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Tver Governorate

Coordinates:57°N36°E / 57°N 36°E /57; 36
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1796–1929 unit of Russia

57°N36°E / 57°N 36°E /57; 36

Tver Governorate
Тверская губерния
Governorate of theRussian Empire
1796–1929
Coat of arms of Tver
Coat of arms

Location in the Russian Empire
CapitalTver
Population 
• 
1,769,135
History 
• Established
12 December 1796
• Disestablished
12 August 1929
Political subdivisions12uyezds

Tver Governorate (Russian:Тверская губерния,romanizedTverskaya guberniya) was an administrative-territorial unit (guberniya) of theRussian Empire and theRussian SFSR, which existed from 1796 until 1929. Its seat was inTver. The governorate was located in the north of the European part of the Russian Empire and borderedNovgorod Governorate in the north,Yaroslavl Governorate in the east,Vladimir Governorate in the southeast,Moscow Governorate in the south,Smolensk Governorate in the southwest, andPskov Governorate in the west.

The area of the governorate is currently split between theTver andMoscow oblasts. Minor parts of Tver Governorate also currently belong to theYaroslavl andNovgorod oblasts.

History

[edit]

In the 18th century, the areas which were later occupied by Tver Governorate were split betweenMoscow andNovgorod Governorates. On 25 November 1775Tver Viceroyalty was established with the administrative center in Tver. On 12 December 1796 the viceroyalty was transformed into Tver Governorate.[1]

In 1796, the viceroyalty was subdivided into thirteen uyezds, however, Tver Governorate originally only had nine uyezds[2][3]

The European part of the Russian Empire in 1917. Tver Governorate is shown in magenta in the center of the map.

In 1803, three more uyezds were established:Kalyazinsky Uyezd (Kalyazin),Korchevskoy Uyezd (Korcheva), andVesyegonsky Uyezd (Vesyegonsk).

In 1918,Krasnokholmsky Uyezd with the center ofKrasny Kholm was established on the territory previously belonged to Bezhetsky and Vesyegonsky Uyezds. In the same year,Kimrsky Uyezd (Kimry) was established on the lands which belonged to Korchevskoy and Kalyazinsky Uyezds. In 1919 and 1921, minor areas, which included the town ofLeninsk, were transferred toMoscow Governorate.[4]

On 25 April 1921 Vesyegonsky and Krasnokholmsky Uyezd were transferred toRybinsk Governorate. On 6 February 1923 Rybinsk Governorate was abolished, and the two uyezds were transferred to Tver Governorate.[4]

On 30 May 1922 three uyezds were abolished. Zubtsovsky Uyezd was merged into Rzhevsky Uyezd, Kalyazinsky Uyezd – into Kashinsky Uyezd, and Korchevskoy Uyezd – into Kimrsky Uyezd.On 3 March 1924 Krasnokholmsky Uyezd was abolished and split between Bezhetsky and Vesyegonsky District, whereas Staritsky Uyezd was abolished and split between Rzhevsky, Novotorzhsky, and Tverskoy Uyezds. On 3 October 1927 Kashinsky Uyezd was abolished and split between Bezhetsky and Kimrsky Uyezds.[4]

On 12 August 1929, Tver Governorate was abolished and split betweenMoscow andWestern Oblasts.[4]

Demographics

[edit]
Population by spoken language in Tver Governorate (1897)[5][6]
LanguageNative speakersPercentage
Russian1,642,50692.8%
Karelian117,6796.6%
Estonian1,5160.08%
Yiddish1,4600.08%
Polish1,4240.08%
German1,0900.06%
Ukrainian1,0700.06%
Other languages2.3900.1%
Total1,769,135100.00

Governors

[edit]

The administration tasks in the governorate were executed by a governor. The governors of Tver Governorate were[7][8]

