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Coordinates: 48°17′N 26°01′E / 48.28°N 26.01°E / 48.28; 26.01
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According to the latest [[Ukrainian Census (2001)]],<ref>[http://www.ukrcensus.gov.ua/eng/results/general/nationality/Chernivtsi/ 2001 Ukrainian Census | English version | Results | General results of the census | National composition of population | Chernivtsi region] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071113170140/http://www.unibuc.ro/eBooks/istorie/istorie1918-1940/13-4.htm |date=2007-11-13 }}</ref> [[Ukrainians]] represent 74.98% (689,056) of the population of Chernivtsi Oblast out of 919,028 inhabitants. Moreover, 12.46% (114,555) reported themselves as Romanians, 7.31% (67,225) as [[Moldovans]], and 4.12% (37,881) as [[Russians]]. The other nationalities, such as [[Polish people|Poles]], [[Belarusians]], and [[Jews]] sum up to 1.2%.<ref>http://pop-stat.mashke.org/ukraine-ethnic2001.htm</ref> According to the 2001 census, the majority of the population of the Chernivtsi region was Ukrainian-speaking (75.57%), and there were also Romanian (18.64%) and Russian (5.27%) speakers.<ref>https://socialdata.org.ua/projects/mova-2001/</ref> In the last Soviet census of 1989, out of 940,801 inhabitants, 666,095 declared themselves Ukrainians (70.8%), 100,317 Romanians (10.66%), 84,519 Moldovans (8.98%), and 63,066 Russians (6.7%).<ref>Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, ''Romanii dn Ucraina - intre trecut si viitor'', vol. 1 (''Romanii din Regiunea Cernauti''), Cernauti, 2005, p. 242.</ref> The decline in the number (from 84,519 to 67,225) and proportion of self-identified Moldovans (from 8.98% to 7.31%) was explained by a switch from a census Moldovan to a census Romanian ethnic identity, and has continued after the 2001 census.<ref>Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, ''Romanii dn Ucraina - intre trecut si viitor'', vol. 1 (''Romanii din Regiunea Cernauti''), Cernauti, 2005, p. 242, 257, 259, 261.</ref> By contrast, the number of self-identified ethnic Romanians has increased (from 100,317 to 114,555),and so has their proportion of the population of the oblast (from 10.66% to 12.46%), and the process has continued after the 2001 census.<ref>Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, ''Romanii dn Ucraina - intre trecut si viitor'', vol. 1 (''Romanii din Regiunea Cernauti''), Cernauti, 2005, p. 242, 257, 259, 261.</ref>
According to the latest [[Ukrainian Census (2001)]],<ref>[http://www.ukrcensus.gov.ua/eng/results/general/nationality/Chernivtsi/ 2001 Ukrainian Census | English version | Results | General results of the census | National composition of population | Chernivtsi region] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071113170140/http://www.unibuc.ro/eBooks/istorie/istorie1918-1940/13-4.htm |date=2007-11-13 }}</ref> [[Ukrainians]] represent 74.98% (689,056) of the population of Chernivtsi Oblast out of 919,028 inhabitants. Moreover, 12.46% (114,555) reported themselves as Romanians, 7.31% (67,225) as [[Moldovans]], and 4.12% (37,881) as [[Russians]]. The other nationalities, such as [[Polish people|Poles]], [[Belarusians]], and [[Jews]] sum up to 1.2%.<ref>http://pop-stat.mashke.org/ukraine-ethnic2001.htm</ref> According to the 2001 census, the majority of the population of the Chernivtsi region was Ukrainian-speaking (75.57%), and there were also Romanian (18.64%) and Russian (5.27%) speakers.<ref>https://socialdata.org.ua/projects/mova-2001/</ref> In the last Soviet census of 1989, out of 940,801 inhabitants, 666,095 declared themselves Ukrainians (70.8%), 100,317 Romanians (10.66%), 84,519 Moldovans (8.98%), and 63,066 Russians (6.7%).<ref>Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, ''Romanii dn Ucraina - intre trecut si viitor'', vol. 1 (''Romanii din Regiunea Cernauti''), Cernauti, 2005, p. 242.</ref> The decline in the number (from 84,519 to 67,225) and proportion of self-identified Moldovans (from 8.98% to 7.31%) was explained by a switch from a census Moldovan to a census Romanian ethnic identity, and has continued after the 2001 census.<ref>Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, ''Romanii dn Ucraina - intre trecut si viitor'', vol. 1 (''Romanii din Regiunea Cernauti''), Cernauti, 2005, p. 242, 257, 259, 261.</ref> By contrast, the number of self-identified ethnic Romanians has increased (from 100,317 to 114,555),and so has their proportion of the population of the oblast (from 10.66% to 12.46%), and the process has continued after the 2001 census.<ref>Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, ''Romanii dn Ucraina - intre trecut si viitor'', vol. 1 (''Romanii din Regiunea Cernauti''), Cernauti, 2005, p. 242, 257, 259, 261.</ref>


