Ukrainian Census (2001)
The Ukrainian Census of 2001 was the first (and so far 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] and is now planned for 2023.[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 |
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 |
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 |
Moldavians | 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 |
Gipsies | 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 |
Gagausians | 31.9 | 0.1 | 0.1 | 99.9 |
Other | 177.1 | 0.4 | 0.4 | 83.9 |
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%)
- Moldavians - 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%)
- Moldavians - 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%)
- Moldavians - 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%)
- Moldavians - 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%)
- Moldavians - 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%)
- Moldavians - 123.7 (5.0%)
- Gagausians - 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%)
References
- ^ a b Ukrainian population census will be held in 2020 – Cabinet decree, Interfax-Ukraine (22 December 2015)
- ^ (in Ukrainian) In 2021, there will most likely be no all-Ukrainian census - Minister, hromadske.ua (21 April 2020)
- ^ (in Ukrainian) It became known when the government plans to conduct a census, The Ukrainian Week (9 December 2020)
External links
- 2001 Census. State Statistics Committee of Ukraine
- 2001 Census results. State Statistics Committee of Ukraine
- (in Ukrainian and Russian) How the Ukrainians will be counted, Zerkalo Nedeli (the Mirror Weekly), November 24–30, 2001, in Ukrainian, in Russian[permanent dead link].
- Law of Ukraine "About the All-Ukrainian Census" (Ukrainian)
- Articles with Ukrainian-language sources (uk)
- Articles with short description
- Short description with empty Wikidata description
- Articles with Russian-language sources (ru)
- All articles with dead external links
- Articles with dead external links from July 2018
- Articles with permanently dead external links
- 2001 in Ukraine
- Censuses in Ukraine
- 2001 censuses
- December 2001 events in Ukraine