Online Encyclopedia

ILI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 299 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ILI  , one of the

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principal rivers of Central
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Asia, in the
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Russian province of
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Semiryechensk . The head-stream, called the Tekez, rises at an altitude of 1x,600 ft . E. of Lake Issyk-kul, in 82° 25' E. and 43° 23' N . , on the W. slopes of mount Kash-katur . At first it flows eastward and north-eastward, until, after emerging from the mountains, it meets the Kungez; and then, assuming the name of Ili, it turns westwards and flows between the Trans-Ili
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Ala-tau mountains on the south and the Borokhoro and Talki ranges on the north for about 300 M. to Iliysk . The valley between 79° 30' and 82° E. is 50 M. wide, and the portion above the
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town of Kulja (Old Kulja) is fertile and populous, Taranchi villages following each other in rapid succession, and the pastures being well stocked with sheep and cattle and horses . 'At Iliysk the
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river turns north-west, and after traversing a region of
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desert and marsh falls by at least seven mouths into the Balkash Lake, the first bifurcation of the delta taking place about 115 M . Up the river . But it is only the
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southern arm of the delta that permanently carries
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water . The
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total length of the river is over 900 m . From Old Kulja to New Kulja the Ili is navigable for at most only two and a
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half months in the
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year, and even then considerable difficulty is occasioned by the shoals and sandbanks . From New Kulja to Iliysk (280 m.) navigation is easy when the water is high, and practicable even at its lowest for small boats .

At Iliysk there is a

ferry on the road from Kopal to Vyernyi . The principal tributaries of the Ili are the Kash, Chilik and Charyn . A vast number of streams flow towards it from the mountains on both sides, but most of them are used up by the irrigation canals and never reach their
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goal . The
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wealth of
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coal in the valley is said to be
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great, and when the Chinese owned the country they worked gold and
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silver with profit . Fort Ili or Iliysk, a
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modern Russian establishment, must not be confounded with Ili, the old capital of the Chinese province of the same name . The latter, otherwise known as Hoi-yuan-chen, New Kulja (Gulja), or Manchu Kulja, was formerly a city of 70,000 in-habitants, but now lies completely deserted . Old Kulja, Tatar Kulja or Nin-yuan, is now the principal town of the
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district . The Chinese district of Ili formerly included the whole of the valley of the Ili river as far as Issyk-kul, but now only its upper
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part . Its
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present
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area is about 27,000 sq. m. and its population probably 70,000 . It belongs administratively to the province of Sin-kiang or East Turkestan .

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