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Russian Empire census

The Russian Empire census, formally the First general census of the population of the Russian Empire in 1897,[a] was the first and only nation-wide census performed in the Russian Empire. The census recorded demographic data as of 9 February 1897 [O.S. 28 January]; with a population of 125,640,021, it made Russia the world's third-most populated country at the time, after the British and Qing empires. Although the census was performed in most of the empire, no enumeration was done in the Grand Duchy of Finland.

First general census of the population of the Russian Empire in 1897

9 February 1897 (1897-02-09) 1920 →

First page of an imperial Russian census form from Kovno Governorate
General information
CountryRussian Empire
AuthorityCentral Statistical Bureau
Results
Total population125,640,021
Most populous ​governorate or oblastKiev Governorate (3,559,229)
Least populous ​governorate or oblastAmur oblast (120,306)

The census revealed the social class, native language, religion, and profession of citizens, which were aggregated to yield district and provincial totals. The data processing took eight years; publishing the results began in 1898 and was completed in 1905. In total, 119 books in 89 volumes were published for 89 governorates in the empire, including a two-volume summary.

The next census had been planned for December 1915, but was cancelled due to World War I.[1] It was not rescheduled before the Russian Revolution. The next census in Russia only occurred at the end of 1926, almost three decades later.

Background edit

Population censuses in Eastern Europe, as well as throughout the world, were carried out in one form or another throughout the existence of tribes, principalities, kingdoms, kaganates, khanates, kingdoms, empires, and states in order to determine the expected collection of income from subject territories and peoples.

In the thirteenth century, the Golden Horde enumerated the population of the Rus' three times—1245, 1257, and 1274; according to censuses, the Rus' population was then estimated at approximately 10 million people.[2] The population in the Tsardom of Russia under the reign of Peter the Great was about 15 million in 1710.

Previous censuses had been recorded for fiscal and military purposes. Until the eighteenth century, population records were sporadic, as in either scribal or census books. Audits began to be carried out at the beginning of the eighteenth century, and population censuses became relatively regular. Since 1858, the audit had been replaced by administrative and police registration of the population based on data from family lists. In total, three large administrative and police censuses of the population were carried out—in 1858, 1863, and 1885. Running population registrations – including births, marriages, and deaths – were carried out by religious organisations until 1918. All the items mentioned above were characterised by inaccuracy and insufficient completeness.

By 1897, significant experience had been accumulated in local, mainly urban, population censuses that had been conducted since the later half of the nineteenth century. Population censuses were performed in separate governorates (Pskov in 1870 and 1887, Astrakhan in 1873, Akmola in 1877, etc.), in which residents in all cities were enumerated. The population in the entire Courland Governorate was enumerated in 1863 and 1881, and in the governorates of Livonia and Estonia in the latter. Registration of the rural population was performed during household and other surveys of zemstvos. In 1871, under the general editorship of the professor of military statistics, Nikolai Obruchev, officers of the General Staff published a military statistical collection, the four-volume edition of which contained data on the population of Russia as a whole, and was categorised by governorates and okrugs.

In 1870, the project for an all-Russian population census was discussed at the First All-Russian Congress of Statisticians, and in 1876, at the eighth session of the International Statistical Congress. On 26 February 1877, the draft of "Regulations on the General National Census", which was developed by a commission under the Ministry of Finance, was submitted to the State Council; however, it was not discussed there, possibly due to the Russo-Turkish War that occurred from 1877 to 1878. In the early 80s of the nineteenth century, the Ministry of Internal Affairs began to receive statements from some zemstvo assemblies and governors about the need to conduct a population census as soon as possible; this was due to the unbalanced distribution of taxes among peasant families and an increase in arrears in collections from the population. After the famine of 1891–1892, the question of the obligation to have accurate figures of the population of the empire again arose.

Organization edit

The census project was suggested during 1877 by Pyotr Semenov-Tyan-Shansky, a famous Russian geographer and director of the Central Statistical Bureau, and was approved by Czar Nicholas II in 1895.

The census was performed in two stages. For the first stage (December 1896 — January 1897) the counters (135,000 persons: teachers, priests, and literate soldiers) visited all households and filled in the questionnaires, which were verified by local census managers. For the second stage (9 January 1898 [O.S. 28 December 1897]) the counters simultaneously visited all households to verify and update the questionnaires. The census was performed during winter as the population was less mobile then.[3] Despite this being the only imperial census, historians are able to estimate the Russian Empire's population during earlier times by collecting city censuses.

The data processing required 8 years using Hollerith card machines. Publication of the results started during 1898 and ended in 1905. In total, 119 volumes for 89 guberniyas, as well as a two-volume summary, were issued.

Data fields edit

The questionnaire contained the following questions:

  • Family name, given name, patronymic or nickname (прозвище)
  • Sex
  • Relation with respect to the head of the family or household
  • Age
  • Marital status
  • Social status: sosloviye (estate of the realm), rank or title (сословіе, состояніе, званіе)
  • Place of birth
  • Place of registration
  • Usual place of residence
  • Notice of absence
  • Faith
  • First language (родной язык)
  • Literacy
  • Occupation (profession, trade, position of office or service), both primary and secondary

In the census summary tables, nationality was based on the declared primary language of respondents.[citation needed]

Census results edit

The total population of the Russian Empire was recorded to be 125,640,021 people, 62,477,348 or 49.73% of whom were men and 63,162,673 or 50.27% were women—the median age was 21.16 years.

