Demographics of Saint Petersburg

Satellite picture of St. Peterburg

Saint Petersburg is the second largest city in Russia, after Moscow. 2002 census recorded population of the federal subject 4,661,219, or 3.21% of the total population of Russia. The city with its vicinity has an estimated population of about 6 million people.

Ethnicity

Soviet period borough and tram

The 2002 census recorded twenty-two ethnic groups of more than two thousand persons each. The ethnic composition was: Russian 84.72%; Ukrainian 1.87%; Belarusians 1.17%; Jewish 0.78%; Tatar 0.76%; Armenian 0.41%; Azeri 0.36%; Georgian 0.22%; Chuvash 0.13%; Polish 0.10%; Finnish 0.08%; Korean 0.08%; German 0.08%; Moldovan 0.07%; Mordovian 0.07%; Uzbek 0.06%; Kazakh 0.06%; Ossetian 0.06%; Bashkir 0.05%; Tajik 0.05%; Estonian 0.05%; Karelian 0.05%; Lithuanian 0.6%, and many other ethnic groups of less than two thousand persons each. 7.89% of the inhabitants declined to state their ethnicity.[1] As of 2001, 41 percent of Petersburgers identified themselves as Russian Orthodox, another 21% called themselves Christians in general. Almost a half of both groups were at the same time self-reported non-believers. The number of churched parishioners of the Russian Orthodox Church are estimated as less than 5%.[2][3]

Saint Petersburg has always been populated mostly by Russians, albeit with several sizeable ethnic minorities, such as Germans, Ukrainians, Finns, and people from Eastern Europe, among others. In 1800 an estimated 200 to 300 thousand lived in the city. After the emancipation of serfs in 1861, former serfs started arriving to the capital as workers, boosting population from half a million to 1439.6 thousand recorded in the census of 1900.

Population

Throughout the three centuries the growth of St. Petersburg was accompanied by an increase in population of its surroundings, while the latter to the city were gradually incorporated into the city limits. From an administrative point of view these suburbs (Russian: пригороды, literally by the city) comprised a few uezds adjacent to the city, holding an intermediate position between the gubernia (presently oblast) as the largest unit in Russia and the city of Petersburg as its center. A known confusion between the St. Petersburg / Petrograd / Leningrad Uezd (1727—1914—1924–1927; with a rural population of 56002 according to the census of 1897[4][5]) and four districts (Russian: участки or части, literally plots or homesteads) referred to as suburbs (of Petershof, of Shlisselburg, of Polyustrovo and of Lesnoi; a total of 191491 inhabitants by 1900[4]) may sometimes lead to a discrepancy between the statistical data taken from different sources, especially considering the fact that a suburban Tsarskoselsky Uezd (population around 150,000 in 1897) was excluded from district statistics.

In 1890–1891 the population figures for Petersburg crossed the boundary of 1 million. By 1900 the 38 'plots' comprising the 'city itself' had a population of 1,248,122 while the four abovenamed suburban districts counted 191,491 people.[4]

In the 20th century the city experienced three major depopulation trends. The first one began in 1916 (estimates for this year show 2.4 million; this level was surpassed again in 1930–31). In addition to the February Revolution, the sharp deterioration in food supplies in the first months of 1917 caused the flood of certain segments of population to the rural areas of Russia. In 1918 Petrograd without suburbs counted 1,179,256 persons (a 40% decline to 1917), and in 1920 about 740 thousand (without troops garrisoned in the city). By that time mobilisations brought the remarkable preponderance of women over men: 100 to 72, not counting the troops.[6]

The demobilisation after the end of the Civil War (1921), the industrial revival which followed the promulgation of New Economic Policy (March 21, 1921), resumption of the old and opening a lots of new universities and especially colleges led to the increasing influx of population since 1921,[7] in which younger generations formed a notable part. The first Five-Year Plans (1928–1930, 1931–1935 and 1936–1940) put the population growth upon the planned basis supported by a 'propiska' residencial quotas introduced at the beginning of the 1930s. It should be noted that in the years of industrialization in the USSR the influx of population was at the same time accompanied by the annual outflow of tens of thousands of college graduates and workers assigned to another locations of the country on the construction sites and in rural areas from where they came to study in Leningrad.

