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Podolia Governorate

1793–1925 unit of Russia

Podolia Governorate

Summary

1793–1925 unit of Russia

FieldValue
namePodolia Governorate
native_nameПодольская губерния
native_name_langru
settlement_typeGovernorate
image_shieldCoat of arms of Podolye Governorate 1856.svg
image_mapPodolia in Russian Empire (1914).svg
mapsize225px
map_captionLocation in the Russian Empire
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameRussian Empire
subdivision_type1Krai
subdivision_name1Southwestern
established_titleEstablished
established_date1793
extinct_titleAbolished
extinct_date1925
seat_typeCapital
seat{{plainlist
area_total_km242017
population_as_of1897
population_total3,018,299
population_density_km2auto
population_urban7.35%
population_rural92.65%
total_typeTotal
  • Kamenets-Podolsky (until 1914)
  • Vinnitsa (1914–1925)

Podolia Governorate was an administrative-territorial unit (guberniya) of the Southwestern Krai of the Russian Empire. It bordered Volhynian Governorate to the north, Kiev Governorate to the east, Kherson Governorate to the southeast, Bessarabia Governorate to the south, and Austria to the west. Its administrative centre was Kamenets-Podolsky (Kamianets-Podilskyi), which later moved to Vinnitsa (Vinnytsia). The governorate covered areas of Ukraine's partially Khmelnytskyi and most of Vinnytsia Oblasts, along with the fractionally recognised state of Transnistria.

It was created from the Second Partition of Poland, which was formed from the former Polish Bracław and Podole voivodeships, which are part of the Southwestern Krai along with Volhynia and Kiev. Its capital was located in Kamenets-Podolsky, which later moved to Vinnitsa. The governorate still existed until the administrative reforms of the Ukrainian SSR, which dissolved it into five okruhas.

History

A market scene in Podolia, c. 1864

The Government of Podolia was established right after the Second Partition of Poland in place of the former Podole and Bracław Voivodeships in 1793.

Location

The Podolia Governorate occupied the southwestern frontier of the former Russian empire, bordering Austria-Hungary, and had an area of about 42,000 km2. The administrative centre was Kamenets-Podolskiy until 1914 when it moved to Vinnytsia.

Podolia Governorate was one of the three governorates of the Southwestern Krai administration. In 1917 it was recognized by the Russian Provisional Government to be governed by the General Secretariat of Ukraine as the representative of the Russian Provisional Government in the region.

Old map of Podolia Governorate, Russian Empire.

Administrative division

Uyezd subdivision

Until 1918 the governorate consisted of 12 uyezds (counties):

CountyCounty TownArms of County TownAreaPopulation
(1897 census)Transliteration nameRussian Cyrillic
BaltskyБалтскийBalta[[File:Balta COA (Podolia Governorate) (1852).gif42pxcenter]]7766.25 km2391,018
BratslavskyБрацлавскийBratslav[[File:Bratslav COA (Podolia Governorate) (1796).png42pxcenter]]3079.93 km2241,868
VinnitskyВинницкийVinnitsa[[File:Vinnitsa COA (Podolia Governorate) (1796).png42pxcenter]]2980.92 km2248,314
GaysinskyГайсинскийGaysin[[File:Gaysin COA (Podolia Governorate) (1796).gif42pxcenter]]3383.11 km2248,142
Kamenets-PodolskyКаменец-ПодольскийKamenets-Podolsky[[File:Kamenets-Podolskiy COA (Podolia Governorate) (1796).gif42pxcenter]]2884.19 km2266,350
LetichevskyЛетичевскийLetichev[[File:Letichev COA (Podolia Governorate) (1796).gif42pxcenter]]2699.14 km2184,477
LitinskyЛитинскийLitin[[File:Litin COA (Podolia Governorate) (1796).gif42pxcenter]]3322 km2210,502
MogilyovskyМогилёвскийMogilyov[[File:Mogilev COA (Podolia Governorate) (1796).gif42pxcenter]]2746.14 km2227,672
NovoushitskyНовоушицкийNovaya Ushitsa[[File:Novaya Ushitsa COA (Podolia Governorate) (1838).gif42pxcenter]]2840.26 km2223,312
OlgopolskyОльгопольскийOlgopol[[File:Olgopol COA (Podolia Governorate) (1820).gif42pxcenter]]4008.14 km2284,253
ProskurovskyПроскуровскийProskurov[[File:Proskurov COA (Podolia Governorate) (1796).gif42pxcenter]]2691.06 km2226,091
YampolskyЯмпольскийYampol[[File:Yampol COA (Podolia Governorate) (1796).gif42pxcenter]]3618.01 km2266,300
Podolian korchma

Okruha subdivision

On 12 April 1923 all uyezds (counties) were transformed into okruhas (counties), while volosts (districts) – into raions (districts). Okruhas served as a subdivision of government until it was abolished on 1 August 1925. Together with the government of Podilia, the Haisyn okruha was dissolved as well. Some territory of Tulchyn okruha were included into the newly formed Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.

