Chernigov Governorate
Chernigov Governorate Черниговская губернiя | |||||
Governorate of Russian Empire | |||||
| |||||
Coat of arms | |||||
Chernigov Governorate 1903 | |||||
Capital | Chernihiv | ||||
History | |||||
• | Established | February 27, 1802 1802 | |||
• | Disestablished | August 1, 1918 1918 | |||
Area | |||||
• | (1897) | 52,396 km2 (20,230 sq mi) | |||
Population | |||||
• | (1897) | 2,298,000 | |||
Density | 43.9 /km2 (113.6 /sq mi) | ||||
Political subdivisions | uezds: 15 | ||||
Today part of | Chernihiv Oblast Kiev Oblast Bryansk Oblast |
The Chernigov Governorate (Russian: Черниговская губерния; translit.: Chernigovskaya guberniya), also known as the Government of Chernigov, was a guberniya in the historical Left-bank Ukraine region of the Russian Empire, which was officially created in 1802 from the Malorossiya Governorate with an administrative centre of Chernihiv. The Little Russian Governorate was transformed into the General Government of Little Russia and consisted of Chernihiv Governorate, Poltava Governorate, and later Kharkiv Governorate.
Chernigov Governorate borders are roughly consistent with the modern Chernihiv Oblast, but also included a large section of Sumy Oblast and smaller sections of the Kiev Oblast of Ukraine, in addition to most of the Bryansk Oblast, Russia.
Administrative division
The governorate consisted of 15 uyezds:
- Borzna County
- Glukhiv County
- Gorodnya County
- Kozelets County
- Konotop County
- Krolevets County
- Nizhyn County
- Novhorod-Siversky County
- Oster County
- Sosnytsia County
- Chernihiv County
- Mhlyn County
- Novozybkov County
- Starodub County
- Surazh County
The Chernigov Governorate covered a total area of 52,396 km², and had a population of 2,298,000, according to the 1897 Russian Empire census. In 1914, the population was 2,340,000. In 1918 it became part of Ukraine and transformed into Chernihiv Governorate.
Principal cities
- Russian Census of 1897
- Nizhyn – 32,113 (Ukrainian – 21,733, Jewish – 7,578, Russian – 2,366)
- Chernihiv – 27,716 (Ukrainian – 10,085, Jewish – 8,780, Russian – 7,985)
- Konotop – 18,770 (Ukrainian – 10,290, Jewish – 4,415, Russian – 3,565)
- Novozybkov – 15,362 (Russian – 11,055, Jewish – 3,787, Belorussian – 303)
- Hlukhiv – 14,828 (Ukrainian – 8,621, Jewish – 3,837, Russian – 2,217)
- Borzna – 12,526 (Ukrainian – 10,846, Jewish – 1,515, Russian – 109)
- Starodub – 12,381 (Russian – 7,255, Jewish – 4,897, Ukrainian – 133)
- Krolevets – 10,384 (Ukrainian – 8,328, Jewish – 1,815, Russian – 209)
- Berezna – 9,922 (Ukrainian – 8,349, Jewish – 1,354, Russian – 144)
- Novgorod-Seversky – 9,182 (Ukrainian – 4,884, Jewish – 2,941, Russian – 1,296)
- Mhlyn – 7,640 (Russian – 4,840, Jewish – 2,675, Belorussian – 75)
- Sosnytsia – 7,087 (Ukrainian – 5,068, Jewish – 1,840, Russian – 158)
- Korop – 6,262 (Ukrainian – 5,309, Jewish – 865, Russian – 77)
- Oster – 5,370 (Ukrainian – 3,229, Jewish – 1,596, Russian – 399)
- Kozelets – 5,141 (Ukrainian – 2,834, Jewish – 1,632, Russian – 468)
- Pogar – 4,965 (Russian – 3,800, Jewish – 1,159, Germans – 6)
- Gorodnya – 4,310 (Ukrainian – 2,349, Jewish – 1,248, Russian – 604)
- Surazh – 4,006 (Jewish – 2,400, Belorussian – 978, Russian – 559)
- Novoye Mesto – 1,488 (Russian – 1,421, Jewish – 67)
Language
- By the Imperial census of 1897.[1] In bold are languages spoken by more people than the state language.
Language | Number | percentage (%) | males | females |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ukrainian | 1,526,072 | 66.41 | 747,721 | 778,351 |
Russian | 495,963 | 21.58 | 236,842 | 259,121 |
Belarusian | 151,465 | 6.59 | 73,691 | 77,774 |
Yiddish | 113,787 | 4.95 | 54,724 | 59,063 |
German | 5,306 | 0.23 | 2,664 | 2,642 |
Polish | 3,302 | 0.14 | 1,775 | 1,527 |
Persons that didn't name their native language |
74 | >0.01 | 32 | 42 |
Other[2] | 1,885 | >0.01 | 1,247 | 638 |
Total | 2,297,854 | 100 | 1,118,696 | 1,179,158 |
See also
References and notes
- ↑ Language Statistics of 1897 (Russian)
- ↑ Languages, number of speakers which in all gubernia were less than 1000
External links
- Chernigov Guberniya – Article in Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary (Russian)
- Chernigov Governorate – Historical coat of arms (Ukrainian)/(English)
- Chernihiv gubernia – Article in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine
Coordinates: 51°30′00″N 31°18′00″E / 51.5000°N 31.3000°E