Odesse district is an administrative-territorial unit ( district ) and a municipality ( municipal district ) in the south of the Omsk region of Russia .
| district [1] / municipal district [2] | |||
| Odessa district | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| |||
| A country | |||
| Enters into | Omsk region | ||
| Includes | 9 municipalities | ||
| Adm Centre | Odessa village | ||
| The head of administration | V.N. Korneychik | ||
| History and geography | |||
| Date of education | May 25, 1925 (I education) January 25, 1935 (II education) January 11, 1965 (III education) | ||
| Square | 1,800 km² | ||
| Timezone | MSK + 3 ( UTC + 6 ) | ||
| Population | |||
| Population | ↘ 17,721 [3] people ( 2017 ) (0.91%) | ||
| Density | 9.85 people / km² | ||
| Digital identifiers | |||
| Telephone code | 38159 | ||
The administrative center is the village of Odessa .
Content
Geography
Area area - 1800 km ².
History
The district was formed in May 1925 by transforming the Odessa enlarged volost of the Omsk district of the Omsk province . The district became part of the Omsk District of the Siberian Territory . [4] [5]
In 1925, Kherson was allocated from the Blagodarovsk village council. Novo-Rossiyanovsky was separated from the Brezitsky village council. From Lukyanovsky village council selected Samorodinsky. From Odessa village council selected Slavgorod. Petroverovsky and Tishansky were separated from the Chuguev village council. Rasskazovsky was separated from the Kharitonovsky village council.
In 1928, 3 village councils (Gromoglasovsky, Orekhovsky, Tsvetkovsky) were transferred from the Stepanovsky district of the Petropavlovsk District of the Kazak Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic . [6]
In 1929, the district was abolished:
- 12 village councils were transferred to the Borisov district (Belostok, Brezitsky, Zhelannovsky, Novo-Rossiyanovsky, Petroverovsky, Pobinsky, Rasskazovsky, Samorodinsky, Tishansky, Kharitonovsky, Kherson, Chuguevsky);
- 9 village councils were transferred to Pavlograd district (Blagodarovsky, Bunyakovsky, Generalovsky, Duvanovsky, Lukyanovsky, Odessa, Prishibsky, Saratsky, Slavgorodsky);
- 3 village councils were transferred to Cherlak district (Gromoglasovsky, Orekhovsky, Tsvetkovsky). [7]
In January 1935 the district was restored:
- 5 village councils transferred from Pavlograd district (Aulsovet number 8, Belostok, Bunyakovsky, Lukyanovsky, Odessa);
- 5 village councils were transferred from the Sherbakulsky district (Brezitsky, Orekhovsky, Pobochinsky, Tsvetkovsky, Chuguevsky). [eight]
In March 1935, Aulsovet number 8 was transferred to the Pavlograd district [9] .
In 1938, the center of the Brezitsky village council was moved from the village of Brezitsky to the village of Zhelannoe.
In 1954 Brezitsy village council was renamed Zheannovsky. Pobelinsky joined Zhelannovsky village council. Orekhovsky village council is attached to Tsvetkovsky [10] .
In 1959, Chuguevsky was joined to the Lukyanovsky village council [11] .
In 1963, the district was abolished. The territory is attached to the Pavlograd district (Belostok, Bunyakovsky, Zhelannovsky, Lukyanovsky, Odessa, Tsvetkovsky village councils). [12]
In 1965, the district was restored:
- 4 village councils were transferred from Pavlograd district (Belostok, Bunyakovsky, Lukyanovsky, Odessa);
- 2 village councils were transferred from the Tavrichesky district (Prishibsky, Tsvetnopolsky);
- 2 village councils were transferred from the Sherbakulsky district (Zhelannovsky, Tsvetkovsky). [13]
In 1967, Tsvetkovsky Village Council was renamed Orekhovsky with the transfer of the center from the village Tsvetkovo to the village Orekhovo [14] .
In 1987, part of the Bialystok Village Council was allocated to Pobinsky [15] .
In 1991, Blagodarovsky was separated from part of the Bunyakovsky village council [16] .
In 1991, part of the Bunyakovsky village council was transferred to Blagodarovsky and the Hannovsky village councils [17] .
