To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

2001 Ukrainian census

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2001 Ukrainian census is to date the only census of the population of independent Ukraine. It was conducted by the State Statistics Committee of Ukraine on 5 December 2001, twelve years after the last Soviet Union census in 1989.[1][2] The next Ukrainian census was planned to be held in 2011 but has been repeatedly postponed.[1][3]

The total population recorded in 2001 was 48,457,100 persons, of which the urban population was 32,574,500 (67.2%), rural: 15,882,600 (32.8%), male: 22,441,400 (46.3%), female: 26,015,700 (53.7%). The total permanent population recorded was 48,241,000 persons.

Settlements

There were 454 cities: Nine had a population over 500,000. The census recorded over 130 nationalities.

Actual population by regions

Region Population, 2001
(thousands)
Population, 1989
(thousands)
Change
(percent)
Autonomous Republic of Crimea 2033.7 2063.6 99
Cherkasy Oblast 1402.9 1531.5 92
Chernihiv Oblast 1245.3 1415.9 88
Chernivtsi Oblast 922.8 938.0 98
Dnipropetrovsk Oblast 3567.6 3881.2 92
Donetsk Oblast 4841.1 5332.4 91
Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast 1409.8 1423.5 99
Kharkiv Oblast 2914.2 3195.0 91
Kherson Oblast 1175.1 1240.0 95
Khmelnytskyi Oblast 1430.8 1527.1 94
Kirovohrad Oblast 1133.1 1239.4 91
Kyiv Oblast 1827.9 1940.0 94
Luhansk Oblast 2546.2 2862.7 89
Lviv Oblast 2626.5 2747.7 94
Mykolaiv Oblast 1264.7 1330.6 95
Odesa Oblast 2469.0 2642.6 93
Poltava Oblast 1630.1 1753.0 93
Rivne Oblast 1173.3 1169.7 100
Sumy Oblast 1299.7 1432.7 91
Ternopil Oblast 1142.4 1168.9 98
Vinnytsia Oblast 1772.4 1932.6 92
Volyn Oblast 1060.7 1061.2 100
Zakarpattia Oblast 1258.3 1252.3 100
Zaporizhzhia Oblast 1929.2 2081.8 93
Zhytomyr Oblast 1389.5 1545.4 90
Kyiv (city) 2611.3 2602.8 100
Sevastopol (city) 379.5 395.0 96
Source: Total number of actual population. 2001 Ukrainian Population Census. State Statistics Committee of Ukraine

Urban and rural population by regions

Region Urban Population
(thousands)
Rural Population
(thousands)
Urban Population
(percent)
Rural Population
(percent)
Autonomous Republic of Crimea 1274.3 759.4 63 37
Cherkasy Oblast 753.6 649.3 54 46
Chernihiv Oblast 727.2 518.1 58 42
Chernivtsi Oblast 373.5 549.3 40 60
Dnipropetrovsk Oblast 2960.3 607.3 83 17
Donetsk Oblast 4363.6 477.5 90 10
Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast 593.0 816.8 42 58
Kharkiv Oblast 2288.7 625.5 79 21
Kherson Oblast 706.2 468.9 60 40
Khmelnytskyi Oblast 729.6 701.2 51 49
Kirovohrad Oblast 682.0 451.1 60 40
Kyiv Oblast 1053.5 774.4 58 42
Luhansk Oblast 2190.8 355.4 86 14
Lviv region 1558.7 1067.8 59 41
Mykolaiv Oblast 838.8 425.9 66 34
Odesa Oblast 1624.6 844.4 66 34
Poltava Oblast 956.8 673.3 59 41
Rivne Oblast 549.7 623.6 47 53
Sumy Oblast 842.9 456.8 65 35
Ternopil Oblast 485.6 656.8 43 57
Vinnytsia Oblast 818.9 953.5 46 54
Volyn Oblast 533.2 527.5 50 50
Zakarpattia Oblast 466.0 792.3 37 63
Zaporizhzhia Oblast 1458.2 471.0 76 24
Zhytomyr Oblast 775.4 614.1 56 44
Kyiv (city) 2611.3 - 100 -
Sevastopol (city) 358.1 21.4 94 6
Source: Urban and rural population. 2001 Ukrainian Population Census. State Statistics Committee of Ukraine'

