In 1943, during the Soviet period, Madagiz was given the status of an urban-type settlement within the Mardakert District of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast.[4] In 1949, Madagiz was home to an industrial complex, including a furniture factory and a lime production workshop. In 1953, a secondary school was opened. The Madagiz hydroelectric power station was built nearby on the banks of the Tartar River.
During the First Nagorno-Karabakh War, Azerbaijani forces launched an offensive into the Mardakert District in the summer of 1992, capturing most of the district. However, as the result of a counter-offensive, by the end of June 1993, Armenian forces managed to take control of almost the entire district. After the war, the village was administrated as part of the Martakert Province of the Republic of Artsakh.[5]
In April 2016, during the Four-Day War, the village found itself in the area of direct hostilities.[6][7][8] The village was captured by Azerbaijan on 3 October 2020, during the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war, with the Azerbaijani government renaming the village to Suqovuşan.[9]
Historical heritage sites
Historical heritage sites in and around the village include tombs from the 2nd-1st millennia BCE, a 12th/13th-century khachkar, the Yeghishe Arakyal Monastery from between the 13th and 18th centuries with an adjacent chapel-mausoleum built in 1286 dedicated to Vachagan III (Armenian: Վաչագան Բարեպաշտի մատուռ-դամբարան, romanized: Vachagan Barepashti Matur-Dambaran), a two-storey building from 1552, the St. Yeghishe Church (Armenian: Սուրբ Եղիշե եկեղեցի, romanized: Surb Yeghishe Yekeghetsi) from 1892-1898, and an 18th/19th-century cemetery.[1]
Geography
The village is located 30 kilometers northwest of the left bank of the river Tartar. To the west of the village lies a reservoir, which was created to supply water to the Tartar, Goranboy, and Yevlakh Districts of Azerbaijan.[10]
Economy and culture
In 2015, the population was mainly engaged in agriculture and animal husbandry, and the village had a municipal building, a secondary school, a kindergarten, and a medical centre.[1][11]
Sugovushan-1 and -2
The reconstructed hydroelectrical power plants Sugovushan-1 and Sugovushan-2 have the total capacity of 7.8 MW.[12]
Demographics
In 1970, 271 people (236 Armenians, 30 Azerbaijanis, 44 Russians and nine Ukrainians) lived in the village.[13] Madagiz also had an Armenian majority-population in 1989.[3]
The village had 404 inhabitants in 2005,[14] and 665 inhabitants in 2015.[1]
According to the State Committee for Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons of Azerbaijan, as of 2020, 66 internally displaced persons from Madagiz were living in Azerbaijan.[15]
Gallery
Church of St. Yeghishe in the northwestern part of the village
Armenian khachkars in the wall in the monastery of St. Yeghishe