محافظة پولتاڤا
| Poltava Governorate Полтавская губерния | |||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Governorate the Russian Empire (1802–1917) and Ukrainian successor states (1917–25) | |||||||||||||||||
| 1802–1925 | |||||||||||||||||
درع | |||||||||||||||||
Poltava Governorate in 1913 | |||||||||||||||||
Location in the Russian Empire | |||||||||||||||||
| العاصمة | Poltava | ||||||||||||||||
| المساحة | |||||||||||||||||
• (1897) | 49،894 km2 (19،264 sq mi) | ||||||||||||||||
| التعداد | |||||||||||||||||
• (1897) | 2,778,151 | ||||||||||||||||
| التاريخ | |||||||||||||||||
| التاريخ | |||||||||||||||||
• Established | 1802 | ||||||||||||||||
• Abolished | 1925 | ||||||||||||||||
| التقسيمات السياسية | 15 uezds (1802–1923) 7 okruhas (1923–25) | ||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||
| اليوم جزء من | Poltava Oblast Kharkiv Oblast Kyiv Oblast Sumy Oblast | ||||||||||||||||
Poltava Governorate[أ] was an administrative-territorial unit (guberniya) of the Russian Empire. It was officially created in 1802 from the disbanded Little Russia Governorate and had its capital in Poltava.
Its borders encompassed the modern Poltava Oblast of Ukraine, in addition to Berestyn, Pereiaslav, Romny and Zolotonosha.
It was bordering the Chernigov and Kursk Governorates to the north, Kiev Governorate to the west, Kharkov Governorate to the east and the Kherson and Yekaterinoslav Governorates to the south.
History
In 1802, the Little Russia Governorate was disbanded and its territory split between the new Chernigov and Poltava Governorates.
The governorate was part of the Ukrainian People's Republic from 1917 to 1920, interrupted in 1918 by the Ukrainian State.
After the formation of the Ukrainian SSR, the territory was wholly included into the new Soviet Republic. Initially the governorate system was retained – although variations included the Kremenchug Governorate which was temporarily formed on its territory (August 1920 – December 1922), and the passing of the Pereyaslavsky Uyezd to the Kiev Governorate. However, on June 3, 1925, the governorate was liquidated and succeeded by five okruhas (which already were its subdivisions as of March 7, 1923): Kremenchutsky, Lubensky, Poltavsky, Prylutsky and Romensky (the remaining two okrugs existed within the governate, Zolotonoshsky and Krasnohradsky, were also liquidated).
Demographics
The governorate had a population of 2,778,151 according to the 1897 Russian Empire census.[1] Most people (90.13%) lived on the countryside, while a tenth (9.87%) lived in towns and cities.[2][3] In 1914, the population had increased to 2,794,727.[بحاجة لمصدر]
Largest towns and cities
According to the 1897 census, nine settlements had more than 10,000 people.
- Kremenchug – 63,007 (Jewish – 29,577, Ukrainian – 18,980, Russian – 12,130)
- Poltava – 53,703 (Ukrainian – 30,086, Russian – 11,035, Jewish – 10,690)
- Romny – 22,510 (Ukrainian – 13,856, Jewish – 6,341, Russian – 1,933)
- Priluki – 18,532 (Ukrainian – 11,850, Jewish – 5,719, Russian – 821)
- Pereyaslav – 14,614 (Ukrainian – 8,348, Jewish – 5,737, Russian – 468)
- Kobeliaki – 10,487 (Ukrainian – 7,708, Jewish – 2,115, Russian – 564)
- Zenkov – 10,443 (Ukrainian – 8,957, Jewish – 1,261, Russian – 187)
- Lubny – 10,097 (Ukrainian – 5,975, Jewish – 3,001, Russian – 960)
- Mirgorod – 10,037 (Ukrainian – 8,290, Jewish – 1,248, Russian – 427)
In bold are cities with a population of over 50,000.
Native Languages
By the 1897 census,[4] Ukrainian was by far the most native spoken language in the governorate, followed by Yiddish and Russian.
| Language | Number | percentage (%) | males | females |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ukrainian | 2,583,133 | 92.98 | 1,276,578 | 1,306,555 |
| Yiddish | 110,352 | 3.97 | 53,860 | 56,492 |
| Russian | 72,941 | 2.63 | 38,851 | 34,090 |
| German | 4,579 | 0.16 | 2,257 | 2,322 |
| Polish | 3,891 | 0.14 | 2,782 | 1,109 |
| Belarusian | 1,344 | 0.05 | 823 | 521 |
| Persons that did not identify their native language |
92 | <0.01 | 65 | 27 |
| Other[ب] | 1,819 | 0.07 | 1,323 | 496 |
In bold are native languages spoken by more people than the state language.