By native language edit

 
Map of subdivisions of the Russian Empire by largest ethnolinguistic group (1897)
Linguistic composition of the Russian Empire[4]
Language Urban Rural TOTAL
Native speakers % Native speakers % Native speakers %
Russian[b] 8,825,733 52.45 46,841,736 43.05 55,667,469 44.31
Ukrainian[c] 1,256,387 7.47 21,124,164 19.41 22,380,551 17.81
Polish 1,455,527 8.65 6,475,780 5.95 7,931,307 6.31
Belarusian[d] 171,383 1.02 5,714,164 5.25 5,885,547 4.68
Jewish 2,502,217 14.87 2,560,939 2.35 5,063,156 4.03
Kyrgyz-Kaisak 46,827 0.28 4,037,312 3.71 4,084,139 3.25
Tatar[e] 417,727 2.48 3,319,900 3.05 3,737,627 2.97
German 418,533 2.49 1,371,956 1.26 1,790,489 1.43
Latvian 230,719 1.37 1,205,218 1.11 1,435,937 1.14
Bashkir 13,844 0.08 1,307,519 1.20 1,321,363 1.05
Lithuanian 43,136 0.26 1,167,374 1.07 1,210,510 0.96
Armenian 272,801 1.62 900,295 0.83 1,173,096 0.93
Romanian 64,134 0.38 1,057,535 0.97 1,121,669 0.89
Mordovian 14,022 0.08 1,009,819 0.93 1,023,841 0.81
Estonian 139,544 0.83 863,194 0.79 1,002,738 0.80
Sartic 204,046 1.21 764,609 0.70 968,655 0.77
Chuvash 6,051 0.04 837,704 0.77 843,755 0.67
Georgian 98,503 0.59 725,465 0.67 823,968 0.66
Uzbek 91,750 0.55 634,784 0.58 726,534 0.58
Samogitian 8,946 0.05 439,076 0.40 448,022 0.36
Other Turkic dialects 156,348 0.93 284,064 0.26 440,412 0.35
Votyak 2,245 0.01 418,725 0.38 420,970 0.34
Mari 2,191 0.01 373,248 0.34 375,439 0.30
Tajik 103,240 0.61 247,157 0.23 350,397 0.28
Buryat 2,038 0.01 286,625 0.26 288,663 0.23
Turkmen 2,687 0.02 278,670 0.26 281,357 0.22
Imeretian 17,181 0.10 256,005 0.24 273,186 0.22
Mingrelian 11,539 0.07 228,086 0.21 239,625 0.19
Yakut 3,890 0.02 223,494 0.21 227,384 0.18
Chechen 871 0.01 225,625 0.21 226,496 0.18
Avar-Andean 5,533 0.03 207,159 0.19 212,692 0.17
Turkish 13,378 0.08 195,444 0.18 208,822 0.17
Karelian 2,791 0.02 205,310 0.19 208,101 0.17
Kara-Kyrgyz 270 0.00 201,412 0.19 201,682 0.16
Kalmyk 1,263 0.01 189,385 0.17 190,648 0.15
Greek 33,621 0.20 153,304 0.14 186,925 0.15
Bulgarian 14,371 0.09 158,288 0.15 172,659 0.14
Ossetian 5,907 0.04 165,809 0.15 171,716 0.14
Kyurin 5,146 0.03 154,067 0.14 159,213 0.13
Komi 6,340 0.04 147,278 0.14 153,618 0.12
Finnish 25,610 0.15 117,458 0.11 143,068 0.11
Dargin 1,847 0.01 128,362 0.12 130,209 0.10
Teptyar 579 0.00 117,194 0.11 117,773 0.09
Permyak 366 0.00 104,325 0.10 104,691 0.08
Karakalpak 46 0.00 104,228 0.10 104,274 0.08
Kurdish 1,148 0.01 98,801 0.09 99,949 0.08
Kabardian 523 0.00 98,038 0.09 98,561 0.08
Tat 4,099 0.02 90,957 0.08 95,056 0.08
Kazi-Kumukh 1,642 0.01 89,238 0.08 90,880 0.07
Kumyk 3,529 0.02 79,879 0.07 83,408 0.07
Abkhaz 343 0.00 71,760 0.07 72,103 0.06
Evenki 192 0.00 66,078 0.06 66,270 0.05
Nogai 299 0.00 63,781 0.06 64,080 0.05
Chinese 24,794 0.15 32,665 0.03 57,459 0.05
Taranchin Uyghur 10,789 0.06 45,680 0.04 56,469 0.04
Mishar Tatar 657 0.00 53,190 0.05 53,847 0.04
Czech 8,375 0.05 42,010 0.04 50,385 0.04
Ingush 541 0.00 46,868 0.04 47,409 0.04
Circassian 1,660 0.01 44,626 0.04 46,286 0.04
Romani 6,551 0.04 38,031 0.03 44,582 0.04
Talysh 1,035 0.01 34,256 0.03 35,291 0.03
Persian 18,976 0.11 12,747 0.01 31,723 0.03
Karapapakh 9 0.00 29,893 0.03 29,902 0.02
Karachay 45 0.00 27,178 0.02 27,223 0.02
Korean 1,716 0.01 24,289 0.02 26,005 0.02
Chud 117 0.00 25,703 0.02 25,820 0.02
Khanty 179 0.00 19,484 0.02 19,663 0.02
French 12,966 0.08 3,467 0.00 16,433 0.01
Samoyedic 127 0.00 15,750 0.01 15,877 0.01
Svan 94 0.00 15,662 0.01 15,756 0.01
Kashgar Uyghur 139 0.00 14,799 0.01 14,938 0.01
Swedish 6,969 0.04 7,230 0.01 14,199 0.01
Izhorian 37 0.00 13,737 0.01 13,774 0.01
Chukchi 8 0.00 11,787 0.01 11,795 0.01
Mansi 9 0.00 7,642 0.01 7,651 0.01
Kipchak 6 0.00 7,601 0.01 7,607 0.01
Udi 11 0.00 7,089 0.01 7,100 0.01
English 5,746 0.03 1,308 0.00 7,054 0.01
Gilyak (Nivkh) 14 0.00 6,180 0.01 6,194 0.00
Koryak 31 0.00 6,027 0.01 6,058 0.00
Assyrian 1,307 0.01 4,046 0.00 5,353 0.00
Italian 3,824 0.02 936 0.00 4,760 0.00
Kamchadal (Itelmen) 6 0.00 3,972 0.00 3,978 0.00
Manchu 54 0.00 3,340 0.00 3,394 0.00
Japanese 1,855 0.01 794 0.00 2,649 0.00
Serbo-Croatian 1,197 0.01 618 0.00 1,815 0.00
Sámi 41 0.00 1,771 0.00 1,812 0.00
Arabic 93 0.00 1,603 0.00 1,696 0.00
Norwegian and Danish 1,031 0.01 609 0.00 1,640 0.00
Ainu 6 0.00 1,440 0.00 1,446 0.00
Eskimo 1 0.00 1,098 0.00 1,099 0.00
Yenisei-Ostyak (Ket) 6 0.00 988 0.00 994 0.00
Hungarian 699 0.00 262 0.00 961 0.00
Yukaghir 0 0.00 948 0.00 948 0.00
Albanian 70 0.00 866 0.00 936 0.00
Mongolian 84 0.00 733 0.00 817 0.00
Afghan 43 0.00 571 0.00 614 0.00
Aleut 338 0.00 246 0.00 584 0.00
Chuvan 190 0.00 316 0.00 506 0.00
Other Lezgic languages 165 0.00 255 0.00 420 0.00
Kist 97 0.00 316 0.00 413 0.00
Dutch 225 0.00 110 0.00 335 0.00
Hindi 236 0.00 76 0.00 312 0.00
Spanish and Portuguese 112 0.00 26 0.00 138 0.00
Other languages 69 0.00 5 0.00 74 0.00
Not indicated 2,142 0.01 2,985 0.00 5,127 0.00
TOTAL 16,828,395 100.00 108,811,626 100.00 125,640,021 100.00

