Novorossiysk province (Novorossia) - the name of the two administrative-territorial units of the Russian Empire , located in the second half of the 18th century on the territory of the Northern Black Sea Region .
| Province of the Russian Empire | |||||
| Novorossiysk province | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A country | |||||
| Adm. center | Ekaterinoslav | ||||
| History and Geography | |||||
| Date of formation | 1796 | ||||
| Date of Abolition | 1802 | ||||
| |||||
It bordered on Little Russia (Little Russia) and Sloboda provinces .
The central city is Yekaterinoslav, Kremenchug .
Content
- 1 Novorossiysk province (1764-1783)
- 1.1 Governorate
- 1.1.1 Chief commanders
- 1.1.2 Governor General
- 1.1.3 Governors
- 1.1 Governorate
- 2 Novorossiysk province (1796-1802)
- 3 See also
- 4 References
Novorossiysk province (1764-1783)
An administrative-territorial and military unit formed by the Highest Decree on March 22, 1764 on the Right-Bank Ukraine on the lands of Novoserbia and the Novoslobodsky Cossack Regiment with a center in the fortress of St. Elizabeth (Until 1752, these lands belonged to the Zaporizhzhya Nizovoy Army ).
Later that year, the lands of the abolished Slavic-Serbia, the Ukrainian line , 13 hundreds of Poltava and 2 hundreds of Mirgorod regiments of the Hetman region were annexed to the province. The administrative center was Kremenchug . The province was divided into 3 provinces: Catherine (along Orel ), Elizavetgrad (former "Zadniprovsky places") and Bakhmut (former Slavic Serbia at the Donets).
In 1775, the Bakhmut district (the former Slavic Serbia ) was transferred to the newly formed Azov province , and the western part of the lands of the Zaporizhzhya Sich (all territories west of the Dnieper River ) was annexed to the Novorossiysk province, eliminated by the manifesto of Catherine II .
As of 1775, the Novorossiysk province was divided into 3 provinces: Kremenchug , Yekaterininsky (Yekaterinoslav; Yekaterinoslav founded in 1777) and Elizavetinsky (Elizavetgradsky) .
In 1777, the Novorossiysk province was replenished with the Kherson province.
During the reform of the administrative-territorial division, the territory of the province became part of the Ekaterinoslav governorate , formed in 1783 .
Governorate
Chief Commanders
- 1764-1765 - Melgunov, Alexey Petrovich
- 1765-1766 - Brandt, Yakov Larionovich
- 1767 - Leontyev, Ivan Petrovich
- 1767–31.05.1774 - Voeikov, Fedor Matveevich
Governor Generals
- 05.31.1774 - 03.30.17.1783 - Potemkin, Grigory Alexandrovich
Governors
- 1775-1778 - Muromtsev, Matvey Vasilievich
- 1778-1783 - Languages, Nikolai Danilovich
- 1783 - Tutolmin, Timofey Ivanovich
Novorossiysk province (1796-1802)
It was founded by Paul I on the territory of the former Yekaterinoslav governorate , Voznesensky governorship and the Tauride region .
The center of this province was located in Yekaterinoslav , which was called Novorossiysk from 1797 to 1802 .
The province was divided into 19 counties:
- Elisavetgrad County
- Olviopol County
- Kherson County
- Tiraspol County
- Bakhmut County
- Yekaterinoslav County
- Verkhnedneprovsky district
- Novomoskovsky County
- Rostov on Don County
- Pavlograd County
- Slavian-Serb County
- Alexander district
- Dnieper County
- Mariupol County
- Evpatoria County
- Perekop County
- Simferopol County
- Tmutarakan County
- Feodosia County
In 1802, on the basis of Elisavetgrad, Olviopol, Kherson and Tiraspol counties, the Nikolaev province was created; based on the Bakhmut, Yekaterinoslavsky, Verkhnedniprovsky, Novomoskovsky, Rostov, Pavlogradsky, Aleksandrovsky and Slavianoserbsky counties - Yekaterinoslav province ; and on the basis of the Dnieper, Yevpatoria, Perekop, Simferopol, Tmutarakan and Feodosiya counties - Tauride province .
See also
- New Russia
- Novorossiysk-Bessarabian Governor General
- Novorossiysk region
Links
- Gusterin P. On the Serb Settlement of New Russia
- Sapozhnikov I.V., Sapozhnikova G.V. Zaporizhzhya and Black Sea Cossacks in Hadzhibey and Odessa. - Odessa, 1998
- Tarkhov S. A. Change in the administrative-territorial division of Russia over the past 300 years // newspaper "Geography". - M .: Publishing House "The First of September", 2001. - No. 15 .
- Goncharuk T.G., Gutsalyuk S. B., Sapozhnikov I. V., Sapozhnikova G.V. Hadzhibey - Odessa and the Ukrainian Cossacks. - Odessa, 1999. (Ukrainian)