52°19′53″N 118°16′19″E / 52.3315°N 118.272°E / 52.3315; 118.272 Ookteechenskaia (Russian: Уктыченская, also referred to as Ookteechenskaia-on-Shilka) was a remote village located in the Transbaikal region of Russia in Siberia.[1][2]

Most probably its current name is Uktycha.

References

  1. Wright, Richardson Little; Digby, George Bassett (1913). Through Siberia; An Empire in the Making. McBride, Nast & Co. pp. 163–164. ISBN 978-1-330-50082-8. Retrieved June 26, 2019. THE SIBERIAN VILLAGE AND THE VILLAGERS OOKTEECHENSKAIA was but a tiny village — a row of log huts sprawling for a mile along the river front, a schoolhouse, a blue-domed church with a crazy fence, and a post station.
  2. "Frontiersmen of Orthodoxy". The Catholic World. Vol. 99, no. 594. Paulist Fathers. September 1914. p. 816. Retrieved June 26, 2019.


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