By religion edit

Religious composition of the Russian Empire in 1897[5]
Faith Male Female Both
Number %
Eastern Orthodox 42,954,739 44,168,865 87,123,604 69.34
Muslim 7,383,293 6,523,679 13,906,972 11.07
Roman Catholic 5,686,361 5,781,633 11,467,994 9.13
Jewish 2,547,144 2,668,661 5,215,805 4.15
Lutherans 1,739,814 1,832,839 3,572,653 2.84
Old Believers 1,029,023 1,175,573 2,204,596 1.75
Armenian Apostolic 625,592 553,649 1,179,241 0.94
Buddhists 240,739 193,124 433,863 0.34
Reformed 42,877 42,523 85,400 0.07
Mennonite 33,598 32,966 66,564 0.05
Armenian Catholic 20,028 18,812 38,840 0.03
Baptist 18,372 19,767 38,139 0.03
Karaite 6,372 6,522 12,894 0.01
Anglican 2,042 2,141 4,183 0.00
Other Christian denominations 2,371 1,581 3,952 0.00
Other non-Christian denominations 144,983 140,338 285,321 0.23
TOTAL 62,477,348 63,162,673 125,640,021 100.00

Population by modern-day countries edit

Largest cities edit

Largest cities of the Empire according to the census:

Data availability edit

Each enumeration form was copied twice, with the three copies filed in the Volost (county) archives, the governorate archives, and the Central Statistical Bureau in St. Petersburg. The copies in St. Petersburg were destroyed after they had been tabulated.[7][3] Most of the copies stored locally and regionally have also been destroyed; however, the complete census for the Arkhangelsk and Tobolsk governorates has been preserved, and the census for portions of several other governorates is also extant.[8][9]

Assessment edit

The results may have been influenced by national policy of the authorities: the population of Russian ethnicity was somewhat exaggerated.[10] Thus for example, the number of Poles is underrepresented.[11][12] Imperial officials classified the Ukrainian and Belarusian languages as belonging to the Russian group and labeled those nationalities as Little Russian for Ukrainians and White Russian for Belarusians.[10]

