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Russia is a federation which, since March 1, 2008, consists of 83 federal subjects (members of the Federation; Russian: субъект федерации, subyekt federatsii).[1] In 1993, when the Constitution was adopted, there were 89 federal subjects listed. By 2008 the number of federal subjects had been decreased to 83 because of mergers.
The federal subjects are of equal federal rights in the sense that they have equal representation — two delegates each — in the Federation Council (upper house of the Federal Assembly). They do, however, differ in the degree of autonomy they enjoy.
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Each federal subject belongs to one of the following types:
21 republics (Russian: республика, respublika) — nominally autonomous, each has its own constitution and legislature; is represented by the federal government in international affairs; is meant to be home to a specific ethnic minority. | |
46 oblasts (provinces; Russian: область, oblast') — most common type of federal subjects with federally appointed governor and locally elected legislature. Commonly named after their administrative centers. | |
9 krais (territories; Russian: край, kray)—essentially the same as oblasts. The title "territory" is historic, originally given because they were once considered frontier regions. | |
1 autonomous oblast (autonomous province; Russian: автономная область, avtonomnaya oblast')—the only autonomous oblast is the Jewish Autonomous Oblast | |
4 autonomous okrugs (autonomous districts; Russian: автономный округ, avtonomny okrug) — with substantial or predominant ethnic minority. | |
2 federal cities (Russian: город федерального значения, gorod federal'nogo znacheniya) — major cities that function as separate regions. |
The subjects have both numerical codes and two- or three-letter ISO 3166-2:RU codes. The numerical codes span from 01 to 92, although nine of them (41, 59, 75, 80, 81, 82, 84, 85, and 88) are no longer in use after mergers.
Code | Name | Capital/administrative centre (Largest city given if not capital) |
Flag | Coat of arms | Federal district | Economic region | Area (km²)[2] | Population[3] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
01 | Adygea, Republic of | Maykop | Southern | North Caucasus | 7,600 | 447,109 | ||
02 | Bashkortostan, Republic of | Ufa | Volga | Urals | 143,600 | 4,104,336 | ||
03 | Buryatia, Republic of | Ulan-Ude | Siberian | East Siberian | 351,300 | 981,238 | ||
04 | Altai Republic | Gorno-Altaysk | Siberian | West Siberian | 92,600 | 202,947 | ||
05 | Dagestan, Republic of | Makhachkala | North Caucasian | North Caucasus | 50,300 | 2,576,531 | ||
06 | Ingushetia, Republic of | Magas (Largest city: Nazran) |
North Caucasian | North Caucasus | 4,000 | 467,294 | ||
07 | Kabardino-Balkar Republic | Nalchik | North Caucasian | North Caucasus | 12,500 | 901,494 | ||
08 | Kalmykia, Republic of | Elista | Southern | Volga | 76,100 | 292,410 | ||
09 | Karachay-Cherkess Republic | Cherkessk | North Caucasian | North Caucasus | 14,100 | 439,470 | ||
10 | Karelia, Republic of | Petrozavodsk | Northwestern | Northern | 172,400 | 716,281 | ||
11 | Komi Republic | Syktyvkar | Northwestern | Northern | 415,900 | 1,018,674 | ||
12 | Mari El Republic | Yoshkar-Ola | Volga | Volga-Vyatka | 23,200 | 727,979 | ||
13 | Mordovia, Republic of | Saransk | Volga | Volga-Vyatka | 26,200 | 888,766 | ||
14 | Sakha (Yakutia) Republic | Yakutsk | Far Eastern | Far Eastern | 3,103,200 | 949,280 | ||
15 | North Ossetia-Alania, Republic of | Vladikavkaz | North Caucasian | North Caucasus | 8,000 | 710,275 | ||
16 | Tatarstan, Republic of | Kazan | Volga | Volga | 68,000 | 3,779,265 | ||
17 | Tuva Republic | Kyzyl | Siberian | East Siberian | 170,500 | 305,510 | ||
18 | Udmurt Republic | Izhevsk | Volga | Urals | 42,100 | 1,570,316 | ||
19 | Khakassia, Republic of | Abakan | Siberian | East Siberian | 61,900 | 546,072 | ||
20 | Chechen Republic | Grozny | North Caucasian | North Caucasus | 15,300 | 1,103,686 | ||
21 | Chuvash Republic | Cheboksary | Volga | Volga-Vyatka | 18,300 | 1,313,754 | ||