  • Vinnytsia
  • Haisyn
  • Kamianets
  • Mohyliv
  • Proskuriv
  • Tulchyn

Principal cities

Russian Census of 1897:

Kamenets/Podolsky
  • Kamenets/Podolsky – 35 934 (Jewish – 16 112, Ukrainian – 9 755, Russian – 7 420)
  • Vinnitsa – 30 563 (Jewish – 11 456, Ukrainian – 10 862, Russian – 5 206)
  • Balta – 23 363 (Jewish – 13 164, Russian – 5 385, Ukrainian – 4 124)
  • Proskurov – 22 855 (Jewish – 11 369, Ukrainian – 4 425, Russian – 3 483)
  • Mogilev/Dnestr – 22 315 (Jewish – 12 188, Ukrainian – 6 512, Russian – 2 668)
  • Zhmerinka – 12 908
  • Khmelnik – 11 657 (Jewish – 5 979, Ukrainian – 5 375, Polish – 150)

Smaller cities

  • Bar – 9 982 (Jewish – 5 764, Ukrainian – 3 332, Russian – 485)
  • Lityn – 9 420 (Jewish – 3 828, Ukrainian – 3 047, Russian – 2 126)
  • Gaysin – 9 374 (Jewish – 4 322, Ukrainian – 3 946, Russian – 884)
  • Olgopol – 8 134 (Ukrainian – 4 837, Jewish – 2 465, Russian – 625)
  • Bratslav – 7 863 (Jewish – 3 275, Ukrainian – 2 608, Russian – 1 782)
  • Letichev – 7 248 (Jewish – 4 105, Ukrainian – 1 719, Polish – 741)
  • Yampol – 6 605 (Ukrainian – 3 282, Jewish – 2 819, Russian – 275)
  • Novaya Ushytsa – 6 371 (Jewish – 2 214, Russian – 2 120, Ukrainian – 1 836)
  • Staraya Ushytsa – 4 176 (Ukrainian – 2 488, Jewish – 1 584, Polish – 57)
  • Salnitsa – 3 699 (Ukrainian – 2 758, Jewish – 899, Polish – 19)
  • Verbovets – 2 311 (Ukrainian – 1 282, Jewish – 661, Polish – 326)

Language

Imperial census of 1897.}}

According to the Russian Empire Census on , the Podolia Governorate had a population of 3,018,299, including 1,505,940 men and 1,512,359 women. The majority of the population indicated Little Russian to be their mother tongue, with a significant Jewish speaking minority.

LanguageNative speakersPercentageTOTAL3,018,299100.00
Little Russian2,442,81980.93
Jewish369,30612.24
Great Russian98,9843.28
Polish69,1562.29
Romanian26,7640.89
German4,0690.13
Tatar2,2960.08
Bashkir1,1130.04
Czech8860.03
White Russian8340.03
Roma5100.02
Votyak2540.01
French2450.01
Chuvash1370.00
Mordovian1360.00
Latvian1120.00
Cheremis1010.00
Other languages5770.02
FaithMaleFemaleBothNumberPercentageTotal1,505,9401,512,3593,018,299100.00
Eastern Orthodox1,180,1481,178,3492,358,49778.14
Judaism179,612191,000370,61212.28
Roman Catholic131,145131,593262,7388.70
Old Believer9,3579,49218,8490.62
Lutheran2,0201,7953,8150.13
Islam3,427333,4600.11
Armenian Apostolic6529940.00
Reformed3026560.00
Armenian Catholic2314370.00
Karaite1113240.00
Anglican3470.00
Mennonite2130.00
Baptist1120.00
Other Christian denomination129210.00
Other non-Christian denomination840840.00
The [[Baal Shem Tov]]'s shul in [[Medzhybizh]], [[Ukraine]] (c. 1915). The shul no longer exists.

;Religious structures

  • Churches
    • Eastern Orthodox 1645
    • Roman Catholic (kosciol) 202
    • Lutheran 4
  • Monasteries
    • Eastern Orthodox 7 (male), 4 (female)
  • Synagogues 89
    • other Shul(s) 438
  • Mosque(s) 1

Notes

References

References

  1. "Demoscope Weekly – Annex. Statistical indicators reference".
  2. Hamm, Michael F.. (2014). "Kiev: A Portrait, 1800–1917". Princeton University Press.
  3. Fortson IV, Benjamin W.. (2011). "Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction". John Wiley & Sons.
  4. link
Wikipedia Source

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