The census did not contain a question on ethnicity, which was deduced from data on mother tongue, social estate and occupation. There was also a 1916 and 1917 "agricultural census" that was carried out throughout the empire (except in some parts of the Caucasus, Eastern Russia, and Siberia), and a 1920 "general census" (except in the Russian far north, far east, Ukraine, and the Caucasus).[13]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Russian: Пе́рвая всео́бщая пе́репись населе́нія Россíйской импе́ріи 1897 го́да, tr. Pérvaya vseóbshchaya pérelis' naseléniya Rossíyskoy impérii 1897 góda
  2. ^ Termed as Great Russian (Великорусский).
  3. ^ Termed as Little Russian (Малорусский).
  4. ^ Termed as White Russian (Белорусский).
  5. ^ Includes Crimean Tatar, Volga Tatar and Azerbaijani.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Rosstat 2013, p. 70.
  2. ^ Borrero 2009, p. 393.
  3. ^ a b "Russia Census". FamilySearch. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  4. ^ Первая всеобщая перепись населения Российской Империи 1897 г. Распределение населения по родному языку, губерниям и областям (in Russian). Demoscope Weekly. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
  5. ^ . 2010-11-05. Archived from the original on 5 November 2010. Retrieved 2022-03-01.
  6. ^ Korkotyan 1932, p. 167.
  7. ^ "Russia, Jewish Families in Russian Empire Census, 1897". Ancestry. Retrieved 17 September 2021.
  8. ^ . Find Russian Heritage. Archived from the original on 2018-02-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  9. ^ . Alex Dunai's personal website. Archived from the original on 2019-04-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  10. ^ a b Anna Geifman, Russia Under the Last Tsar: Opposition and Subversion, 1894-1917, Wiley-Blackwell, 1999, ISBN 1-55786-995-2, Google Print, p. 118-119
  11. ^ Piotr Eberhardt, Jan Owsinski, Ethnic groups and population changes in twentieth-century Central-Eastern Europe, M.E. Sharpe, 2003, ISBN 0-7656-0665-8, Google Print, p.27
  12. ^ Jerzy Borzęcki, The Soviet-Polish peace of 1921 and the creation of interwar Europe, Yale University Press, 2008, ISBN 0-300-12121-0, Google Print, p.10
  13. ^ Anderson 2011, p. 29.

Bibliography edit

  • Karabchuk, Tatiana; Kumo, Kuzuhiro; Selezneva, Ekaterina (2016). Demography of Russia: From the Past to the Present. Springer. ISBN 978-1-137-51850-7.
  • Istoriya rossiyskoy gosudarstvennoy statistiki: 1811-2011 История российской государственной статистики: 1811-2011 [History of Russian State statistics: 1811–2011] (PDF) (in Russian). ИИЦ «Статистика России». 2013. p. 70. ISBN 978-5-4269-0029-5. (PDF) from the original on 24 November 2022.
  • Borrero, Mauricio (2009). Russia: A Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-0-8160-7475-4.
  • Anderson, David G., ed. (2011). The 1926/27 Soviet Polar Census Expeditions. New York: Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-0-85745-044-9. OCLC 733040240.
  • Первая всеобщая перепись населенiя Россійской Имперіи. Под редакцiею Н. А. Тройницкаго. — СПб.: Изданiе центральнаго статистическаго комитета министерства внутреннихъ делъ, 1905. (The First Total Census of Russian Empire. A publication of the central statistical bureau of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. Editor N. A. Toynitsky.)
  • РОССИЯ. Полное Географическое Описание Нашего Отечества. Под ред. П. П. Семенова-Тян-Шанского. — СПб., 1913. (Semenov-Tyan-Shanskiy, P. P. (Ed.): RUSSIA. Complete Geographical Description of our Fatherland. — St. Petersburg, 1913. This latter work reproduces most of the results of the census, and is a good deal easier to find in western libraries than the original publication.)
  • Первая всеобщая перепись населения Российской Империи 1897 г. Распределение населения по родному языку и регионам (First General Russian Empire Census of 1897. Population breakdown by mother tongue and regions) (Demoscope.ru) (in Russian)
  • The First General Census of the Russian Empire of 1897. Breakdown of population by mother tongue and districts in 50 Governorates of the European Russia (1777 territorial units)
  • Korkotyan, Zaven (1932). [The population of Soviet Armenia in the last century (1831–1931)] (PDF) (in Armenian). Yerevan: Pethrat. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 February 2022.

Other websites edit

  • A website containing an interactive map with native language, religion, and urbanization data for each Russian district (uyezd) in the 1897 Russian census for a district's total population, urban population, and rural population