In 1992, Prishibsky, Tsvetnopolsky village councils were transferred to the Azov German National District . [18]
Population
| Population | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1926 | 1959 | 1970 | 1979 | 1989 | 2002 [19] | 2006 |
| 23,615 | ↘ 19,582 | ↗ 23,265 | ↘ 20,966 | 58 22,584 | ↘ 18,652 | ↘ 18,200 |
| 2009 [20] | 2010 [21] | 2011 [22] | 2012 [23] | 2013 [24] | 2014 [25] | 2015 [26] |
| 115 18,115 | ↘ 17,422 | ↘ 17,418 | ↘ 17,377 | ↗ 17,527 | ↗ 17,534 | ↗ 17,589 |
| 2016 [27] | 2017 [3] | |||||
| ↗ 17,724 | ↘ 17,721 | |||||
- National composition
According to the census of 1939 : Ukrainians - 62.1% or 12,999 people, Russians - 23.2% or 4852 people, Germans - 7.9% or 1657 people [28] .
According to the 2010 All-Russian Population Census [29]
| Nationality | Population, people | Proportion of population [30] |
|---|---|---|
| Armenians | 90 | 0.52 |
| Belarusians | 139 | 0.80 |
| Kazakhs | 858 | 4.92 |
| Germans | 1107 | 6.35 |
| Russians | 11039 | 63.36 |
| Tatars | 83 | 0.48 |
| Ukrainians | 3726 | 21.39 |
| Other nations | 380 | 2.18 |
| Total area | 17422 | 100.00 |
Municipal unit
In the Odessa district there are 20 settlements consisting of 9 rural settlements:
| No | Rural settlements | Administrative center | amount inhabited points | Population | Square, km 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| one | Bialystok rural settlement | village Bialystok | one | ↗ 1090 [3] | |
| 2 | Blagodarovskoye rural settlement | village Blagodarovka | one | ↘ 879 [3] | |
| 3 | Bunyakovskoye rural settlement | village of Bunyakovka | one | ↘ 1047 [3] | |
| four | Hannovskoye rural settlement | Hannivka village | one | → 795 [3] | |
| five | Zhelannovskoe rural settlement | Zhelannoe village | 2 | ↘ 2080 [3] | |
| 6 | Lukyanovsky Cossack rural settlement | Lukyanovka village | 6 | ↘ 2736 [3] | |
| 7 | Odessa rural settlement | Odessa village | 3 | ↗ 6702 [3] | |
| eight | Orehovsky rural settlement | Orekhovo village | four | ↘ 1291 [3] | |
| 9 | Pobochinskoye rural settlement | Pobino village | one | ↗ 1101 [3] |
| List of settlements of the district | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | Locality | Type of | Population | Municipality |
| one | Antumbek | village | ↘ 0 [21] | Odessa rural settlement |
| 2 | Bialystok | village | ↗ 1090 [3] | Bialystok rural settlement |
| 3 | Blagodarovka | village | ↘ 879 [3] | Blagodarovskoye rural settlement |
| four | Bobrovitsa | village | 55 [21] | Orehovsky rural settlement |
| five | Brezitsk | village | ↘ 294 [21] | Zhelannovskoe rural settlement |
| 6 | Bunyakovka | village | ↘ 1047 [3] | Bunyakovskoye rural settlement |
| 7 | Hanover | village | → 795 [3] | Hannovskoye rural settlement |
| eight | Generals | village | ↘ 431 [21] | Lukyanovsky Cossack rural settlement |
| 9 | Thunder | village | 221 [21] | Orehovsky rural settlement |
| ten | Desirable | village | ↗ 1757 [21] | Zhelannovskoe rural settlement |
| eleven | Lukyanovka | village | ↗ 1730 [21] | Lukyanovsky Cossack rural settlement |
| 12 | Novopavlovka | village | ↘ 61 [21] | Lukyanovsky Cossack rural settlement |
| 13 | Odessa | village | ↗ 6148 [21] | Odessa rural settlement |
| 14 | Orekhovo | village | 946 [21] | Orehovsky rural settlement |
| 15 | Gerbil | village | ↗ 166 [21] | Lukyanovsky Cossack rural settlement |
| sixteen | Pobochino | village | ↗ 1101 [3] | Pobochinskoye rural settlement |
| 17 | Sarat | village | ↘ 225 [21] | Lukyanovsky Cossack rural settlement |
| 18 | Slavgorodka | village | ↘ 184 [21] | Odessa rural settlement |
| nineteen | Tishanka | village | ↘ 144 [21] | Lukyanovsky Cossack rural settlement |
| 20 | Tsvetkovo | village | 277 [21] | Orehovsky rural settlement |
Attractions
Monuments of history, architecture, archeology and monumental art of the area
- obelisk to the soldiers of the countrymen who died during the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945, was installed in 1967, the village of Blagodarovka
- Monument to V.I. Lenin , established in 1967, the village of Odessa
Notes
- ↑ from the point of view of the administrative-territorial structure
- ↑ from the point of view of the municipal structure
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2017 (July 31, 2017). The date of circulation is July 31, 2017. Archived July 31, 2017.