The separate categories for the [[Moldovans]] and Romanians as two ethnicities has been criticized by Romanian organizations in Ukraine.<ref name=RDSCJ>[http://noinu.rdscj.ro/article.php?articleID=146&document=3 Noi, NU! Revistă de atitudine şi cultură - Românii din Ucraina] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071027141332/http://noinu.rdscj.ro/article.php?articleID=146&document=3 |date=October 27, 2007 }} {{in lang|ro}}</ref> According to Kateryna Sheshtakova, a professor at the Pomeranian University of Slutsk in Poland who did field research among the self-identified Romanians and self-identified Moldovans in the Chernivtsi region of Ukraine, 'Some Moldovans use both names of the mother tongue (Moldovan or Romanian) and accordingly declare two ethnic affiliations.'<ref>Kateryna Sheshtakova, "Ethnic Identity and Linguistic Practices of Romanians and Moldovans (On the Example of Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine), in ''Studia Humanistyczne AGH'', Tom 12/2, 2013, p. 65.</ref> The study suggests that the number of Moldovans who identify their language as Romanian and have both a Moldovan and a Romanian ethnic identity is about equal to those who identify their language as Moldovan, and have an exclusively Moldovan ethnic identity.<ref>Kateryna Sheshtakova, "Ethnic Identity and Linguistic Practices of Romanians and Moldovans (On the Example of Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine), in ''Studia Humanistyczne AGH'', Tom 12/2, 2013, p. 71-33, in the section "Moldovan Identity: Two Languages, One Nation".</ref> She recorded statements such as "I am Moldovan, but to be more precise, we should say I am Romanian".<ref>Kateryna Sheshtakova, "Ethnic Identity and Linguistic Practices of Romanians and Moldovans (On the Example of Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine), in ''Studia Humanistyczne AGH'', Tom 12/2, 2013, p. 72.</ref> In the Republic of Moldova, “more than half of the self-proclaimed Moldovans (53.5%) said that they saw no difference” between the Romanian and Moldovan languages according to a survey conducted by Pal Kolsto and Hans Olav Melberg in 1998 which also included the Transnistrian separatist region.<ref>Pal Kolsto with Hans Olav Melberg, “Integration, Alienation, and Conflict in Estonia and Moldova,” in Pal Kolsto (ed.), ''National Integration and Violent Conflict in Post-Soviet Societies'' (Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.), p. 34-35.</ref> Opinion polling from the Chernivtsi oblast indicated that this was also the case in that part of Ukraine.<ref>Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, ''Romanii dn Ucraina - intre trecut si viitor'', vol. 1 (''Romanii din Regiunea Cernauti''), Cernauti, 2005</ref> However, all census respondents had to write in their ethnicity (no predetermined set of choices existed), and could respond or not to any particular census question, or not answer any questions at all.<ref name=Censform>[http://www.ukrcensus.gov.ua/eng/organization/ The Organization Order of the Population Census] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060830230721/http://www.ukrcensus.gov.ua/eng/organization/ |date=August 30, 2006 }} at the State Statistics Committee of Ukraine web-site.</ref> It has been claimed by some that no allegation of counting fraud were brought up. However, there are allegations that in 2001, individuals, especially, but not exclusively, in the Odessa region were threatened with dismissal from their jobs if they declared that they were “Romanians” rather than "Moldovans", and it was also claimed that the ethnicity of some individuals was listed arbitrarily by census-takers who did not even ask those individuals what their ethnicity was.<ref>George Coman, “SOS romanii din Ucraina!” (“SOS the Romanians of Ukraine”), in Ziua, March 4, 2003, originally accessed at http://www.ziua.ro/archive/2003/03/04/docs/5846.html, though the link is not currently working.</ref> However, Romanian Community of Ukraine Interregional Union, one of Romanian organizations in Ukraine, criticized what they see as the continuous usage of [[Romanians]] and [[Moldovans]] as two separate ethnic groups. In 2001, among the 67,225 inhabitants with a "Moldovan" ethnic identity, 2,657 people declared that their native language is "Romanian" (3.95%), and among the 5,627 self-identified "Moldovans" whose native language was not "Moldovan", 1,672 declared that they knew "Romanian" (2.49% of all "Moldovans").<ref>Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, ''Românii din Ucraina – intre trecut si viitor'' [vol. 1, ''Românii din Regiunea Cernăuţi (Studiu etnodemografic si sociolingvistic)''] [“''The Romanians in Ukraine – between past and future'', vol. 1, "''The Romanians in the Chernivtsi Region (An Ethnodemographic and Sociolinguistic Study)''”] (Oradea: Treira, 2006), p. 266.</ref> Opinion polling from the Chernivtsi oblast indicated that a significant majority of the self-identified Moldovans thought that there was no difference between the Moldovan and Romanian languages.<ref>Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, ''Romanii dn Ucraina - intre trecut si viitor'', vol. 1 (''Romanii din Regiunea Cernauti''), Cernauti, 2005.</ref>.