The German minority in Petersburg began to extinguish at the end of the 19th century (1890 – 4.6%, 1900 – 3.5%); this process accelerated in 1914 with the beginning of the First World War. The disintegration of the Russian Empire in 1917–1920 with the secession of Finland, Poland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania was followed by an outflow of Finns (in 1900 they counted 15638, or 1.3% of citizen), Poles (38314, or 3.1%), Estonians (13401, or 1.1%), Latvians (7097, or 0.6%) and Lithuanians (5666, or 0.4%).[4] In 1939 the city has surpassed a 3-million mark,[7] however the subsequent mobilisation to the Winter War (1939–40), the assignments of some part of both military and civilians onto the western territories of the USSR and to a certain extent, the Transfer of some Finns still remaining in Leningrad out of the border zone of the USSR stagnated the 3 million population level through the beginning of the Great Patriotic War in June 1941.[7]

The impact of the siege of Leningrad is estimated as one of the longest, most destructive and costly in terms of casualties in human history.[8] Before September 8, 1941 when the city was encircled 336,000 civilians were evacuated with the 86 city industrial enterprises that were dismantled and moved to Northern Russia and Siberia. From September 1941 through April 1942 659,000 civilians were evacuated mainly by watercraft and ice road over the Ladoga lake. From May through October 1942 another 403,000 people were evacuated mainly through the waterways of this lake.[9] Not everybody from those 1,298,000 were Leningradians, for some of them fled to the city from surrounding territory seeking a rescue from the German troops. But the worst thing is that many of them died soon after evacuation due to the previous months of starvation within the Siege of Leningrad. From September, 1941 to January, 1944 670,000 deaths were registered officially, resulting mostly from starvation, stress and exposure. In addition, German shelling and bombings killed 5,723 and wounded 20,507 civilians.[10]

Statistics for 1944 show between 546,000[7] and 700,000 Leningradians who managed to undergo the hardships of the blockade. After the siege was lifted, the evacuees were allowed to return, but the main source of renewal of the population of Leningrad in the post-war years was the influx from another parts of the Soviet Union. Only in 1957–1958,[7] or 18–19 years after 1939 when the 3-million citizen was born, the city managed to surpass this population mark again. 12 years later, in 1969–1970 the population reached 4 million, and in 1988–1989 — 5 million.[7]

When the historical maximum was reached in 1990 (less than 5,1 million) the whole country has already teetered on the brink of political and economic collapse. The first year when the city has restored its original name, St. Petersburg (1991) was the first in the most lengthy period of the steady population reduction in the city history. By 2003 the city population was less than 4,5 million, or at a level of 1977. Among the reasons of this demographic degradation were the increase of death rate and decrease of birth rate; halting of inflow of workers due to shutdowns of many of the city’s industries; increased emigration out of the country; closure of many military educational institutions. At the same time a certain inflow to the Leningrad Oblast (a region surrounding the city) in the 2000s was influenced with the migration from Russia and other ex Soviet Republics, the relocation of officers and their families from places of the overseas deployment of the Soviet Army. The relevant suburban housing construction was supported both with private and state funding.[11][12] The long-term excess of deaths over births has brought a noticeable population ageing. The average age is about 40 years, and people of 65 years and older comprise more than 20% of the population, while the life expectancy in Russia has fallen under 60 years.[13]

Periods of temporary economic recovery accompanied by an increase in demand for unskilled labor (road and construction workers, janitors, porters, drivers etc.) pose a problem of migrant workers under a new, unexpected angle. In the Soviet planned economy this demand was covered by the stable inflow of labourers from the central regions of Russia and the European Republics of the USSR. They were favored with both job and dwelling guarantees (initially housed in the dorms, after a certain period they received a new living space from the state). Now the labour sourcing geographical azimuth has changed to the ex republics of Caucasus, Middle Asia and Moldavia known by the lesser professional skill of newcomers. Apart from that, more and more labourers now migrate to St. Petersburg from the Far East and Turkey. It changes the labour market conditions for people from Russia and other ex-Soviet Republics, despite the fact that the latter were taught Russian language from their childhood.