russian, empire, census, other, uses, russian, census, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspap. For other uses see Russian census This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Russian Empire census news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message The Russian Empire census formally the First general census of the population of the Russian Empire in 1897 a was the first and only nation wide census performed in the Russian Empire The census recorded demographic data as of 9 February 1897 O S 28 January with a population of 125 640 021 it made Russia the world s third most populated country at the time after the British and Qing empires Although the census was performed in most of the empire no enumeration was done in the Grand Duchy of Finland First general census of the population of the Russian Empire in 18979 February 1897 1897 02 09 1920 First page of an imperial Russian census form from Kovno GovernorateGeneral informationCountryRussian EmpireAuthorityCentral Statistical BureauResultsTotal population125 640 021Most populous wbr governorate or oblastKiev Governorate 3 559 229 Least populous wbr governorate or oblastAmur oblast 120 306 The census revealed the social class native language religion and profession of citizens which were aggregated to yield district and provincial totals The data processing took eight years publishing the results began in 1898 and was completed in 1905 In total 119 books in 89 volumes were published for 89 governorates in the empire including a two volume summary The next census had been planned for December 1915 but was cancelled due to World War I 1 It was not rescheduled before the Russian Revolution The next census in Russia only occurred at the end of 1926 almost three decades later Contents 1 Background 2 Organization 3 Data fields 4 Census results 4 1 By native language 4 2 By religion 4 3 Population by modern day countries 4 4 Largest cities 5 Data availability 6 Assessment 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Bibliography 8 4 Other websitesBackground editPopulation censuses in Eastern Europe as well as throughout the world were carried out in one form or another throughout the existence of tribes principalities kingdoms kaganates khanates kingdoms empires and states in order to determine the expected collection of income from subject territories and peoples In the thirteenth century the Golden Horde enumerated the population of the Rus three times 1245 1257 and 1274 according to censuses the Rus population was then estimated at approximately 10 million people 2 The population in the Tsardom of Russia under the reign of Peter the Great was about 15 million in 1710 Previous censuses had been recorded for fiscal and military purposes Until the eighteenth century population records were sporadic as in either scribal or census books Audits began to be carried out at the beginning of the eighteenth century and population censuses became relatively regular Since 1858 the audit had been replaced by administrative and police registration of the population based on data from family lists In total three large administrative and police censuses of the population were carried out in 1858 1863 and 1885 Running population registrations including births marriages and deaths were carried out by religious organisations until 1918 All the items mentioned above were characterised by inaccuracy and insufficient completeness By 1897 significant experience had been accumulated in local mainly urban population censuses that had been conducted since the later half of the nineteenth century Population censuses were performed in separate governorates Pskov in 1870 and 1887 Astrakhan in 1873 Akmola in 1877 etc in which residents in all cities were enumerated The population in the entire Courland Governorate was enumerated in 1863 and 1881 and in the governorates of Livonia and Estonia in the latter Registration of the rural population was performed during household and other surveys of zemstvos In 1871 under the general editorship of the professor of military statistics Nikolai Obruchev officers of the General Staff published a military statistical collection the four volume edition of which contained data on the population of Russia as a whole and was categorised by governorates and okrugs In 1870 the project for an all Russian population census was discussed at the First All Russian Congress of Statisticians and in 1876 at the eighth session of the International Statistical Congress On 26 February 1877 the draft of Regulations on the General National Census which was developed by a commission under the Ministry of Finance was submitted to the State Council however it was not discussed there possibly due to the Russo Turkish War that occurred from 1877 to 1878 In the early 80s of the nineteenth century the Ministry of Internal Affairs began to receive statements from some zemstvo assemblies and governors about the need to conduct a population census as soon as