The separate categories for the [[Moldovans]] and Romanians as two ethnicities has been criticized by Romanian organizations in Ukraine.<ref name=RDSCJ>[http://noinu.rdscj.ro/article.php?articleID=146&document=3 Noi, NU! Revistă de atitudine şi cultură - Românii din Ucraina] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071027141332/http://noinu.rdscj.ro/article.php?articleID=146&document=3 |date=October 27, 2007 }} {{in lang|ro}}</ref> According to Kateryna Sheshtakova, a professor at the Pomeranian University of Slutsk in Poland who did field research among the self-identified Romanians and self-identified Moldovans in the Chernivtsi region of Ukraine, 'Some Moldovans use both names of the mother tongue (Moldovan or Romanian) and accordingly declare two ethnic affiliations.'<ref>Kateryna Sheshtakova, "Ethnic Identity and Linguistic Practices of Romanians and Moldovans (On the Example of Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine), in ''Studia Humanistyczne AGH'', Tom 12/2, 2013, p. 65.</ref> The study suggests that the number of Moldovans who identify their language as Romanian and have both a Moldovan and a Romanian ethnic identity is about equal to those who identify their language as Moldovan, and have an exclusively Moldovan ethnic identity.<ref>Kateryna Sheshtakova, "Ethnic Identity and Linguistic Practices of Romanians and Moldovans (On the Example of Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine), in ''Studia Humanistyczne AGH'', Tom 12/2, 2013, p. 71-33, in the section "Moldovan Identity: Two Languages, One Nation".</ref> She recorded statements such as "I am Moldovan, but to be more precise, we should say I am Romanian".<ref>Kateryna Sheshtakova, "Ethnic Identity and Linguistic Practices of Romanians and Moldovans (On the Example of Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine), in ''Studia Humanistyczne AGH'', Tom 12/2, 2013, p. 72.</ref> In the Republic of Moldova, “more than half of the self-proclaimed Moldovans (53.5%) said that they saw no difference” between the Romanian and Moldovan languages according to a survey conducted by Pal Kolsto and Hans Olav Melberg in 1998 which also included the Transnistrian separatist region.<ref>Pal Kolsto with Hans Olav Melberg, “Integration, Alienation, and Conflict in Estonia and Moldova,” in Pal Kolsto (ed.), ''National Integration and Violent Conflict in Post-Soviet Societies'' (Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.), p. 34-35.</ref> Opinion polling from the Chernivtsi oblast indicated that this was also the case in the Chernivtsi oblast of Ukraine.<ref>Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, ''Romanii dn Ucraina - intre trecut si viitor'', vol. 1 (''Romanii din Regiunea Cernauti''), Cernauti, 2005</ref> However, all census respondents had to write in their ethnicity (no predetermined set of choices existed), and could respond or not to any particular census question, or not answer any questions at all.<ref name=Censform>[http://www.ukrcensus.gov.ua/eng/organization/ The Organization Order of the Population Census] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060830230721/http://www.ukrcensus.gov.ua/eng/organization/ |date=August 30, 2006 }} at the State Statistics Committee of Ukraine web-site.</ref> It has been claimed by some that no allegation of counting fraud were brought up. However, there are allegations that in 2001, individuals, especially, but not exclusively, in the Odessa region were threatened with dismissal from their jobs if they declared that they were “Romanians” rather than "Moldovans", and it was also claimed that the ethnicity of some individuals was listed arbitrarily by census-takers who did not even ask those individuals what their ethnicity was.<ref>George Coman, “SOS romanii din Ucraina!” (“SOS the Romanians of Ukraine”), in Ziua, March 4, 2003, originally accessed at http://www.ziua.ro/archive/2003/03/04/docs/5846.html, though the link is not currently working.</ref> However, Romanian Community of Ukraine Interregional Union, one of Romanian organizations in Ukraine, criticized what they see as the continuous usage of [[Romanians]] and [[Moldovans]] as two separate ethnic groups. In 2001, among the 67,225 inhabitants with a "Moldovan" ethnic identity, 2,657 people declared that their native language is "Romanian" (3.95%), and among the 5,627 self-identified "Moldovans" whose native language was not "Moldovan", 1,672 declared that they knew "Romanian" (2.49% of all "Moldovans").<ref>Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, ''Românii din Ucraina – intre trecut si viitor'' [vol. 1, ''Românii din Regiunea Cernăuţi (Studiu etnodemografic si sociolingvistic)''] [“''The Romanians in Ukraine – between past and future'', vol. 1, "''The Romanians in the Chernivtsi Region (An Ethnodemographic and Sociolinguistic Study)''”] (Oradea: Treira, 2006), p. 266.</ref> Opinion polling from the Chernivtsi oblast indicated that a significant majority of the self-identified Moldovans thought that there was no difference between the Moldovan and Romanian languages.<ref>Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, ''Romanii dn Ucraina - intre trecut si viitor'', vol. 1 (''Romanii din Regiunea Cernauti''), Cernauti, 2005.</ref>.