Gender structure by regions

Region Male
(thousands)
Female
(thousands)
Male
(percent)
Female
(percent)
Autonomous Republic of Crimea 937.6 1096.1 46 54
Cherkasy Oblast 638.8 764.2 46 54
Chernihiv Oblast 565.5 679.7 45 55
Chernivtsi Oblast 432.1 490.7 47 53
Dnipropetrovsk Oblast 1643.3 1924.3 46 54
Donetsk Oblast 2219.9 2621.2 46 54
Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast 665.2 744.5 47 53
Kharkiv Oblast 1339.5 1574.7 46 54
Kherson Oblast 548.5 626.6 47 53
Khmelnytskyi Oblast 659.9 770.8 46 54
Kirovohrad Oblast 520.8 612.2 46 54
Kyiv Oblast 845.9 982.0 46 54
Luhansk Oblast 1169.9 1376.3 46 54
Lviv Oblast 1245.1 1381.4 47 53
Mykolaiv Oblast 588.2 676.6 47 53
Odesa Oblast 1155.4 1313.6 47 53
Poltava Oblast 747.4 882.7 46 54
Rivne Oblast 555.6 617.7 47 53
Sumy Oblast 593.8 705.9 46 54
Ternopil Oblast 530.2 612.3 46 54
Vinnytsia Oblast 809.6 962.8 46 54
Volyn Oblast 500.1 560.6 47 53
Zakarpattia Oblast 605.5 652.8 48 52
Zaporizhzhia Oblast 886.6 1042.6 46 54
Zhytomyr Oblast 644.8 744.7 46 54
Kyiv (city) 1218.7 1392.7 47 53
Sevastopol (city) 173.5 206.0 46 54
Source: Gender structure of the population. 2001 Ukrainian Population Census. State Statistics Committee of Ukraine'

National structure

Region Population, 2001
(thousands)
Population, 2001
(percent)
Population, 1989
(percent)
Change
(percent)
Ukrainians 37541.7 77.8 72.7 100.3
Russians 8334.1 17.3 22.1 73.4
Belarusians 275.8 0.6 0.9 62.7
Moldovans 258.6 0.5 0.6 79.7
Crimean Tatars 248.2 0.5 0 530.0
Bulgarians 204.6 0.4 0.5 87.5
Hungarians 156.6 0.3 0.4 96.0
Romanians 151.0 0.3 0.3 112.0
Poles 144.1 0.3 0.4 65.8
Jews 103.6 0.2 0.9 21.3
Armenians 99.9 0.2 0.1 180.0
Greeks 91.5 0.2 0.2 92.9
Tatars 73.3 0.2 0.2 84.4
Gypsies 47.6 0.1 0.1 99.3
Azerbaijanians 45.2 0.1 0 122.2
Georgians 34.2 0.1 0 145.3
Germans 33.3 0.1 0.1 88.0
Gagauz 31.9 0.1 0.1 99.9
Other 177.1 0.4 0.4 83.9
Source: National composition of the population. 2001 Ukrainian Population Census. State Statistics Committee of Ukraine'

National structure by regions

Note: listed are those nationalities which comprise more than 0.1% of regional population. Numbers are given in thousands.