possible this was due to the unbalanced distribution of taxes among peasant families and an increase in arrears in collections from the population After the famine of 1891 1892 the question of the obligation to have accurate figures of the population of the empire again arose Organization editThe census project was suggested during 1877 by Pyotr Semenov Tyan Shansky a famous Russian geographer and director of the Central Statistical Bureau and was approved by Czar Nicholas II in 1895 The census was performed in two stages For the first stage December 1896 January 1897 the counters 135 000 persons teachers priests and literate soldiers visited all households and filled in the questionnaires which were verified by local census managers For the second stage 9 January 1898 O S 28 December 1897 the counters simultaneously visited all households to verify and update the questionnaires The census was performed during winter as the population was less mobile then 3 Despite this being the only imperial census historians are able to estimate the Russian Empire s population during earlier times by collecting city censuses The data processing required 8 years using Hollerith card machines Publication of the results started during 1898 and ended in 1905 In total 119 volumes for 89 guberniyas as well as a two volume summary were issued Data fields editThe questionnaire contained the following questions Family name given name patronymic or nickname prozvishe Sex Relation with respect to the head of the family or household Age Marital status Social status sosloviye estate of the realm rank or title soslovie sostoyanie zvanie Place of birth Place of registration Usual place of residence Notice of absence Faith First language rodnoj yazyk Literacy Occupation profession trade position of office or service both primary and secondary In the census summary tables nationality was based on the declared primary language of respondents citation needed nbsp The first page of a census form from Kiev Governorate nbsp The second page of a census form from Kiev Governorate nbsp The third page of a census form from Kiev Governorate nbsp A description page for a census form from Kiev Governorate Census results editThe total population of the Russian Empire was recorded to be 125 640 021 people 62 477 348 or 49 73 of whom were men and 63 162 673 or 50 27 were women the median age was 21 16 years By native language edit nbsp Map of subdivisions of the Russian Empire by largest ethnolinguistic group 1897 Linguistic composition of the Russian Empire 4 Language Urban Rural TOTAL Native speakers Native speakers Native speakers Russian b 8 825 733 52 45 46 841 736 43 05 55 667 469 44 31 Ukrainian c 1 256 387 7 47 21 124 164 19 41 22 380 551 17 81 Polish 1 455 527 8 65 6 475 780 5 95 7 931 307 6 31 Belarusian d 171 383 1 02 5 714 164 5 25 5 885 547 4 68 Jewish 2 502 217 14 87 2 560 939 2 35 5 063 156 4 03 Kyrgyz Kaisak 46 827 0 28 4 037 312 3 71 4 084 139 3 25 Tatar e 417 727 2 48 3 319 900 3 05 3 737 627 2 97 German 418 533 2 49 1 371 956 1 26 1 790 489 1 43 Latvian 230 719 1 37 1 205 218 1 11 1 435 937 1 14 Bashkir 13 844 0 08 1 307 519 1 20 1 321 363 1 05 Lithuanian 43 136 0 26 1 167 374 1 07 1 210 510 0 96 Armenian 272 801 1 62 900 295 0 83 1 173 096 0 93 Romanian 64 134 0 38 1 057 535 0 97 1 121 669 0 89 Mordovian 14 022 0 08 1 009 819 0 93 1 023 841 0 81 Estonian 139 544 0 83 863 194 0 79 1 002 738 0 80 Sartic 204 046 1 21 764 609 0 70 968 655 0 77 Chuvash 6 051 0 04 837 704 0 77 843 755 0 67 Georgian 98 503 0 59 725 465 0 67 823 968 0 66 Uzbek 91 750 0 55 634 784 0 58 726 534 0 58 Samogitian 8 946 0 05 439 076 0 40 448 022 0 36 Other Turkic dialects 156 348 0 93 284 064 0 26 440 412 0 35 Votyak 2 245 0 01 418 725 0 38 420 970 0 34 Mari 2 191 0 01 373 248 0 34 375 439 0 30 Tajik 103 240 0 61 247 157 0 23 350 397 0 28 Buryat 2 038 0 01 286 625 0 26 288 663 0 23 Turkmen 2 687 0 02 278 670 0 26 281 357 0 22 Imeretian 17 181 0 10 256 005 0 24 273 186 0 22 Mingrelian 11 539 0 07 228 086 0 21 239 625 0 19 Yakut 3 890 0 02 223 494 0 21 227 384 0 18 Chechen 871 0 01 225 625 0 21 226 496 0 18 Avar Andean 5 533 0 03 207 159 0 19 212 692 0 17 Turkish 13 378 0 08 195 444 0 18 208 822 0 17 Karelian 2 791 0 02 205 310 0 19 208 101 0 17 Kara Kyrgyz 270 0 00 201 412 0 19 201 682 0 16 Kalmyk 1 263 0 01 189 385 0 17 190 648 0 15 Greek 33 621 0 20 153 304 0 14 186 925 0 15 Bulgarian 14 371 0 09 158 288 0 15 172 659 0 14 Ossetian 5 907 0 04 165 809 0 15 171 716 0 14 Kyurin 5 146 0 03 154 067 0 14 159 213 0 13 Komi 6 340 0 04 147 278 0 14 153 618 0 12 Finnish 25 610 0 15 117 458 0 11 143 068 0 11 Dargin 1 847 0 01 128 362 0 12 130 209 0 10 Teptyar 579 0 00 117 194 0 11 117 773 0 09 Permyak 366 0 00 104 325 0 10 104 691 0 08 Karakalpak 46 0 00 104 228 0 10 104 274 0 08 Kurdish 1 148 0 01 98 801 0 09 99 949 0 08 Kabardian 523 0 00 98 038 0 09 98 561 0 08 Tat 4 099 0 02 90 957 0 08 95 056 0 08 Kazi Kumukh 1 642 0 01 89 238 0 08 90 880 0 07 Kumyk 3 529 0 02 79 879 0 07 83 408 0 07 Abkhaz 343 0 