According to the Romanian census of 1930, the territory of the future ''Chernivtsi Oblast'' had 805,642 inhabitants in that year, out of which 47.6% were [[Ukrainians]], and 28.2% were Romanians. The rest of the population was 88,772 [[Jews]], 46,946 [[Russians]] (among them an important community of [[Lipovan]]s), around 35,000 [[Germans]], 10,000 [[Polish people|Poles]], and 10,000 [[Hungarians]].<ref name=RDSCJ/>
According to the Romanian census of 1930, the territory of the future ''Chernivtsi Oblast'' had 805,642 inhabitants in that year, out of which 47.6% were [[Ukrainians]], and 28.2% were Romanians. The rest of the population was 88,772 [[Jews]], 46,946 [[Russians]] (among them an important community of [[Lipovan]]s), around 35,000 [[Germans]], 10,000 [[Polish people|Poles]], and 10,000 [[Hungarians]].<ref name=RDSCJ/>

Revision as of 05:08, 26 July 2024

Chernivtsi Oblast
Чернівецька область
Chernivetska oblast[1]
Coat of arms of Chernivtsi Oblast
Coordinates: 48°17′N 26°01′E / 48.28°N 26.01°E / 48.28; 26.01
Country Ukraine
EstablishedAugust 9, 1940
Administrative centerChernivtsi
Largest citiesChernivtsi, Storozhynets, Novodnistrovsk
Government
 • GovernorRuslan Zaparanyuk[2]
 • Oblast council64 seats
 • ChairpersonOleksiy Boyko (Independent)
Area
 • Total
8,097 km2 (3,126 sq mi)
 • RankRanked 25th
Population
 (2022)[3]
 • Total
Decrease 890,457
 • RankRanked 26th
 • Annual growth
−0.4%
GDP
 • Total₴ 55 billion
(€1.414 billion)
 • Per capita₴ 61,088
(€1,582)
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal code
58-60xxx
Area code+380-37
ISO 3166 codeUA-77
Vehicle registrationСЕ
Raions11
Cities (total)11
• Regional cities2
Urban-type settlements8
Villages398
FIPS 10-4UP03
Websitebukoda.gov.ua
oblrada.cv.ua

Chernivtsi Oblast (Template:Lang-uk), also referred to as Chernivechchyna (Template:Lang-uk), is an oblast (province) in western Ukraine, consisting of the northern parts of the historical regions of Bukovina and Bessarabia. It has an international border with Romania and Moldova. The region spans 8,100 square kilometres (3,100 sq mi). The oblast is the smallest in Ukraine both by area and population. It has a population of 890,457 (2022 estimate),[3] and its administrative center is the city of Chernivtsi.

In 1408, Chernivtsi was a town in Moldavia and the chief centre of the area known as Bukovina. Chernivtsi later passed to the Turks and then in 1774 to the Habsburg monarchy. After World War I, it was ceded to Romania, and in 1940, the town was acquired by the Ukrainian SSR.

The oblast has a large variety of landforms: the Carpathian Mountains and picturesque hills at the foot of the mountains gradually change to a broad partly forested plain situated between the Dniester and Prut rivers.

Geography

Chernivtsi Oblast covers an area of 8,097 km2 (3,126 sq mi). It is the smallest oblast in Ukraine, representing 1.3% of Ukrainian territory, and is only larger than the city of Kyiv itself.

In the oblast there are 75 rivers longer than 10 kilometers. The largest rivers are the Dniester (290 km, in the Oblast), Prut (128 km, in the Oblast) and Siret (113 km, in the Oblast).[5]

The oblast covers three geographic zones: a forest steppe region between Prut and Dnister rivers, a foothill region between the Carpathian Mountains and Prut river, and a mountain region known as the Bukovinian part of the Carpathian Mountains.[5]

Chernivtsi Oblast is bordered by Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast, Ternopil Oblast, Khmelnytskyi Oblast, Vinnytsia Oblast, Romania, and Moldova. Within the oblast the national border of Ukraine with Romania extends 226 km, and with Moldova 198 km (123 mi).[5]

History

Chernivtsi oblast was created on August 7, 1940, in the wake of the Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina. The oblast was organized out of the northeast part of Ținutul Suceava of Kingdom of Romania, joining parts of three historical regions: northern half of Bukovina, northern half of the Hotin County county of Bessarabia, and Hertsa region, which was part of the Dorohoi county (presently Botoșani County) of proper Moldavia.