22 | Altai Krai | Barnaul | Siberian | West Siberian | 169,100 | 2,607,426 | ||
92 | Zabaykalsky Krai | Chita | Siberian | East Siberian | 431,500 | 1,155,346 | ||
91 | Kamchatka Krai | Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky | Far Eastern | Far Eastern | 472,300 | 358,801 | ||
23 | Krasnodar Krai | Krasnodar | Southern | North Caucasus | 76,000 | 5,125,221 | ||
24 | Krasnoyarsk Krai | Krasnoyarsk | Siberian | East Siberian | 2,339,700 | 2,966,042 | ||
90 | Perm Krai | Perm | Volga | Urals | 160,600 | 2,819,421 | ||
25 | Primorsky Krai | Vladivostok | Far Eastern | Far Eastern | 165,900 | 2,071,210 | ||
26 | Stavropol Krai | Stavropol | North Caucasian | North Caucasus | 66,500 | 2,735,139 | ||
27 | Khabarovsk Krai | Khabarovsk | Far Eastern | Far Eastern | 788,600 | 1,436,570 | ||
28 | Amur Oblast | Blagoveshchensk | Far Eastern | Far Eastern | 363,700 | 902,844 | ||
29 | Arkhangelsk Oblast | Arkhangelsk | Northwestern | Northern | 587,400 | 1,336,539 | ||
30 | Astrakhan Oblast | Astrakhan | Southern | Volga | 44,100 | 1,005,276 | ||
31 | Belgorod Oblast | Belgorod | Central | Central Black Earth | 27,100 | 1,511,620 | ||
32 | Bryansk Oblast | Bryansk | Central | Central | 34,900 | 1,378,941 | ||
33 | Vladimir Oblast | Vladimir | Central | Central | 29,000 | 1,523,990 | ||
34 | Volgograd Oblast | Volgograd | Southern | Volga | 113,900 | 2,699,223 | ||
35 | Vologda Oblast | Vologda (Largest city: Cherepovets) |
Northwestern | Northern | 145,700 | 1,269,568 | ||
36 | Voronezh Oblast | Voronezh | Central | Central Black Earth | 52,400 | 2,378,803 | ||
37 | Ivanovo Oblast | Ivanovo | Central | Central | 21,800 | 1,148,329 | ||
38 | Irkutsk Oblast | Irkutsk | Siberian | East Siberian | 767,900 | 2,581,705 | ||
39 | Kaliningrad Oblast | Kaliningrad | Northwestern | Kaliningrad | 15,100 | 955,281 | ||
40 | Kaluga Oblast | Kaluga | Central | Central | 29,900 | 1,041,641 | ||
42 | Kemerovo Oblast | Kemerovo (Largest city: Novokuznetsk) |
Siberian | West Siberian | 95,500 | 2,899,142 | ||
43 | Kirov Oblast | Kirov | Volga | Volga-Vyatka | 120,800 | 1,503,529 | ||
44 | Kostroma Oblast | Kostroma | Central | Central | 60,100 | 736,641 | ||
45 | Kurgan Oblast | Kurgan | Urals | Urals | 71,000 | 1,019,532 | ||
46 | Kursk Oblast | Kursk | Central | Central Black Earth | 29,800 | 1,235,091 | ||
47 | Leningrad Oblast | Largest city: Gatchina[a] | Northwestern | Northwestern | 84,500 | 1,669,205 | ||
48 | Lipetsk Oblast | Lipetsk | Central | Central Black Earth | 24,100 | 1,213,499 | ||
49 | Magadan Oblast | Magadan | Far Eastern | Far Eastern | 461,400 | 182,726 | ||
50 | Moscow Oblast | Largest city: Balashikha[b] | Central | Central | 45,900 | 6,618,538 | ||
51 | Murmansk Oblast | Murmansk | Northwestern | Northern | 144,900 | 892,534 | ||
52 | Nizhny Novgorod Oblast | Nizhny Novgorod | Volga | Volga-Vyatka | 76,900 | 3,524,028 | ||
53 | Novgorod Oblast | Veliky Novgorod | Northwestern | Northwestern | 55,300 | 694,355 | ||
54 | Novosibirsk Oblast | Novosibirsk | Siberian | West Siberian | 178,200 | 2,692,251 | ||
55 | Omsk Oblast | Omsk | Siberian | West Siberian | 139,700 | 2,079,220 | ||
56 | Orenburg Oblast | Orenburg | Volga | Urals | 124,000 | 2,179,551 | ||
57 | Oryol Oblast | Oryol | Central | Central | 24,700 | 860,262 | ||
58 | Penza Oblast | Penza | Volga | Volga | 43,200 | 1,452,941 | ||
60 | Pskov Oblast | Pskov | Northwestern | Northwestern | 55,300 | 760,810 | ||
61 | Rostov Oblast | Rostov-on-Don | Southern | North Caucasus | 100,800 | 4,404,013 | ||
62 | Ryazan Oblast | Ryazan | Central | Central | 39,600 | 1,227,910 | ||
63 | Samara Oblast | Samara | Volga | Volga | 53,600 | 3,239,737 | ||
64 | Saratov Oblast | Saratov | Volga | Volga | 100,200 | 2,668,310 | ||
65 | Sakhalin Oblast | Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk | Far Eastern | Far Eastern | 87,100 | 546,695 | ||
66 | Sverdlovsk Oblast | Yekaterinburg | Urals | Urals | 194,800 | 4,486,214 | ||
67 | Smolensk Oblast | Smolensk | Central | Central | 49,800 | 1,049,574 | ||
68 | Tambov Oblast | Tambov | Central | Central Black Earth | 34,300 | 1,178,443 | ||
69 | Tver Oblast | Tver | Central | Central | 84,100 | 1,471,459 | ||