  • Autonomous Republic of Crimea - 2,024.0 (100%)
    • Russians - 1,180.4 (58.5%)
    • Ukrainians - 492.2 (24.4%)
    • Crimean Tatars - 243.4 (12.1%)
    • Belarusians - 29.2 (1.5%)
    • Tatars - 11.0 (0.5%)
    • Armenians - 8.7 (0.4%)
    • Jews - 4.5 (0.2%)
    • Poles - 3.8 (0.2%)
    • Moldovans - 3.7 (0.2%)
    • Azeris - 3.7 (0.2%)
    • Uzbeks - 2.9 (0.1%)
    • Koreans - 2.9 (0.1%)
    • Greeks - 2.8 (0.1%)
    • Germans - 2.5 (0.1%)
    • Mordvins - 2.2 (0.1%)
    • Chuvashi - 2.1 (0.1%)
  • Cherkasy Oblast - 1,398.3 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,301.2 (93.1%)
    • Russians - 75.6 (5.4%)
    • Belarusians - 3.9 (0.3%)
    • Armenians - 1.7 (0.1%)
    • Moldovans - 1.6 (0.1%)
    • Jews - 1.5 (0.1%)
  • Chernihiv Oblast - 1,236.1 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,155.4 (93.5%)
    • Russians - 62.2 (5.0%)
    • Belarusians - 7.1 (0.6%)
  • Chernivtsi Oblast - 919.0 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 689.1 (75.0%)
    • Romanians - 114.6 (12.5%)
    • Moldovans - 67.2 (7.3%)
    • Russians - 37.9 (4.1%)
    • Poles - 3.4 (0.4%)
    • Belarusians - 1.5 (0.2%)
    • Jews - 1.4 (0.2%)
  • Dnipropetrovsk Oblast - 3,561.2 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 2,825.8 (79.3%)
    • Russians - 627.5 (17.6%)
    • Belarusians - 29.5 (0.8%)
    • Jews - 13.7 (0.4%)
    • Armenians - 10.6 (0.3%)
    • Azeris - 5.6 (0.2%)
  • Donetsk Oblast - 4,825.6 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 2,744.1 (56.9%)
    • Russians - 1,844.4 (38.2%)
    • Greeks - 77.5 (1.6%)
    • Belarusians - 44.5 (0.9%)
    • Tatars - 19.2 (0.4%)
    • Armenians - 15.7 (0.3%)
    • Jews - 8.8 (0.2%)
    • Azeris - 8.1 (0.2%)
    • Georgians - 7.2 (0.2%)
    • Moldovans - 7.2 (0.2%)
  • Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast - 1,406.1 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,371.2 (97.5%)
    • Russians - 24.9 (1.8%)
    • Poles - 1.9 (0.2%)
    • Belarusians - 1.5 (0.2%)
  • Kharkiv Oblast - 2,895.8 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 2,048.7 (70.7%)
    • Russians - 742.0 (25.6%)
    • Belarusians - 14.7 (0.5%)
    • Jews - 11.5 (0.4%)
    • Armenians - 11.1 (0.4%)
  • Kherson Oblast - 1,172.7 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 961.6 (82.0%)
    • Russians - 165.2 (14.1%)
    • Belarusians - 8.1 (0.7%)
    • Tatars - 5.3 (0.5%)
    • Armenians - 4.5 (0.4%)
    • Moldovans - 4.1 (0.4%)
  • Khmelnytskyi Oblast - 1,426.6 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,339.3 (93.9%)
    • Russians - 50.7 (3.6%)
    • Poles - 23.0 (1.6%)
  • Kirovohrad Oblast - 1,125.7 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,014.6 (90.1%)
    • Russians - 83.9 (7.5%)
    • Moldovans - 8.2 (0.7%)
    • Belarusians - 5.5 (0.5%)
    • Armenians - 2.9 (0.3%)
  • Kyiv Oblast - 1,821.1 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,684.8 (92.5%)
    • Russians - 109.3 (6.0%)
    • Belarusians - 8.6 (0.5%)
  • Luhansk Oblast - 2,540.2 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,472.4 (58.0%)
    • Russians - 991.8 (39.0%)