Archaeological sites in the region date back to 43,000-45,000 BC, with finds including a mammoth bone dwelling from the Middle Paleolithic.[6] The Cucuteni-Trypillian culture flourished in the area. In the Middle Ages, the region was inhabited by East Slavic tribes White Croats and Tivertsi.[7] From the end of the 10th century, it became a part of the Kievan Rus', then Principality of Halych, and in the mid-14th century of the Principality of Moldavia (which in the 16th century became a vassal of the Ottoman Empire).[7] In 1775, two counties of Moldavia, since then known as Bukovina, were annexed by the Habsburg monarchy as part of the Austrian Empire and its final iteration Austria-Hungary. In 1812, one half of Moldavia, since then known as Bessarabia, was annexed by the Russian Empire. Hertsa region remained in Moldavia until its union with Wallachia in 1859, a union which in 1881 became the Kingdom of Romania. In 1918 both provinces of Bukovina and Bessarabia united with the Kingdom of Romania.

The Soviet occupation began on June 28, 1940. In addition to Bessarabia, the USSR demanded Northern Bukovina as compensation for the occupation of Bessarabia by Romania from 1918 to 1940. Hertsa region was not included in the demands that the Soviet Union addressed to Romania, but was occupied at the same time. Most of the occupied territories were organized on August 2, 1940, as the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic, while the remainder, including the Chenivtsi Oblast, which was formed on August 7, 1940, were included in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.

Historical regions outlined: red: Northern Bukovina, blue: Hertsa region, green: Northern Bessarabia

Throughout 1940-1941 several tens of thousands of Bukovinians were deported to Siberia and Kazakhstan, some 13,000 of them on June 13, 1941, alone. This and later deportations were primarily based on social class difference, it targeted intellectuals, people employed previously by the state, businessmen, clergymen, students, railworkers. The majority of those targeted were ethnic Romanians, but there were many representatives of other ethnicities, as well. The protests of the Romanian population of Bukovina that found themselves under the Soviet rule brought about serious Soviet reprisals, including of ethnic character. In the winter and spring of 1941, the Soviet troops (NKVD) opened fire on many groups of locals trying to cross the border into Romania (for more, see: Lunca massacre and Fântâna Albă massacre).

Between September 17 and November 17, 1940, by a mutual agreement between USSR and Germany, 43,641 "ethnic Germans" from the Chernivtsi region were moved to Germany, although the total ethnic German population was only 34,500, and of these some 3,500 did not go to Germany. Upon their arrival in Germany, the Nazi government sent most of non-ethnic Germans to concentration camps.[citation needed] Only some of them were freed after the protests of the Romanian government.

During World War II, when the region returned under the control of the Romanian administration, the Jewish community of the area was largely destroyed by the deportations to ghettos and Nazi concentration camps, where about 60% died. Despite the anti-Semitic policies of the Ion Antonescu's government of Romania, the mayor of Cernăuți, Traian Popovici, now honored by Israel's Yad Vashem memorial as one of the Righteous Among the Nations, saved approximately 20,000 Jews.[citation needed]

In 1944, when the Soviet troops returned to Bukovina, many inhabitants fled to Romania, and Soviet persecutions resumed, with the result that the region was seriously depopulated. In demographic terms, these war-time and post-war-time factors changed the region's ethnic composition. Today the number of Jews, Germans and Poles is negligible, while the number of Romanians has decreased substantially.

Ruthenian communities in Bukovina date back to at least 16th century. In 1775, Ukrainians (Ruthenians) represented some 8,000 out of a 75,000 population of Bukovina. By 1918, as a result of immigration of Ukrainian peasants from nearby villages in Galicia and Podolia, there were over 200,000 Ukrainians, out of a total of 730,000. Most of Ukrainians settled in the northern parts of Bukovina. Their number was especially large in the area between the Dniester and Prut rivers, where they became a majority. A similar process occurred in Northern Bessarabia. Throughout the history of the region, there were no inter-ethnic clashes, while the city of Chernivtsi was known for its German-style architecture, for a highly cultivated society, and for ethnic tolerance. Small ethnic disputes were, however, present on occasion. In 1918, many Ukrainians in Bukovina wanted to join an independent Ukrainian state. After an initial period of free education in Ukrainian language, in late 1920s Romanian authorities attempted to switch all education to the Romanian language. In 1940–1941, the Soviet reprisals were more massive in the parts of the Chernivtsi oblast were Romanians predominated; when, however, after 1944, Ukrainian anti-Soviet resistance rose up, Romanians and Ukrainians fought alongside against NKVD.

Many Ukrainians in the south-western mountain area of the Chernivtsi region belong to the Hutsul ethnic sub-group, a sophisticated cultural community inhabiting an area in the Carpathian Mountains in both Ukraine and Romania.

