Kaluga Governorate
Kaluga Governorate Калужская губерния | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Governorate of the Russian Empire | |||||||||
1796–1929 | |||||||||
Coat of arms | |||||||||
Location in the Russian Empire | |||||||||
Capital | Kaluga | ||||||||
Area | |||||||||
• 1897 | 28,993 km2 (11,194 sq mi) | ||||||||
Population | |||||||||
• 1897 | 1,132,843[1] | ||||||||
History | |||||||||
• Established | 12 December 1796 | ||||||||
• Disestablished | 1 October 1929 | ||||||||
|
Kaluga Governorate (Russian: Калужская губерния, romanized: Kaluzhskaya guberniya) was an administrative-territorial unit (guberniya) of the Russian Empire and the Russian SFSR, which existed in 1796–1929.[2] Its capital was Kaluga.[3]
Administrative division
Kaluga Governorate consisted of the following uyezds (administrative centres in parentheses):
- Borovsky Uyezd (Borovsk)
- Zhizdrinsky Uyezd (Zhizdra)
- Kaluzhsky Uyezd (Kaluga)
- Kozelsky Uyezd (Kozelsk)
- Likhvinsky Uyezd (Likhvin)
- Maloyaroslavetsky Uyezd (Maloyaroslavets)
- Medynsky Uyezd (Medyn)
- Meshchovsky Uyezd (Meshchovsk)
- Mosalsky Uyezd (Mosalsk)
- Peremyshlsky Uyezd (Peremyshl)
- Tarussky Uyezd (Tarusa)
Demographics
At the time of the Russian Empire Census of 1897, Kaluga Governorate had a population of 1,132,843. Of these, 99.4% spoke Russian, 0.2% Polish, 0.1% Yiddish, 0.1% Ukrainian, 0.1% Belarusian and 0.1% German as their native language.[4]
References
- ^ "Демоскоп Weekly - Приложение. Справочник статистических показателей". www.demoscope.ru. Retrieved 2024-02-18.
- ^ Постановление ВЦИК от 14.01.1929 «Об образовании на территории Р. С. Ф. С. Р. административно-территориальных объединений краевого и областного значения»
- ^ "Всесоюзная перепись населения 1926 г." Archived from the original on 2014-04-07.
- ^ [1] Демоскоп Weekly - Приложение. Справочник статистических показателей
Further reading
- William Henry Beable (1919), "Governments or Provinces of the Former Russian Empire: Kaluga", Russian Gazetteer and Guide, London: Russian Outlook – via Open Library
54°32′00″N 36°16′00″E / 54.5333°N 36.2667°E / 54.5333; 36.2667
- v
- t
- e
(List)
- Azov¹
- *Altai²
- Arkhangelsk
- Archangelgorod
- Astrakhan
- Belgorod
- Bessarabia
- Bratslav
- Belarus
- Caucasus
- Chernigov
- Grodno
- Finland
- Iziaslav
- Ingermanland
- Irkutsk
- Kazan
- Kaluga
- Kiev (1708)
- Kiev
- Kharkov
- Kherson
- Kholm
- Kovno
- Kolyvan
- Kostroma
- Kursk
- Lithuania
- Little Russia (1764)
- Little Russia (1796)
- Minsk
- Mogilev
- Moscow
- Nikolayev
- Nizhny Novgorod
- Novgorod-Seversky
- Novgorod
- Novorossiya
- Olonets
- Orenburg
- Oryol
- Penza
- Perm
- *Petrograd²
- Podolia
- Polotsk
- Poltava
- Pskov
- Ryazan
- Samara
- Saint Petersburg
- Saratov
- Siberia
- Simbirsk
- Sloboda Ukraine
- Slonim
- Smolensk
- Stavropol
- Taurida
- Tambov
- Tver
- Tobolsk
- Tomsk
- Tula
- Ufa
- Vilna
- Vitebsk
- Vladimir
- Voznesensk
- Vologda
- Volhynia
- Voronezh
- Vyatka
- Vyborg
- Yaroslavl
- Yekaterinoslav
- Yeniseysk
- Amur
- Belostok
- Bessarabia
- Don Host
- Transbaikal
- Kamchatka
- Caspian
- Kwantung
- Orenburg Kirgiz
- Omsk
- Primorskaya
- Sakhalin
- Taurida
- Tarnopol
- Turgay
- Ural
- Yakut
- Akmolinsk
- Siberia Kirgiz
- Semipalatinsk
Galicia and Bukovina
- Lvov
- Peremyshl
- Tarnopol
- Chernovtsy
- Bukey Horde
- Emirate of Bukhara
- Khanate of Kokand
- Russian America
- *Uryankhay Krai²
- Khanate of Khiva
- Zeravshan Okrug
² An asterisk (*) indicates governorates formed or created with renaming after 1 January 1914.
³ Ostsee or Baltic general-governorship was abolished in 1876.
This Russian location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e