Yekaterinoslav Governorate

Екатеринославская губернiя
Yekaterinoslav Governorate
Governorate of Russian Empire, Ukraine

1802–1925

Flag

A historic map of the Yekaterinoslav Governorate.
Capital Yekaterinoslav
History
 - Established February 27 1802
 - Disestablished August 01 1925
Population
 - (1897) 2,113,700 
Political subdivisions uezds: 8 (9 1874-85)

The Yekaterinoslav Governorate (Russian: Екатеринославская губернiя; translit.: Yekaterinoslavskaya guberniya) or Government of Yekaterinoslav was a governorate in the Russian Empire. Its capital was the city of Yekaterinoslav (modern Dnipropetrovsk).

Contents

Administrative divisions

The governorate was created in place of Novorossiysk Governorate in 1802 and encompassed a huge area of the southern Ukraine. Officially the new governorate was created as Yekaterinoslav Governorate in 1802 and subdivided into the following uyezds:

  1. Yekaterinoslav (Екатеринославъ, Катеринослав)
  2. Verkhnodneprovsk (Верходнѣпровскъ, Верхніодніпровськ)
  3. Bakhmut (Бахмутъ, Бахмут)
  4. Novomoskovsk (Новомосковскъ, Новомосковськ)
  5. Aleksandrovsk (Александровскъ, Олександрівськ)
  6. Pavlograd (Павлоградъ, Павлоград)
  7. Slavyanoserbsk (Славяносербскъ, Слав'яносербськ)
  8. Taganrog (Таганрог)

Changes

Okrugs

List of okrugs upon the disolvement of Governorate:

  1. Yekaterinoslav
  2. Zaporizhia
  3. Kryvyi Rih
  4. Melitopol
  5. Pavlohrad

Demographics

The governorate's population, a majority of peasants, was 662,000 in 1811, 902,400 in 1851, 1,204,800 in 1863, and 1,792,800 in 1885. From the second half of the 19th century, the governorate was the coal-mining and metallurgical center of the then Ukraine, incorporating the Dnieper Industrial Region and the Donbass (Donets Basin).

Its population increased to 2,113,674 by 1897. The nationalities within the governorate were: Russians (then divided into archaic categorisation of Little Russian (i.e. Ukrainian) speakers - 68.9 % and Great Russian speakers - 17.3 %), Jews (4.7 %), Germans (3.8 %), Greeks (2.3 %), and Tatars (0.8 %). In 1924, the governorate had 3,424,100 (13.6 % urban) inhabitants, living in 5,165 settlements, 36 of them being cities and urban-type settlements. The largest social class was that of workers (about 25 %).

Principal cities

The data is taken from demoscope.ru. Here is also the most common language composition.

From the turn of the 19th century until 1897 city of Rostov-na-Donu and all the Taganrog uyezd were part of the governorate, but before the census of 1897 took place they were transferred to the Don oblast. Note that the biggest city of the guberniya was the city of Rostov-na-Donu while Taganrog wasnot much smaller and the third in size. Here is the data on them:

Language

Religion

Governors before Communist Coup

General-Governors
Governors

Chairmen of Governorate

Revkoms
Ispolkom

Chekists

Cheka
Gub-department of GPU

References

  1. ^ Population of Yekaterinoslav
  2. ^ Language Statistics of 1897 (Russian)
  3. ^ including Moldavian language
  4. ^ Languages, number of speakers which in all guberniya were less than 1000
  5. ^ Religion Statistics of 1897 (Russian)
  6. ^ Religions, number of believers which in all gubernia were less than 10000

External links