When the Soviet Union collapsed, Chernivtsi Oblast, then part of the Ukrainian SSR, became part of the newly independent (August 24, 1991) Ukraine. It has a Ukrainian ethnic majority. In the referendum on December 1, 1991, 92% of Chernivtsi Oblast residents supported the independence of Ukraine, a wide support from both Ukrainians and Romanians.

Subdivisions

Map of Chernivtsi Oblast

Since July 2020, Chernivtsi Oblast is administratively subdivided into 3 raions (districts). These are

At the locality level, the territory of the oblast is divided among 11 cities, 8 urban-type settlements, and 252 communes.

Urban settlements

 
 
Largest cities or towns in Chernivtsi Oblast
Source?
Rank Name Raion Pop.
Chernivtsi
Chernivtsi
Storozhynets
Storozhynets
1 Chernivtsi Chernivtsi 263,287 Krasnoilsk
Krasnoilsk
2 Storozhynets Chernivtsi 14,506
3 Novodnistrovsk Dnistrovskyi 10,774
4 Krasnoilsk Chernivtsi 9,142
5 Khotyn Dnistrovskyi 9,692
6 Hlyboka Chernivtsi 9,800
7 Sokyriany Dnistrovskyi 9,463
8 Zastavna Chernivtsi 8,097
9 Berehomet Vyzhnytsia 7,706
10 Novoselytsia Chernivtsi 7,764

Population and demographics

Ethnic divisions in Chernivtsi Oblast at the end of the Soviet Period [1], with Ukrainians, Romanians, Russians and Jewish areas depicted in white, blue, red, and yellow respectively. Note that the Moldovans, which represented 9% of the region's population according to the last Soviet census (1989),[8] are shown as Romanians.
Ethnic division of the Chernivtsi Oblast according to the latest 2001 Ukrainian census results. Areas inhabited by Ukrainians, Romanians, Moldovans, Russians, and other ethnicities are depicted in yellow, blue, green, red, and white respectively. Circle sizes represent total population size in each area. Romanians and Moldovans form a single ethnic group.
Largest settlements in the region
# City Population
1 Chernivtsi 240,621 (2001)
2 Storozhynets 14,693 (2001)
3 Khotyn 11,216 (2001)
4 Novodnistrovsk 10,342 (2001)
5 Sokyriany 10,258 (2001)

According to the latest Ukrainian Census (2001),[9] Ukrainians represent 74.98% (689,056) of the population of Chernivtsi Oblast out of 919,028 inhabitants. Moreover, 12.46% (114,555) reported themselves as Romanians, 7.31% (67,225) as Moldovans, and 4.12% (37,881) as Russians. The other nationalities, such as Poles, Belarusians, and Jews sum up to 1.2%.[10] According to the 2001 census, the majority of the population of the Chernivtsi region was Ukrainian-speaking (75.57%), and there were also Romanian (18.64%) and Russian (5.27%) speakers.[11] In the last Soviet census of 1989, out of 940,801 inhabitants, 666,095 declared themselves Ukrainians (70.8%), 100,317 Romanians (10.66%), 84,519 Moldovans (8.98%), and 63,066 Russians (6.7%).[12] The decline in the number (from 84,519 to 67,225) and proportion of self-identified Moldovans (from 8.98% to 7.31%) was explained by a switch from a census Moldovan to a census Romanian ethnic identity, and has continued after the 2001 census.[13] By contrast, the number of self-identified ethnic Romanians has increased (from 100,317 to 114,555),and so has their proportion of the population of the oblast (from 10.66% to 12.46%), and the process has continued after the 2001 census.[14]

The separate categories for the Moldovans and Romanians as two ethnicities has been criticized by Romanian organizations in Ukraine.[15] According to Kateryna Sheshtakova, a professor at the Pomeranian University of Slutsk in Poland who did field research among the self-identified Romanians and self-identified Moldovans in the Chernivtsi region of Ukraine, 'Some Moldovans use both names of the mother tongue (Moldovan or Romanian) and accordingly declare two ethnic affiliations.'[16] The study suggests that the number of Moldovans who identify their language as Romanian and have both a Moldovan and a Romanian ethnic identity is about equal to those who identify their language as Moldovan, and have an exclusively Moldovan ethnic identity.[17] She recorded statements such as "I am Moldovan, but to be more precise, we should say I am Romanian".[18] In the Republic of Moldova, “more than half of the self-proclaimed Moldovans (53.5%) said that they saw no difference” between the Romanian and Moldovan languages according to a survey conducted by Pal Kolsto and Hans Olav Melberg in 1998 which also included the Transnistrian separatist region.[19] Opinion polling from the Chernivtsi oblast indicated that this was also the case in the Chernivtsi oblast of Ukraine.[20] However, all census respondents had to write in their ethnicity (no predetermined set of choices existed), and could respond or not to any particular census question, or not answer any questions at all.[21] It has been claimed by some that no allegation of counting fraud were brought up. However, there are allegations that in 2001, individuals, especially, but not exclusively, in the Odessa region were threatened with dismissal from their jobs if they declared that they were “Romanians” rather than "Moldovans", and it was also claimed that the ethnicity of some individuals was listed arbitrarily by census-takers who did not even ask those individuals what their ethnicity was.[22] However, Romanian Community of Ukraine Interregional Union, one of Romanian organizations in Ukraine, criticized what they see as the continuous usage of Romanians and Moldovans as two separate ethnic groups. In 2001, among the 67,225 inhabitants with a "Moldovan" ethnic identity, 2,657 people declared that their native language is "Romanian" (3.95%), and among the 5,627 self-identified "Moldovans" whose native language was not "Moldovan", 1,672 declared that they knew "Romanian" (2.49% of all "Moldovans").[23] Opinion polling from the Chernivtsi oblast indicated that a significant majority of the self-identified Moldovans thought that there was no difference between the Moldovan and Romanian languages.[24].