Religion
By the 1897 census,[5] the majority religion in the governorate and virtually the state religion was Eastern Orthodox Christianity with some of the population following Judaism. Other religions were much less common.
| Religion | Number | percentage (%) | males | females |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eastern Orthodoxy | 2,654,645 | 95.55 | 1,314,851 | 1,339,794 |
| Judaism | 110,944 | 3.99 | 54,073 | 56,871 |
| Other[ت] (Roman Catholicism, Lutheranism, Old Believers) | 12,562 | 0.45 | 7,615 | 4,947 |
Administrative divisions
The governorate was divided into 15 uezds (povits in Ukrainian):
| Uezd | Administrative seat | Area | Population (1897 census) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Transliteration (Cyrillic) | Coat of arms | Transliteration (Cyrillic) | ||
| Gadyachsky (Гадячский) | Gadyach (Гадячъ) | 2،460.9 km2 (950.2 sq mi) | 142,806 | |
| Zenkovsky (Зеньковский) | Zenkov (Зеньковъ) | 2،250.5 km2 (868.9 sq mi) | 140,304 | |
| Zolotonoshsky (Золотоношский) | Zolotonosha (Золотоноша) | 4،425.5 km2 (1،708.7 sq mi) | 227,594 | |
| Kobelyaksky (Кобелякский) | Kobeliaki (Кобеляки) | 3،672.8 km2 (1،418.1 sq mi) | 217,875 | |
| Konstantinogradsky (Константиноградский) | Konstantinograd (Константиноградъ) | 6،079.2 km2 (2،347.2 sq mi) | 230,310 | |
| Kremenchugsky (Кременчугский) | Kremenchug (Кременчугъ) | 3،429.2 km2 (1،324.0 sq mi) | 244,894 | |
| Lokhvitsky (Лохвицкий) | Lokhvitsa (Лохвица) | 2،640.9 km2 (1،019.6 sq mi) | 150,985 | |
| Lubensky (Лубенский) | Lubny (Лубны) | 2،344.0 km2 (905.0 sq mi) | 136,613 | |
| Mirgorodsky (Миргородский) | Mirgorod (Миргородъ) | 2،659.3 km2 (1،026.8 sq mi) | 157,790 | |
| Pereyaslavsky (Переяславский) | Pereyaslav (Переяславъ) | 4،091.6 km2 (1،579.8 sq mi) | 185,306 | |
| Piryatinsky (Пирятинский) | Piryatin (Пирятинъ) | 3،268.1 km2 (1،261.8 sq mi) | 163,505 | |
| Poltavsky (Полтавский) | Poltava (Полтава) | 3،389.0 km2 (1،308.5 sq mi) | 227,795 | |
| Priluksky (Прилукский) | Priluki (Прилуки) | 3،274.7 km2 (1،264.4 sq mi) | 192,502 | |
| Romensky (Роменский) | Romny (Ромны) | 2،600.7 km2 (1،004.1 sq mi) | 186,497 | |
| Khorolsky (Хорольский) | Khorol (Хороль) | 3،311.0 km2 (1،278.4 sq mi) | 173,375 | |
Notes
- ^
- روسية: Полтавская губерния, pre-1918: Полтавская губернія, romanized: Poltavskaya guberniya
- أوكرانية: Полтавська губернія, romanized: Poltavsʼka huberniia
- ^ Languages, number of speakers which in all gubernia were less than 1000
- ^ Religions, number of believers which in all gubernia were less than 10000
References
- ^ Russian Empire census of 1897 (in روسية)
- ^ Language statistics of Poltava Governorate in 1897: Urban population
- ^ Language statistics of Poltava Governorate in 1897: Districts without urban population
- ^ Language statistics of Poltava Governorate in 1897
- ^ Religion statistics of Poltava Governorate in 1897 (in روسية)
External links
- Poltava Guberniya – Article in Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary (in روسية)
- Poltava Governorate – Historical coat of arms (in أوكرانية and إنگليزية)
- Chernihiv gubernia – Article in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine
قالب:Divisions of the Russian Empire قالب:Governorates of Ukraine 1917-1921 قالب:Okruhas of Ukraine
- Articles containing روسية-language text
- Articles containing أوكرانية-language text
- Articles with روسية-language sources (ru)
- Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
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- Use dmy dates from January 2024
- Former country articles requiring maintenance
- Articles with unsourced statements from February 2025
- Articles with أوكرانية-language sources (uk)
- Articles with إنگليزية-language sources (en)
- Coordinates not on Wikidata
- محافظة پولتاڤا
- محافظات الإمبراطورية الروسية
- محافظات أوكرانيا
- 1802 establishments in the Russian Empire
- تأسيسات 1802 في أوكرانيا
- انحلالات 1925 في أوكرانيا
- History of Chernihiv Oblast
- تاريخ أوبلاست خاركيڤ
- History of Kyiv Oblast
- History of Poltava Oblast
- تاريخ أوبلاست سومي