Pskov Oblast, Russia | |
---|---|
Administrative center | |
As of 2013: | |
| 24 |
| 14 |
| 14 |
| 192 |
As of 2002:[1] | |
| 8,393 |
| 1,073 |
In terms of the population, the biggest administrative districts are Pskovsky District (34,323 in 2010) and Ostrovsky District (31,096), the smallest one is Usvyatsky District (5,598).
In terms of the area, the biggest administrative district is Bezhanitsky District (3535km2), the smallest one is Pushkinogorsky District (1059km2).
Division | Structure | OKATO | OKTMO | Urban-type settlement/ /district-level town* | Rural (volost) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Administrative | Municipal | |||||||
Pskov (Псков) | city | urban okrug | 58 401 | 58 701 | ||||
Velikiye Luki (Великие Луки) | city | urban okrug | 58 410 | 58 710 | ||||
Bezhanitsky (Бежаницкий) | district | 58 204 | 58 604 |
| 10 | |||
Velikoluksky (Великолукский) | district | 58 206 | 58 606 | 11 | ||||
Gdovsky (Гдовский) | district | 58 208 | 58 608 |
| 8 | |||
Dedovichsky (Дедовичский) | district | 58 210 | 58 610 |
| 11 | |||
Dnovsky (Дновский) | district | 58 212 | 58 612 |
| 5 | |||
Krasnogorodsky (Красногородский) | district | 58 214 | 58 614 |
| 6 | |||
Kunyinsky (Куньинский) | district | 58 216 | 58 616 |
| 8 | |||
Loknyansky (Локнянский) | district | 58 218 | 58 618 |
| 6 | |||
Nevelsky (Невельский) | district | 58 220 | 58 620 |
| 10 | |||
Novorzhevsky (Новоржевский) | district | 58 223 | 58 623 |
| 8 | |||
Novosokolnichesky (Новосокольнический) | district | 58 226 | 58 626 |
| 9 | |||
Opochetsky (Опочецкий) | district | 58 229 | 58 629 |
| 8 | |||
Ostrovsky (Островский) | district | 58 233 | 58 633 |
| 8 | |||
Palkinsky (Палкинский) | district | 58 237 | 58 637 |
| 6 | |||
Pechorsky (Печорский) | district | 58 240 | 58 640 |
| 6 | |||
Plyussky (Плюсский) | district | 58 243 | 58 643 | 3 | ||||
Porkhovsky (Порховский) | district | 58 247 | 58 647 |
| 13 | |||
Pskovsky (Псковский) | district | 58 249 | 58 649 | 17 | ||||
Pustoshkinsky (Пустошкинский) | district | 58 250 | 58 650 |
| 5 | |||
Pushkinogorsky (Пушкиногорский) | district | 58 251 | 58 651 |
| 5 | |||
Pytalovsky (Пыталовский) | district | 58 253 | 58 653 |
| 9 | |||
Sebezhsky (Себежский) | district | 58 254 | 58 654 |
| 10 | |||
Strugo-Krasnensky (Струго-Красненский) | district | 58 256 | 58 656 |
| 6 | |||
Usvyatsky (Усвятский) | district | 58 258 | 58 658 |
| 4 |
The municipal divisions of Pskov Oblast are identical with its administrative divisions. All of the administrative districts of Pskov Oblast are municipally incorporated as municipal districts, and the cities of oblast significance are municipally incorporated as urban okrugs.
Historically, the whole area of the oblast was dependent on the Novgorod Republic and was annexed by the Grand Duchy of Moscow in the 15th and the 16th centuries. The southern part of the oblast was the battleground area and changed hands frequently, before landing in Poland by the end of the 16th century., 1708 Tsar Peter the Great issued an edict which established seven governorates.[2] [3] The description of the borders of the governorates was not given; instead, their area was defined as a set of towns and the lands adjacent to those towns. The present area of Pskov oblast was a part of Ingermanland Governorate, which was renamed Saint Petersburg Governorate in 1710. The governorates were subdivided into uyezds, and uyezds into volosts. In 1727, a separate Novgorod Governorate was established. It was subdivided into five provinces, and the current area of Novgorod Oblast was split between two of them - Pskov and Velikiye Luki Provinces. In 1772, after the First Partition of Poland, vast areas which formerly belonged to Poland were annexed by Russia, and in order to accommodate them, Pskov Governorate, with the center in Opochka, was established, and Pskov and Velikiye Luki Provinces, with the exception of Gdovsky Uyezd, were transferred to Pskov Governorate. All current area of Pskov Oblast belonged to Pskov Governorate, with the exception of the areas currently belonging to Gdovsky, Plyussky, and Strugo-Krasnensky Districts. These belonged to Saint Petersburg Governorate.[4] Porkhovsky Uyezd belonged to Novgorod Governorate until 1776, and then it was transferred to Pskov Governorate.