According to the Romanian census of 1930, the territory of the future Chernivtsi Oblast had 805,642 inhabitants in that year, out of which 47.6% were Ukrainians, and 28.2% were Romanians. The rest of the population was 88,772 Jews, 46,946 Russians (among them an important community of Lipovans), around 35,000 Germans, 10,000 Poles, and 10,000 Hungarians.[15]

During the inter-war period, Cernăuți County had a population of 306,975, of which 136,380 were Ukrainians, and 78,589 were Romanians. Storojineţ County had 77,382 Ukrainians and 57,595 Romanians. (The three other counties of Bukovina, which remained in Romania, had a total of 22,368 Ukrainians). The northern part of the Hotin County had approximately 70% Ukrainians and 25% Romanians. The Hertsa region, smaller by area and population, was virtually 100% Romanian.

Major demographic changes occurred during the Second World War. Immediate after the Soviet takeover of the region in 1940 the Soviet government deported or killed about 41,000 Romanians (see Fântâna Albă massacre), while at the same time further encouraging an influx of Ukrainians from the Ukrainian SSR. Most Poles were deported by the Soviet authorities, while most Germans forcibly returned to Germany. After the Kingdom of Romania took control of the region during the war (1941–1944), the Jewish community of the area was largely destroyed by the deportations to ghettos and concentration camps.

The languages of the population closely reflect the ethnic composition with over 90% within each of the major ethnic groups declaring their national language as the mother tongue.

National Structure of Chernivtsi Oblast (2001 Census)[25][26]
Raions/Cities Total Ukrainians Russians Romanians Moldovans Other
Hertsa Raion 32,316 1,616 299 29,554 756 91
Hlyboka Raion 72,676 34,025 877 32,923 4,425 426
Kelmentsi Raion 48,468 47,261 607 25 477 98
Khotyn Raion 72,398 66,060 927 59 5,102 250
Kitsman Raion 72,884 71,805 674 116 88 201
Novoselytsia Raion 87,461 29,703 1,235 5,904 50,329 290
Putyla Raion 25,352 25,182 98 19 20 33
Sokyriany Raion 48,889 43,927 3,044 43 1,681 194
Storozhynets Raion 95,295 56,786 1,367 35,095 307 1,740
Vyzhnytsia Raion 59,993 58,924 631 196 58 184
Zastavna Raion 56,261 55,733 335 38 55 100
city of Chernivtsi 236,691 189,021 26,733 10,553 3,829 6,555
city of Novodnistrovsk 10,344 9,013 1,054 30 98 149
Total 919,028 689,056 37,881 114,555 67,225 10,311

Age structure

0-14 years: 16.7% Increase (male 77,507/female 73,270)
15-64 years: 69.7% Steady (male 304,793/female 325,677)
65 years and over: 13.6% Decrease (male 41,980/female 80,871) (2013 official)

Median age

total: 36.9 years Increase
male: 34.5 years Increase
female: 39.4 years Increase (2013 official)

Attractions

Khotyn Fortress

On the territory of the Chernivtsi region there are 836 archeological monuments (of which 18 have national meanings), 586 historical monuments (2 of them have national significance), 779 monuments of architecture and urban development (112 of them national significance), 42 monuments of monumental art.