  • 1797–1800 Ignaty Antonovich Teyls;
  • 1800–1802 Villim Fyodorovich Mertens (Willem Mertens);
  • 1802–1804 Ivan Mikhaylovich Ukhtomsky;
  • 1804–1812 Alexander Andreyevich Ushakov;
  • 1812–1813 Luka Semyonovich Kologrivov;
  • 1813–1817 Pyotr Ivanovich Ozerov;
  • 1817–1826 Nikolay Sergeyevich Vsevolozhsky;
  • 1826–1830 Vasily Andrianovich Borisov;
  • 1830 Dmitry Mikhaylovich Obrezkov;
  • 1830–1831 Pyotr Grigoryevich Gorn;
  • 1831 Pyotr Ivanovich Apraksin;
  • 1831–1834 Kirill Yakovlevich Tyufyayev;
  • 1834–1837 Alexander Petrovich Tolstoy;
  • 1837–1842 Yakov Dmitriyevich Bolgovskoy;
  • 1842–1857 Alexander Pavlovich Bakunin;
  • 1857–1862 Pavel Trofimovich Baranov;
  • 1862–1868Pyotr Romanovich Bagration;
  • 1868–1890 Afanasy Nikolayevich Somov;
  • 1890-1897 Pavel Dmitriyevich Akhlestyshev;
  • 1897–1903Nikolay Dmitriyevich Golitsyn, later the last Imperial Prime Minister of Russia;
  • 1903–1904 Alexey Aleksandrovich Shirinsky-Shikhmatov;
  • 1904–1905 Sergey Dmitriyevich Urusov;
  • 1905–1906 Pavel Alexandrovich Sleptsov;
  • 1906–1917 Nikolay Georgiyevich Byunting (Nikolai von Bünting), lynched during theFebruary Revolution.

In 1809,Duke George of Oldenburg was appointed governor general and supervised Novgorod, Tver, and Yaroslavl Governorates. In 1812, he died, and the position of the governor general was abolished.[3]

References

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toTver Governorate.
  1. ^Н. Ф. Самохвалов, ed. (2003).Губернии Российской Империи. История и руководители. 1708-1917.Moscow: Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russian Federation. pp. 294–300.
  2. ^Российская империя: административно-территориальное деление (1708–1917): Тверская губерния (in Russian).Russian National Library. Retrieved12 July 2013.
  3. ^abМалыгин, П. Д.; Смирнов, С. Н. (2007).История административно-территориального деления Тверской Области(PDF). Tver. pp. 14–15.OCLC 540329541.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^abcdСправка об изменениях в административно-территориальном делении Тверской губернии – Калининской области (in Russian). Архивы России. Archived fromthe original on 19 April 2012. Retrieved11 July 2013.
  5. ^Мовний склад населення повітів Рос. імперії за переписом 1897 року [Linguistic composition of the population of the counties of the Russian Empire according to the 1897 census].www.datatowel.in.ua (in Ukrainian). Retrieved7 March 2025.
  6. ^"Первая всеобщая перепись населения Российской Империи 1897. Демоскоп Weekly - Приложение. Справочник статистических показателей" [The first general census of the population of the Russian Empire in 1897].www.demoscope.ru.
  7. ^Н. Ф. Самохвалов, ed. (2003).Губернии Российской Империи. История и руководители. 1708-1917.Moscow: Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russian Federation. pp. 64–66, 407.
  8. ^Административно-территориальное деление (in Russian). Энциклопедический справочник "Тверская Область". Retrieved13 July 2013.
Governorates
(List)
Baltic Governorates³
Governorates ofFinland
Governorates ofPoland
Governorates of
Galicia and Bukovina
Oblasts
The Steppes
Turkestan
Priamurye
Caucasus Viceroyalty
Dependencies
¹Italics indicates renamed or abolished governorates, oblasts, etc on 1 January 1914.
² An asterisk (+) indicates governorates formed or created with renaming after 1 January 1914.
³Ostsee or Baltic general-governorship was abolished in 1876.
Authority control databasesEdit this at Wikidata
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