The population of St.Petersburg in 1764–2003
years thousands years thousands years thousands years thousands
1764 149,7 1911 1950,3 1942 2432,0 1973 4219,8
1765 150,3 1912 2035,6 1943 622,0 1974 4287,0
1770 158,8 1913 2124,6 1944 546,0 1975 4356,2
1775 166,1 1914 2217,5 1945 927,0 1976 4417,9
1780 174,8 1915 2314,5 1946 1541,0 1977 4471,3
1785 197,6 1916 2415,7 1947 1920,0 1978 4527,2
1790 218,2 1917 2300,0 1948 1998,0 1979 4588,2
1795 219,1 1918 1469,0 1949 2218,0 1980 4635,2
1800 220,2 1919 900,0 1950 2258,0 1981 4669,4
1805 252,8 1920 740,0 1951 2328,0 1982 4711,2
1810 291,0 1921 830,0 1952 2403,0 1983 4762,1
1815 340,0 1922 960,0 1953 2459,0 1984 4806,4
1820 385,4 1923 1093,0 1954 2765,0 1985 4844,2
1825 424,7 1924 1221,0 1955 2797,0 1986 4882,2
1830 435,5 1925 1379,0 1956 2814,0 1987 4931,2
1835 452,0 1926 1535,0 1957 2816,0 1988 4986,9
1840 472,8 1927 1627,0 1958 3333,6 1989 5023,5
1845 480,0 1928 1700,1 1959 3389,6 1990 5035,2
1850 487,3 1929 1827,8 1960 3432,0 1991 5034,7
1855 513,0 1930 2009,5 1961 3524,5 1992 5003,8
1860 506,6 1931 2372,5 1962 3594,9 1993 4952,3
1865 539,1 1932 2684,3 1963 3663,9 1994 4882,6
1870 682,3 1933 2668,0 1964 3731,6 1995 4838,0
1875 758,4 1934 2715,9 1965 3777,2 1996 4801,5
1880 843,1 1935 2715,7 1966 3813,5 1997 4778,6
1885 884,3 1936 2728,5 1967 3867,0 1998 4748,5
1890 954,4 1937 2814,5 1968 3925,1 1999 4728,2
1895 1097,5 1938 2946,7 1969 3983,1 2000 4694,0
1900 1418,0 1939 3015,2 1970 4026,8 2001 4660,6
1905 1635,1 1940 2920,0 1971 4083,4 2002 4629,0
1910 1881,3 1941 2992,0 1972 4149,9 2003 4597,6
Source: И.И.Елисеева, Е.И.Грибова, ed. (2003). Санкт-Петербург. 1703-2003: Jubilee Statistical Yearbook [Saint Petersburg. 1703-2003:] (2 ed.). СПб: Судостроение. pp. 16–17. Retrieved February 9, 2011. 

Housing

People in urban Saint Petersburg mostly live in apartment blocks. Between 1918 and 1990s, the Soviets nationalised housing and many were forced to share their apartments as communal apartments (kommunalkas) with other residents of the city. In the 1930s some 68 percent of the Leningrad population lived in shared apartments. Leningrad was the largest city of the Soviet Union by the number of kommunalkas. As new boroughs were built on the outskirts in the 1950s-1980s, over half a million low income families eventually received free apartments, and additional hundred thousand condos were purchased by the middle class. While much economic and social activity is still concentrated in and around the city centre, which is the richest part of Saint Petersburg, the new boroughs has been used mostly as many-storied urban commuter areas. Their gentrification has yet to begin. Although progress has been made in resettling residents of kommunalkas in the 1990s, shared apartments are still not uncommon. In the last 15 years of de-nationalisation most of residential property has been transferred free of charge, or at a small fraction of its value, to millions of legal residents of St. Petersburg.

References

  1. "National Composition of Population for Regions of the Russian Federation". 2002 Russian All-Population Census. 2002. Archived from the original (XLS) on 2007-02-17. Retrieved 2006-07-20.
  2. Голов А.А. Есть ли бог в Санкт-Петербурге?. VTsIOM, August 23, 2002.
  3. 55 процентов петербуржцев считают себя православными. Православный Санкт-Петербург 3 (107), March 2001.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "Saint Petersburg". The Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary [Энциклопедический словарь Брокгауза и Ефрона]. СПб. 1890–1906. Retrieved February 9, 2011.
  5. Ibid. of which 86.49% were Russians, 4.01% Germans, 2.91% Poles, 1.66% Finns, 0.97% Estonians, 0.95% Jews, 0.50% Latvians, 0.41% Ukrainians, 0.39% Tatars, 0,37% Swedes, 0.30% Lithuanians, 0.26% French, 0.23% Belorussians
  6. Russian Information and Review [Saint Petersburg. 1703-2003:]. 1. Petrograd: Information Departement of the Russian Trade Delegation. October 1922. p. 95. Retrieved February 9, 2011.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 И.И.Елисеева, Е.И.Грибова, ed. (2003). Санкт-Петербург. 1703-2003: Jubilee Statistical Yearbook [Saint Petersburg. 1703-2003:] (2 ed.). СПб: Судостроение. pp. 16–17. Retrieved February 9, 2011.
  8. The Siege of Leningrad, 1941 - 1944
  9. "Road of Life (Russian commemoration of 65th Anniversary of the siege of Leningrad".
  10. Glantz 2001, p. 130
  11. Чистякова Н. Третье сокращение численности населения… и последнее? Демоскоп Weekly 163 – 164, August 1–15, 2004.
  12. Чистяков А. Ю. Население (обзорная статья). Энциклопедия Санкт-Петербурга
  13. Основные показатели социально-демографической ситуации в Санкт-Петербурге Archived October 10, 2006, at the Wayback Machine.
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