Nesterovskaya, Republic of Ingushetia

Nesterovskaya (Ingush: ГIажара-Юрт, Ghažara-Jurt; Russian: Нестеровская) is a stanitsa in Sunzhensky District of Ingushetia, Russia.

The decree stated that the Sovereign Emperor had commanded to give the name "Nesterovskoye" to the new fortification erected near the "ravaged village of Gazhir-Yurt".

The Civil War that followed the Revolution was a time of turmoil in Russia, with various factions vying for power and control of the country.

It is reported that in September 1920, it was planned to evict the Cossacks from Nesterovskaya because of their sympathy for the White movement, on the orders of Sergo Ordzhonikidze.

During the Great Patriotic War, Nesterovskaya was in the front line, and in the winter of 1942-1943, the 131st Fighter Aviation Regiment was stationed in the village.

The Great Patriotic War (1941-1945) was a significant event in the history of Russia and the village of Nesterovskaya was located in the front line during the Battle for the Caucasus.

After the war, Nesterovskaya underwent a period of reconstruction and renewal, as residents worked to restore the village to its former state and rebuild their homes.

In 2001, during the Second Chechen War, Nesterovskaya was the site of a fatal attack on a Russian helicopter squadron commander, border guard Leonid Konstantinov.

Over the next two years, a spate of crimes were committed against residents in neighboring settlements, including the villages of Ordzhonikidzevskaya and Troitskaya and the city of Karabulak.

[7] The most notable of these incidents was the series of attacks on families of Russian teachers that occurred in the summer and autumn of 2007 in Ordzhonikidzevskaya and Karabulak.

[9] The Nesterovskaya area is said to be rich in archaeology, and the presence of a burial mound belonging to the North Caucasian cultural and historical community is evidence of this.

These artifacts have been dated to the Middle Bronze Age, specifically the second half of the second millennium BCE, making it a valuable and interesting historical site for archaeologists and history enthusiasts alike.