sturgeon, and
beluga) in the Ural River and the Caspian. A great variety of fishing techniques existed; the most famous of them was
bagrenye (, from
bagor , meaning
pike pole): spearing hibernating sturgeons in their underwater lairs in mid-winter. The
bagrenye was allowed only on one day of the year. On the appointed day, a large number of Cossacks with pike poles were gathering on the shore; after a signal was given, they rushed on the ice, broke it with their poles, and speared and pulled the fish. Another fishing technique was constructing a
weir, known as the
uchug (
учуг) across the river, to catch fish going upstream to spawn. Until 1918, an
uchug was set up in the summer and autumn near Uralsk, so that the fish would not go upstream beyond the Cossacks' land. While the
uchug weirs were also known in the
Volga Delta, the
bagrenye was thought to be a uniquely Ural technique. The Ural Cossacks (known originally as the Yaik Cossacks) resented the attempts by the central government to impose rules and regulations on them, and on occasions rose in rebellions. The largest rebellion, the
Pugachev's Rebellion of 1773–75, involved not only the Ural, but much of south-eastern Russia, and resulted in a loss of the government control there. After its suppression, Empress Catherine issued a decree of 15 January 1775 to rename most of the places involved in the revolt, in order to erase the memory of it. Thus the Yaik River and the city of Yaitsk were renamed to the Ural River and
Uralsk, respectively, and the Yaik Cossacks became the Ural Cossacks. On 6 April 2024, during the
Snowmelt, a
levee sheltering the city of
Orsk broke. A flood in
Orenburg set over 10,000 houses under water, and parts of
Kazakhstan were also concerned. == Geography ==