Novorossiya

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A map of what was called as New Russia during the Russian Empire times. Part of Novorossiya that is now in Russia is not shown.
A map of what was called as New Russia during the Russian Empire times. Part of Novorossiya that is now in Russia is not shown.
A map of what was called as New Russia
A map of what was called as New Russia
History of Ukraine  v  d  e 

Novorossiya (Russian: Новоро́ссия, literally New Russia) is a historic area now mostly located in southern Ukraine, in southern Russia, in Bessarabia and in Transnistria.

The western part of New Russia (between Dnister and Dniepr rivers) was known as Dykra in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and subsequently the province of Yedisan in the Ottoman Empire, and was previously inhabited, as well as the central part, by the Nogai Horde.

The Russian Empire gradually gained control over the area by peace treaties with Ottoman Empire at the conclusion of Russo-Turkish Wars of 1735-1739, 1768-1774, 1787-1792, and 1806-1812. The colonization of the land in the end of 18th century was led by prince Potemkin who was granted the powers of an absolute ruler of the area by Catherine the Great. The lands were generously given to Russian dvoryanstvo (nobility) and the enserfed peasantry from Russia and Ukraine was transferred to cultivate what was a sparsely populated steppe. Also Catherine the Great invited European settlers to these newly conquered lands: Germans, Poles, Italians, Greeks, Serbs, and others.

New cities founded during colonization included Novorossiysk, Yekaterinoslav (now Dnipropetrovsk), Nikolaev (Mykolaiv), Kherson, and Odessa.

In modern terms it encompasses Donetsk Oblast, Luhansk Oblast, Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, Zaporizhia Oblast, Mykolaiv Oblast, Kherson Oblast, Odessa Oblast and Crimea in Ukraine, Krasnodar Krai, Stavropol Krai, Rostov Oblast, and the Republic of Adygea in Russia, Bessarabia and Transnistria.

Politically, people living in the region mostly have a pro-Russian orientation, and even in the parts of New Russia which are not in Russia today, Russian is the most common language. In the 2006 Ukrainian parliamentary election, the pro-Russian Party of Regions gained a majority in the regions of Ukraine which were once Novorossiya. In Moldova a whole region named Transnistria declared its independence. The official language in the region is Russian, and supported mainly by Russia it has a pro-Russian orientation. Those regions feature a high percentage of Russian population.

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