00 71 760 0 07 72 103 0 06 Evenki 192 0 00 66 078 0 06 66 270 0 05 Nogai 299 0 00 63 781 0 06 64 080 0 05 Chinese 24 794 0 15 32 665 0 03 57 459 0 05 Taranchin Uyghur 10 789 0 06 45 680 0 04 56 469 0 04 Mishar Tatar 657 0 00 53 190 0 05 53 847 0 04 Czech 8 375 0 05 42 010 0 04 50 385 0 04 Ingush 541 0 00 46 868 0 04 47 409 0 04 Circassian 1 660 0 01 44 626 0 04 46 286 0 04 Romani 6 551 0 04 38 031 0 03 44 582 0 04 Talysh 1 035 0 01 34 256 0 03 35 291 0 03 Persian 18 976 0 11 12 747 0 01 31 723 0 03 Karapapakh 9 0 00 29 893 0 03 29 902 0 02 Karachay 45 0 00 27 178 0 02 27 223 0 02 Korean 1 716 0 01 24 289 0 02 26 005 0 02 Chud 117 0 00 25 703 0 02 25 820 0 02 Khanty 179 0 00 19 484 0 02 19 663 0 02 French 12 966 0 08 3 467 0 00 16 433 0 01 Samoyedic 127 0 00 15 750 0 01 15 877 0 01 Svan 94 0 00 15 662 0 01 15 756 0 01 Kashgar Uyghur 139 0 00 14 799 0 01 14 938 0 01 Swedish 6 969 0 04 7 230 0 01 14 199 0 01 Izhorian 37 0 00 13 737 0 01 13 774 0 01 Chukchi 8 0 00 11 787 0 01 11 795 0 01 Mansi 9 0 00 7 642 0 01 7 651 0 01 Kipchak 6 0 00 7 601 0 01 7 607 0 01 Udi 11 0 00 7 089 0 01 7 100 0 01 English 5 746 0 03 1 308 0 00 7 054 0 01 Gilyak Nivkh 14 0 00 6 180 0 01 6 194 0 00 Koryak 31 0 00 6 027 0 01 6 058 0 00 Assyrian 1 307 0 01 4 046 0 00 5 353 0 00 Italian 3 824 0 02 936 0 00 4 760 0 00 Kamchadal Itelmen 6 0 00 3 972 0 00 3 978 0 00 Manchu 54 0 00 3 340 0 00 3 394 0 00 Japanese 1 855 0 01 794 0 00 2 649 0 00 Serbo Croatian 1 197 0 01 618 0 00 1 815 0 00 Sami 41 0 00 1 771 0 00 1 812 0 00 Arabic 93 0 00 1 603 0 00 1 696 0 00 Norwegian and Danish 1 031 0 01 609 0 00 1 640 0 00 Ainu 6 0 00 1 440 0 00 1 446 0 00 Eskimo 1 0 00 1 098 0 00 1 099 0 00 Yenisei Ostyak Ket 6 0 00 988 0 00 994 0 00 Hungarian 699 0 00 262 0 00 961 0 00 Yukaghir 0 0 00 948 0 00 948 0 00 Albanian 70 0 00 866 0 00 936 0 00 Mongolian 84 0 00 733 0 00 817 0 00 Afghan 43 0 00 571 0 00 614 0 00 Aleut 338 0 00 246 0 00 584 0 00 Chuvan 190 0 00 316 0 00 506 0 00 Other Lezgic languages 165 0 00 255 0 00 420 0 00 Kist 97 0 00 316 0 00 413 0 00 Dutch 225 0 00 110 0 00 335 0 00 Hindi 236 0 00 76 0 00 312 0 00 Spanish and Portuguese 112 0 00 26 0 00 138 0 00 Other languages 69 0 00 5 0 00 74 0 00 Not indicated 2 142 0 01 2 985 0 00 5 127 0 00 TOTAL 16 828 395 100 00 108 811 626 100 00 125 640 021 100 00 By religion edit Religious composition of the Russian Empire in 1897 5 Faith Male Female Both Number Eastern Orthodox 42 954 739 44 168 865 87 123 604 69 34 Muslim 7 383 293 6 523 679 13 906 972 11 07 Roman Catholic 5 686 361 5 781 633 11 467 994 9 13 Jewish 2 547 144 2 668 661 5 215 805 4 15 Lutherans 1 739 814 1 832 839 3 572 653 2 84 Old Believers 1 029 023 1 175 573 2 204 596 1 75 Armenian Apostolic 625 592 553 649 1 179 241 0 94 Buddhists 240 739 193 124 433 863 0 34 Reformed 42 877 42 523 85 400 0 07 Mennonite 33 598 32 966 66 564 0 05 Armenian Catholic 20 028 18 812 38 840 0 03 Baptist 18 372 19 767 38 139 0 03 Karaite 6 372 6 522 12 894 0 01 Anglican 2 042 2 141 4 183 0 00 Other Christian denominations 2 371 1 581 3 952 0 00 Other non Christian denominations 144 983 140 338 285 321 0 23 TOTAL 62 477 348 63 162 673 125 640 021 100 00 nbsp Eastern Orthodox nbsp Muslims nbsp Roman Catholics nbsp Jews nbsp Lutherans nbsp Old Believers nbsp Armenian Apostolics nbsp Buddhists nbsp Pagans Population by modern day countries edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message Russia 67 476 000 from this Siberia 5 758 822 Ukraine 23 430 407 from this Crimea 1 447 790 Poland Vistula basin 9 402 253 Belarus 6 927 040 Kazakhstan 4 000 000 Lithuania 3 135 771 Georgia 2 109 273 Uzbekistan 2 000 000 Moldova 1 935 412 Latvia 1 929 387 Azerbaijan 1 705 131 Estonia 900 000 Armenia 797 853 6 better source needed Kyrgyzstan 750 000 Tajikistan 646 000 Turkmenistan 350 000 Largest cities edit See also List of cities of the Russian Empire in 1897 Largest cities of the Empire according to the census Saint Petersburg 1 264 900 Moscow 1 038 600 Varshava Warsaw 626 000 Odessa Odesa 403 800 Lod Lodz 314 000 Riga 282 200 Kiev Kyiv 247 700 Kharkov Kharkiv 174 000 Tiflis Tbilisi 159 600 Vilna Vilnius 154 500 Saratov 137 100 Kazan 130 000 Rostov on Don 119 500 Tula 114 700 Astrakhan 112 900 Ekaterinoslav Dnipro 112 800 Baku 111 900 Chișinău 108 500 Helsinki 93 000 Nikolayev Mykolaiv 92 000 Minsk 90 900 Nizhny Novgorod 90 100 Samara 90 000 Orenburg 72 400 Yaroslavl 71 600 Dvinsk Daugavpils 69 675 Vitebsk 65 900 Reval Tallinn 64 572 Libava Liepaja 64 489 Yekaterinodar Krasnodar 65 600 Tsaritsyn Volgograd 55 200Data availability editEach enumeration form was copied twice with the three copies filed in the Volost county archives the governorate archives and the Central Statistical Bureau in St Petersburg The copies in St Petersburg were destroyed after they had been tabulated 7 3 Most of the copies stored locally and regionally have also been destroyed however the complete census for the Arkhangelsk and Tobolsk governorates has been preserved and the census for portions of several other governorates