- Resolution of the Presidium of the Central Executive Committee of May 25, 1925 "On the Formation of the Siberian Territory"
- ↑ The district existed in 1924 unofficially and neither the SRK nor the All-Russian Central Executive Committee was approved
- ↑ The act of the conciliation commission on the transfer of territory from Kazakhstan to the Omsk district of September 13, 1928
- Resolution of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of July 17, 1929 “On changes in the administrative division of the Siberian Territory”
- Resolution of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of January 25, 1935 “On the organization of new districts of the Omsk Region”
- Resolution of the Omsk Regional Executive Committee No. 165 of March 11, 1935 “On the change in the boundaries of the new districts”
- Decision of the regional executive committee dated June 22, 1954 “On the unification of the village councils of the Omsk region” (Approved by the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR on June 18, 1954)
- The decision of the Omsk Regional Executive Committee of March 25, 1959 "On the unification of the Chuguevsky and Lukyanovsky village councils of the Odessa district"
- Decision of the Omsk Regional Executive Committee of December 15, 1962 “On the enlargement of rural areas” (Approved by the Supreme Council of the RSFSR on January 1, 1963)
- Decision of the regional executive committee No. 14 of January 18, 1965 “On changes in the administrative and territorial division of the region” (Decree of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR of January 11, 1965)
- Decision of the Omsk Regional Executive Committee No. 271 of April 6, 1967 “On the renaming of the Tsvetkovsky Village Council of the Odessa Region”
- Decision of the regional executive committee № 67 dated February 21, 1987 “On some changes in the administrative-territorial division of Okoneshnikovsky, Odessa, Poltava, Omsk, Tarsky, Bolsheukovsky, Sedelnikovsky districts of the region”
- Decision of the Presidium of the Regional Council No. 8 of January 15, 1991 “On some changes in the administrative-territorial division of the Maryanovsky, Moskalensky and Odessa districts of the Omsk Region”
- Resolution of the Presidium of the Regional Council No. 138 dated November 22, 1991 "On some changes in the administrative-territorial division of the Odessa, Pavlograd and Omsk districts of the Omsk region"
- Decision of the Presidium of the Omsk Regional Council No. 72 of March 5, 1992 "On the formation of the Azov District Council of People's Deputies" (Decree of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR of February 17, 1992)
- ↑ All-Russian census of 2002. Tom. 1, table 4. The population of Russia, federal districts, constituent entities of the Russian Federation, districts, urban settlements, rural settlements — regional centers and rural settlements with a population of 3,000 or more . Archived on February 3, 2012.
- ↑ The resident population of the Russian Federation by cities, urban-type settlements and districts as of January 1, 2009 . The date of circulation is January 2, 2014. Archived January 2, 2014.
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 The 2010 All-Russian Population Census. The population of urban and rural settlements of the Omsk region . The appeal date is April 16, 2014. Archived April 16, 2014.
- ↑ Omsk region. Estimate of the number of resident population on January 1, 2009-2016
- Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities. Table 35. Estimated number of resident population on January 1, 2012 . The date of circulation is May 31, 2014. Archived May 31, 2014.
- ↑ Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2013. - M .: Federal State Statistics Service Rosstat, 2013. - 528 p. (Table 33. Population of urban districts, municipal districts, urban and rural settlements, urban settlements, rural settlements) . The appeal date is November 16, 2013. Archived November 16, 2013.
- ↑ Table 33. The population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2014 . Circulation date August 2, 2014. Archived August 2, 2014.
- ↑ Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2015 . Circulation date August 6, 2015. Archived August 6, 2015.
- Population of the Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2016
- All-Union census of 1939. National composition of the population by regions of Russia . Demoscope The appeal date is November 17, 2018.
- Population of municipal districts of Omsk region by nationality (2010)
- Share of the most numerous nationalities of the Omsk region in the population of municipal districts and the city of Omsk (2010)