    • Belarusians - 20.5 (0.8%)
    • Tatars - 8.5 (0.3%)
    • Armenians - 6.5 (0.3%)
  • Lviv Oblast - 2,606.0 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 2,471.0 (94.8%)
    • Russians - 92.6 (3.6%)
    • Poles - 18.9 (0.7%)
  • Mykolaiv Oblast - 1,262.9 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,034.5 (81.9%)
    • Russians - 177.5 (14.1%)
    • Moldovans - 13.1 (1.0%)
    • Belarusians - 8.3 (0.7%)
    • Bulgarians - 5.6 (0.4%)
    • Armenians - 4.2 (0.3%)
    • Jews - 3.2 (0.3%)
  • Odesa Oblast - 2,455.7 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,542.3 (62.8%)
    • Russians - 508.5 (20.7%)
    • Bulgarians - 150.6 (6.1%)
    • Moldovans - 123.7 (5.0%)
    • Gagauz - 27.6 (1.1%)
    • Jews - 13.3 (0.5%)
    • Belarusians - 12.7 (0.5%)
    • Armenians - 7.4 (0.3%)
  • Poltava Oblast - 1,621.2 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,481.1 (91.4%)
    • Russians - 117.1 (7.2%)
    • Belarusians - 6.3 (0.4%)
  • Rivne Oblast - 1,171.4 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,123.4 (95.9%)
    • Russians - 30.1 (2.6%)
    • Belarusians - 11.8 (1.0%)
  • Sumy Oblast - 1,296.8 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,152.0 (88.8%)
    • Russians - 121.7 (9.4%)
    • Belarusians - 4.3 (0.3%)
  • Ternopil Oblast - 1,138.5 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,113.5 (97.8%)
    • Russians - 14.2 (1.2%)
    • Poles - 3.8 (0.3%)
  • Vinnytsia Oblast - 1,763.9 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,674.1 (94.9%)
    • Russians - 67.5 (3.8%)
  • Volyn Oblast - 1,057.2 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,025.0 (96.9%)
    • Russians - 25.1 (2.4%)
    • Belarusians - 3.2 (0.3%)
  • Zakarpattia Oblast - 1,254.6 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,010.1 (80.5%)
    • Hungarians - 151.5 (12.1%)
    • Romanians - 32.1 (2.6%)
    • Russians - 31.0 (2.5%)
    • Gypsies - 14.0 (1.1%)
    • Slovaks - 5.6 (0.5%)
    • Germans - 3.5 (0.3%)
  • Zaporizhzhia Oblast - 1,926.8 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,364.1 (70.8%)
    • Russians - 476.8 (24.7%)
    • Bulgarians - 27.7 (1.4%)
    • Belarusians - 12.6 (0.7%)
    • Armenians - 6.4 (0.3%)
    • Tatars - 5.1 (0.3%)
  • Zhytomyr Oblast - 1,389.3 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 1,255.0 (90.3%)
    • Russians - 68.9 (5.0%)
    • Poles - 49.0 (3.5%)
    • Belarusians - 4.9 (0.4%)
  • Kyiv - 2,567.0 (100%)
    • Ukrainians - 2,110.8 (82.2%)
    • Russians - 337.3 (13.1%)
    • Jews - 17.9 (0.7%)
    • Belarusians - 16.5 (0.6%)
    • Poles - 6.9 (0.3%)
  • Sevastopol - 377.2 (100%)
    • Russians - 270.0 (71.6%)
    • Ukrainians - 84.4 (22.4%)
    • Belarusians - 5.8 (1.6%)
    • Tatars - 2.5 (0.7%)
    • Crimean Tatars - 1.8 (0.5%)
    • Armenians - 1.3 (0.3%)
    • Jews - 1.0 (0.3%)
Source: National composition of the population. 2001 Ukrainian Population Census. State Statistics Committee of Ukraine'

References

External links

This page was last edited on 26 December 2023, at 19:35
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.