References

  1. ^ Syvak, Nina; Ponomarenko, Valerii; Khodzinska, Olha; Lakeichuk, Iryna (2011). Veklych, Lesia (ed.). Toponymic Guidelines for Map and Other Editors for International Use (PDF). scientific consultant Iryna Rudenko; reviewed by Nataliia Kizilowa; translated by Olha Khodzinska. Kyiv: DerzhHeoKadastr and Kartographia. p. 20. ISBN 978-966-475-839-7. Retrieved 2020-10-06. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  2. ^ "УКАЗ ПРЕЗИДЕНТА УКРАЇНИ No: 486/2022". president.gov.ua (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 5 February 2023.
  3. ^ a b Чисельність наявного населення України на 1 січня 2022 [Number of Present Population of Ukraine, as of January 1, 2022] (PDF) (in Ukrainian and English). Kyiv: State Statistics Service of Ukraine. Archived (PDF) from the original on 4 July 2022.
  4. ^ "Валовии регіональнии продукт".
  5. ^ a b c About Oblast Archived 2008-05-03 at the Wayback Machine Chernivtsi Oblast State Administration (in Ukrainian)
  6. ^ "Molodova I and V (Ukraine)". Archived from the original on 2013-12-03. Retrieved 2011-12-04.
  7. ^ a b Верменич Я.В. (2013). ЧЕРНІВЕЦЬКА ОБЛАСТЬ (in Ukrainian). Vol. 10. Naukova Dumka, NASU Institute of History of Ukraine. ISBN 978-966-00-1359-9. У 9—11 ст. на території Ч.о. жили племена тиверців і хорватів. Із кінця 10 — в 11 ст. рівнинна частина сучасної області стала периферією Київської Русі, потім — Галицького князівства, а в 2-й пол. 14 ст. відійшла до Молдавського князівства (яке в 16 ст. стало васалом Османської імперії). {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  8. ^ Distribution of the population by nationality and native language Archived March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ 2001 Ukrainian Census | English version | Results | General results of the census | National composition of population | Chernivtsi region Archived 2007-11-13 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ http://pop-stat.mashke.org/ukraine-ethnic2001.htm
  11. ^ https://socialdata.org.ua/projects/mova-2001/
  12. ^ Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, Romanii dn Ucraina - intre trecut si viitor, vol. 1 (Romanii din Regiunea Cernauti), Cernauti, 2005, p. 242.
  13. ^ Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, Romanii dn Ucraina - intre trecut si viitor, vol. 1 (Romanii din Regiunea Cernauti), Cernauti, 2005, p. 242, 257, 259, 261.
  14. ^ Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, Romanii dn Ucraina - intre trecut si viitor, vol. 1 (Romanii din Regiunea Cernauti), Cernauti, 2005, p. 242, 257, 259, 261.
  15. ^ a b Noi, NU! Revistă de atitudine şi cultură - Românii din Ucraina Archived October 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine (in Romanian)
  16. ^ Kateryna Sheshtakova, "Ethnic Identity and Linguistic Practices of Romanians and Moldovans (On the Example of Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine), in Studia Humanistyczne AGH, Tom 12/2, 2013, p. 65.
  17. ^ Kateryna Sheshtakova, "Ethnic Identity and Linguistic Practices of Romanians and Moldovans (On the Example of Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine), in Studia Humanistyczne AGH, Tom 12/2, 2013, p. 71-33, in the section "Moldovan Identity: Two Languages, One Nation".
  18. ^ Kateryna Sheshtakova, "Ethnic Identity and Linguistic Practices of Romanians and Moldovans (On the Example of Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine), in Studia Humanistyczne AGH, Tom 12/2, 2013, p. 72.
  19. ^ Pal Kolsto with Hans Olav Melberg, “Integration, Alienation, and Conflict in Estonia and Moldova,” in Pal Kolsto (ed.), National Integration and Violent Conflict in Post-Soviet Societies (Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.), p. 34-35.
  20. ^ Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, Romanii dn Ucraina - intre trecut si viitor, vol. 1 (Romanii din Regiunea Cernauti), Cernauti, 2005
  21. ^ The Organization Order of the Population Census Archived August 30, 2006, at the Wayback Machine at the State Statistics Committee of Ukraine web-site.
  22. ^ George Coman, “SOS romanii din Ucraina!” (“SOS the Romanians of Ukraine”), in Ziua, March 4, 2003, originally accessed at http://www.ziua.ro/archive/2003/03/04/docs/5846.html, though the link is not currently working.
  23. ^ Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, Românii din Ucraina – intre trecut si viitor [vol. 1, Românii din Regiunea Cernăuţi (Studiu etnodemografic si sociolingvistic)] [“The Romanians in Ukraine – between past and future, vol. 1, "The Romanians in the Chernivtsi Region (An Ethnodemographic and Sociolinguistic Study)”] (Oradea: Treira, 2006), p. 266.
  24. ^ Ion Popescu and Constantin Ungureanu, Romanii dn Ucraina - intre trecut si viitor, vol. 1 (Romanii din Regiunea Cernauti), Cernauti, 2005.
  25. ^ "2001 Census results". Archived from the original on March 10, 2007. Retrieved 2006-02-20. Statistics Committee of Chernivtsi Oblast
  26. ^ http://pop-stat.mashke.org/ukraine-ethnic2001.htm

See also