is also extant 8 9 Assessment editThe results may have been influenced by national policy of the authorities the population of Russian ethnicity was somewhat exaggerated 10 Thus for example the number of Poles is underrepresented 11 12 Imperial officials classified the Ukrainian and Belarusian languages as belonging to the Russian group and labeled those nationalities as Little Russian for Ukrainians and White Russian for Belarusians 10 The census did not contain a question on ethnicity which was deduced from data on mother tongue social estate and occupation There was also a 1916 and 1917 agricultural census that was carried out throughout the empire except in some parts of the Caucasus Eastern Russia and Siberia and a 1920 general census except in the Russian far north far east Ukraine and the Caucasus 13 See also editRevision listReferences editNotes edit Russian Pe rvaya vseo bshaya pe repis nasele niya Rossijskoj impe rii 1897 go da tr Pervaya vseobshchaya perelis naseleniya Rossiyskoy imperii 1897 goda Termed as Great Russian Velikorusskij Termed as Little Russian Malorusskij Termed as White Russian Belorusskij Includes Crimean Tatar Volga Tatar and Azerbaijani Citations edit Rosstat 2013 p 70 Borrero 2009 p 393 a b Russia Census FamilySearch Retrieved 10 April 2017 Pervaya vseobshaya perepis naseleniya Rossijskoj Imperii 1897 g Raspredelenie naseleniya po rodnomu yazyku guberniyam i oblastyam in Russian Demoscope Weekly Retrieved 26 October 2012 Demoskop Weekly Prilozhenie Spravochnik statisticheskih pokazatelej 2010 11 05 Archived from the original on 5 November 2010 Retrieved 2022 03 01 Korkotyan 1932 p 167 Russia Jewish Families in Russian Empire Census 1897 Ancestry Retrieved 17 September 2021 1897 Census of Imperial Russia Find Russian Heritage Archived from the original on 2018 02 05 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Documents of the First General Census of the population of Russian Empire in the Ukrainian Archives Alex Dunai s personal website Archived from the original on 2019 04 17 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b Anna Geifman Russia Under the Last Tsar Opposition and Subversion 1894 1917 Wiley Blackwell 1999 ISBN 1 55786 995 2 Google Print p 118 119 Piotr Eberhardt Jan Owsinski Ethnic groups and population changes in twentieth century Central Eastern Europe M E Sharpe 2003 ISBN 0 7656 0665 8 Google Print p 27 Jerzy Borzecki The Soviet Polish peace of 1921 and the creation of interwar Europe Yale University Press 2008 ISBN 0 300 12121 0 Google Print p 10 Anderson 2011 p 29 Bibliography edit Karabchuk Tatiana Kumo Kuzuhiro Selezneva Ekaterina 2016 Demography of Russia From the Past to the Present Springer ISBN 978 1 137 51850 7 Istoriya rossiyskoy gosudarstvennoy statistiki 1811 2011 Istoriya rossijskoj gosudarstvennoj statistiki 1811 2011 History of Russian State statistics 1811 2011 PDF in Russian IIC Statistika Rossii 2013 p 70 ISBN 978 5 4269 0029 5 Archived PDF from the original on 24 November 2022 Borrero Mauricio 2009 Russia A Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 0 8160 7475 4 Anderson David G ed 2011 The 1926 27 Soviet Polar Census Expeditions New York Berghahn Books ISBN 978 0 85745 044 9 OCLC 733040240 Pervaya vseobshaya perepis naseleniya Rossijskoj Imperii Pod redakcieyu N A Trojnickago SPb Izdanie centralnago statisticheskago komiteta ministerstva vnutrennih del 1905 The First Total Census of Russian Empire A publication of the central statistical bureau of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Editor N A Toynitsky ROSSIYa Polnoe Geograficheskoe Opisanie Nashego Otechestva Pod red P P Semenova Tyan Shanskogo SPb 1913 Semenov Tyan Shanskiy P P Ed RUSSIA Complete Geographical Description of our Fatherland St Petersburg 1913 This latter work reproduces most of the results of the census and is a good deal easier to find in western libraries than the original publication Pervaya vseobshaya perepis naseleniya Rossijskoj Imperii 1897 g Raspredelenie naseleniya po rodnomu yazyku i regionam First General Russian Empire Census of 1897 Population breakdown by mother tongue and regions Demoscope ru in Russian The First General Census of the Russian Empire of 1897 Breakdown of population by mother tongue and districts in 50 Governorates of the European Russia 1777 territorial units Korkotyan Zaven 1932 Խորհրդային Հայաստանի բնակչությունը վերջին հարյուրամյակում 1831 1931 The population of Soviet Armenia in the last century 1831 1931 PDF in Armenian Yerevan Pethrat Archived from the original PDF on 2 February 2022 Other websites edit A website containing an interactive map with native language religion and urbanization data for each Russian district uyezd in the 1897 Russian census for a district s total population urban population and rural population Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Russian Empire census amp oldid 1220704332, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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