70 | Tomsk Oblast | Tomsk | Siberian | West Siberian | 316,900 | 1,046,039 | ||
71 | Tula Oblast | Tula | Central | Central | 25,700 | 1,675,758 | ||
72 | Tyumen Oblast | Tyumen | Urals | West Siberian | 1,435,200 | 3,264,841 | ||
73 | Ulyanovsk Oblast | Ulyanovsk | Volga | Volga | 37,300 | 1,382,811 | ||
74 | Chelyabinsk Oblast | Chelyabinsk | Urals | Urals | 87,900 | 3,603,339 | ||
76 | Yaroslavl Oblast | Yaroslavl | Central | Central | 36,400 | 1,367,398 | ||
77 | Moscow | — | Central | Central | 1,100 | 10,382,754 | ||
78 | Saint Petersburg | — | Northwestern | Northwestern | 1,439 | 4,662,547 | ||
79 | Jewish Autonomous Oblast | Birobidzhan | Far Eastern | Far Eastern | 36,000 | 190,915 | ||
83 | Nenets Autonomous Okrug | Naryan-Mar | Northwestern | Northern | 176,700 | 41,546 | ||
86 | Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug-Yugra | Khanty-Mansiysk (Largest city: Surgut) |
Urals | West Siberian | 523,100 | 1,432,817 | ||
87 | Chukotka Autonomous Okrug | Anadyr | Far Eastern | Far Eastern | 737,700 | 53,824 | ||
89 | Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug | Salekhard (Largest city: Novy Urengoy) |
Urals | West Siberian | 750,300 | 507,006 |
There are 46 oblasts (Russian: область; "provinces").
1. Amur |
17. Leningrad |
33. Samara |
There are 9 krais (Russian: край; territories).
There are 2 federal cities: Moscow and Saint Petersburg.
Map # | Code | ISO Code | Name | Flag | Coat of arms | Federal district | Economic region | Area (km²)[1] | Population[2] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 77 | MOW | Moscow | Central | Central | 1,100 | 10,382,754 | ||
2 | 78 | SPE | Saint Petersburg | Northwestern | Northwestern | 1,439 | 4,662,547 |
There is one autonomous oblast, the Jewish Autonomous Oblast.
Starting in 2005, some of the federal subjects were merged into larger territories. The merging process was finished on March 1, 2008. No new mergers have been planned since March 2008.
Original territories | Original codes | New code | Date of referendum | Date of merger | Merger |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1, 1a | 59 (1), 81 (1a) | 90 | December 7, 2003 | December 1, 2005 | Perm Oblast (1) + Komi-Permyak Autonomous Okrug (1a) → Perm Krai |
2, 2a, 2b | 24 (2), 88 (2a), 84 (2b) | 24 | April 17, 2005 | January 1, 2007 | Krasnoyarsk Krai (2) + Evenk Autonomous Okrug (2a) + Taymyr Autonomous Okrug (2b) → Krasnoyarsk Krai |
3, 3a | 41 (3), 82 (3a) | 91 | October 23, 2005 | July 1, 2007 | Kamchatka Oblast (3) + Koryak Autonomous Okrug (3a) → Kamchatka Krai |
4, 4a | 38 (4), 85 (4a) | 38 | April 16, 2006 | January 1, 2008 | Irkutsk Oblast (4) + Ust-Orda Buryat Autonomous Okrug (4a) → Irkutsk Oblast |
5, 5a | 75 (5), 80 (5a) | 92 | March 11, 2007 | March 1, 2008 | Chita Oblast (5) + Agin-Buryat Autonomous Okrug (5a) → Zabaykalsky Krai |
The following merger proposals have been made in recent years; most have since become inactive.
Proposals | Federal subjects | Map | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6, 6a | Arkhangelsk Oblast + Nenets Autonomous Okrug = Pomorsky Krai | ||||||
7, 7a, 7b | Khabarovsk Krai + Jewish Autonomous Oblast + Amur Oblast = Amur Krai | ||||||
8, 8a | Magadan Oblast + Chukotka Autonomous Okrug = Magadan Krai | ||||||
9, 9a, 9b | Irkutsk Oblast + Buryat Republic + Zabaykalsky Krai = Baykalsky Krai | ||||||
10, 10a, 10b | Tyumen Oblast + Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug + Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug = Tyumen Krai | ||||||
11, 11a, 11b | Novosibirsk Oblast + Omsk Oblast + Tomsk Oblast = Novosibirsk Krai | ||||||
12, 12a, 12b | Kemerovo Oblast + Altai Republic + Altai Krai = Altai Krai | ||||||
13 | St. Petersburg + Leningrad Oblast = Leningrad Oblast | ||||||
14 | Moscow + Moscow Oblast = Moscow Oblast | ||||||
15, 15a | Yaroslavl Oblast + Kostroma Oblast = Yaroslavl Krai | ||||||
16, 16a | Novgorod Oblast + Pskov Oblast = Novgorod Krai | ||||||
17, 17a | Krasnodar Krai + Republic of Adygea = Krasnodar Krai | ||||||
18, 18a | Republic of Ingushetia + Chechen Republic = Checheno-Ingushetia |
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