Origins The village of Kabashchich was formed in 1865 on the site now occupied by modern Zelenodolsk. By 1890, 104 people lived in the village and sawmills began to operate nearby it. In 1897, the village was renamed as Paratsk or Paratsky Zaton, by which time it had become a place for repair and wintering of river ships sailing along the Volga. The backwaters of the shipyards would serve as the basis for the future factory named after
Maxim Gorky. In 1928, Paratsk was reorganized into the working village of Zeleny Dol. On July 11, 1913, a railway bridge across the Volga was opened near the village, and a stations along this line was established in the village. In 1932, according to the Resolution of the
All-Russian Central Executive Committee, Zeleny Dol received the status of a city and the name Zelenodolsk. In the period 1931-1932 three factories were built in the city and the area of housing increased by 24,000 m2. Zelenodolsk was part of the Yudinsky region (Tat. Юдино районы) that was formed on August 4, 1938 from the western part of the abolished Kazan region. The administrative center of the district was located in the working village of Yudino (now part of Kazan). On January 1, 1948, the district included three village councils: Vasilievsky, Oktyabrsky and Yudinsky, and 24 village councils: Aishinsky, Belo-Bezvodninsky, Bishninsky, Bolshe-
Derbyshkinsky, Bolshe-Klyuchinsky, Bolshe-Kulbashsky, Bolshe-Kurguzinsky, Bolshe- Yakinsky, Borisoglebsky, Garinsky, Kadyshevsky, Kindersky, Krasnogorsky, Malo-Klyuchinsky, Nikolsky, Novopolsky, Osinovsky, Osoko-Kovalinsky, Remplersky, Russian-Mari-Kovalinsky, Semiozersky, Sukhoretsky, Urazlinsky and Shigalinsky. The territory of the Yudinsky district encompassed 906 km2 during this period. On July 16, 1958, the district center was moved from the village of Yudino to Zelenodolsk and the district was renamed after Zelenodolsky.
Sviyazhsk The island of Sviyazhsk, located at the confluence of three rivers (Volga, Sviyaga, and Shchuka) is part of the Zelenodolsky district. The first mention of Sviyazhsk dates back to the 16th century when it was called "Kirmen", which means a forbidden place. In 1551, Ivan the Terrible, after an unsuccessful campaign against Kazan, decided to turn Sviyazhsk into a fortress. At the end of May, the streltsy completed fortifications in which the Tsar's army was located, and in October Kazan was besieged. Sviyazhsk remained an outpost of the state following the completion of the siege. In 1560, the Assumption Cathedral was built on the island. At the end of the 18th century, Sviyazhsk acquired the status of a district town. In 1918, Sviyazhsk became one of the first places of Soviet political repression. In 1920-1927 the city was the center of the Sviyazhsky district of the TASSR and in 1927-1931 it was the center of the Sviyazhsky district. By the decree of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of February 1, 1932, Sviyazhsk was transformed into a rural settlement. In 1957, as a result of the filling of the Kuibyshev reservoir, Sviyazhsk ended up as an island. The settlement was connected to the left bank of the Sviyaga only in 2008 when a dam with a road was built. Since 2010, large-scale work on the restoration and reconstruction of sights began on the island within the framework of the "Revival" program of the Republican Fund for the Preservation and Development of Bulgar and Sviyazhsk.
Contemporary Zelenodolsky District From 1994 to 1999, the district was headed by Sergei Kogonin. For the next five years, he was replaced by Ravil Zinnatullin. In 2004, Gennady Yemelyanov took the post, followed for one year by Radik Khasanov as the head of the district from 2009 to 2010. Radik was then replaced by Sergei Batin, who in 2012 became a member of the
Federation Council as a representative from the executive body of the Republic of Tatarstan. From 2013 to 2019, the head of the Zelenodolsky district was Alexander Tygin. In 2016, he launched a ten-year program for the improvement of district territories "Standard Yard" and in 2017 the district achieved TASED status (The territory of advanced socio-economic development in the Russian Federation). In 2019, Alexander Tygin left to sit in the
State Council and Mikhail Afanasyev was elected the head of the district, Afanasyev also serves as the mayor of Zelenodolsk. == Population==