Pskov Governorate has proven to be too big to be administered properly, and in 1776, the decree of the empress, Catherine the Great, was issued. It divided the governorate into Pskov and Polotsk Governorates. Pskov was made the administrative center of Pskov Governorate. In 1777, Pskov Governorate was transformed into Pskov Viceroyalty. In 1796, the viceroyalty was abolished, and the emperor Paul I issued a decree restoring Pskov Governorate.[4]
The south of Pskov Oblast was transferred to Polotsk Governorate, which in 1777 became Polotsk Viceroyalty. In 1796, the viceroyalty was abolished and the area was transferred to Belarus Governorate; since 1802 to Vitebsk Governorate. After 1919, Vitebsk Governorate was a part of Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic.[5] In 1924, Vitebsk Governorate was abolished, and Sebezhsky, Nevelsky, and Velizhsky Uyezds were transferred to Pskov Governorate.
In 1920, the Treaty of Tartu established the border between Russia and independent Estonia, and the areas constituting now Pechorsky District, along with the town of Pechory, were transferred to Estonia. In the same year, the Treaty of Riga fixed the boundary between Russia and Latvia, with some parts of Pskov Governorate transferred to Latvia.
On August 1, 1927, Pskov and Saint Petersburg Governorates were abolished, in the course of the administrative reform, and all of the areas which currently belong to Pskov Oblast and belonged then to Soviet Union, became a part of Leningrad Oblast. The oblast was divided into okrugs, and the current area of Pskov Oblast was split between Pskov and Velikiye Luki Okrugs. On June 17, 1929, Velikiye Luki Okrug was transferred to Western Oblast, a huge administrative unit with the center in Smolensk. In 1930, the okrugs were also abolished and the districts were directly subordinated to the oblasts. In 1935, the northern part of Western Oblast was transferred to the newly established Kalinin Oblast. The areas which constitute now Usvyatsky District and the southern part of Kunyinsky District remained in Western Oblast until it was abolished in 1937, at which point they were transferred to Smolensk Oblast.[6]
In the summer of 1941, during the World War II, the current area of Pskov Oblast was occupied by German troops. Most of it was not liberated until the summer of 1944. After the liberation, the administrative division of Soviet Union was considerably changed. On August 22, 1944, Velikiye Luki Oblast was established, with the center in Velikiye Luki, and on the following day, August 23, 1944, Pskov Oblast was established. In 1945, some areas were transferred from Estonian and Latvian Soviet Socialist Republics to Pskov Oblast and formed three districts, Pechorsky, Pytalovsky, and Kachanovsky Districts. Together, Pskov and Velikiye Luki Oblasts now contained all the areas which currently constitute Pskov Oblast. On October 2, 1957, Velikiye Luki Oblast was abolished and split between Pskov and Kalinin Oblasts. As of October 1957, Pskov Oblast also contained Kholmsky and Ploskoshsky Districts, which in July 1958 were transferred to Novgorod and Kalinin Oblasts, respectively.
In the middle of the 1960s the oblast went through the aborted Khrushchyov administrative reform, when districts were first divided into large-scale agricultural and industrial district, and several years later these were abolished, and the oblast got a district structure slightly different from that before the reform.
After 1927 (with the exception of the aborted reform of 1963–1966) borders between the districts sometimes were modified, and as a result some of the districts were abolished. This list includes the districts which existed in the current area of Pskov Oblast.[6]
The area of Lovatsky District is currently split between Pskov and Novgorod Oblasts. The area of Podberezinsky Districts is split between Pskov, Tver, and Novgorod Oblasts. The area of Rudnensky District is split between Pskov and Leningrad Oblasts.
In 1937, Pushkinsky District was renamed Pushkinogorsky District.