Kholm Governorate (Russian Empire) Explained

Native Name:Холмская губерния
Conventional Long Name:Kholm Governorate
Common Name:Kholm
Subdivision:Governorate
Nation:the Russian Empire
Year Start:1913
Date Start:8 September
Event Start:Creation of Kholm Governorate
Event End:Armistice of 11 November
Date End:11 November
Year End:1918
Event1:Act of 5th November
Date Event1:1916
Event2:Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
Date Event2:1918
Event3:Second Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
Date Event3:1918
P1:Siedlce Governorate
Flag P1:Седлецкая губ МВД Бенке.jpg
P2:Lublin Governorate
Flag P2:Coat of Arms of Lublin gubernia (Russian empire).png
S1:Kingdom of Poland (1916–1918)Regency Kingdom of Poland
Flag S1:Flag of Poland.svg
S2:Kholm Governorate (Ukraine)Kholm Governorate
Flag S2:Flag of Ukrainian People's Republic.svg
Image Map Caption:Location in the Russian Empire
Image Map2:KholmGovernorate1913Map.png
Capital:Kholm
Stat Area1:10460
Stat Pop1:896316
Political Subdiv:Governorates of the Russian Empire
Today:Poland

Kholm Governorate was an administrative-territorial unit (guberniya) of the Russian Empire, with its capital in Kholm (Chełm).

It was created from the eastern parts of Siedlce Governorate and Lublin Governorate in 1912. It was separated from Privislinsky Krai and joined to Kiev General Governorate as "core Russian territory", as a precaution in case the territories of Privislinsky Krai should be taken from the Russian Empire in an upcoming war. Another reason for this administrative change was to facilitate Russification and conversion of the non-Eastern Orthodox Christians to Orthodoxy.[1]

Kholm Governorate was officially excluded from Privislinsky Krai by Tsar's decree of 4 April 1915.

According to Russian statistical sources for 1914, while the area of the governorate was, it was inhabited by 896,316 inhabitants of whom 404,633 (45.1%) were Roman Catholics, 327,322 (36.5%) Orthodox Christians, 29,123 Protestants and 135,238 Jews.[2] Russian data was questioned by Polish scholars, such as Włodzimierz Wakar, who argued that Poles made up a larger percent of the total population than according to official Russian sources.

However, during the Great Retreat in the summer of 1915, the Russian command gave orders to evacuate the population of the governorate. Due to that policy, about 2/3 of the Ukrainian population was deported to the Russian Empire in June–July 1915. The deported population reached a few hundred thousand people and thus significantly changed the national composition of the region. As of year 1918 the ethnic Polish population amounted already to around 70% of the region's total population.[3]

Administrative Divisions

The Kholm governorate consisted of 8 Uyezds (note Russian spellings for administrative centres used):

UyezdAdmin CentreArea,
(Verst)
Population (1897)
(People)
1BelgoraiskyBelgorai (5 846)1 500.896 332
2BelskyBela (13 090)1 311.076 687
3VlodavskyVlodava (6 673)1 900.198 035
4GrubeshovskyGrubeshov (10 639)1 063.9101 392
5ZamostskyZamost (14 705)1 569.6119 783
6KonstantinovskyYanov (3 861)1 263.061 333
7TomashevskyTomashev (6 233)1 213.498 783
8KholmskyKholm (18 452)1 865.9137 585

Demographics

The entire population of the Kholm province, according to official Russian statistics, was 896,316 people of whom 45.1% were Roman Catholics, 36.5% Orthodox Christians, 3.2% Protestants and 15.1% Jews. This means that even according to official data the number of Catholics was larger than the number of the Orthodox. Polish historiography considers this official Russian data as falsified. The Orthodox accounted for more than half of the population only in Grubeshovsky district, as well as in some parts of the former Lubartovsk and Krasnostavsky districts. In parts of Tomashov and Kholm districts, as well as in the former Vlodavsky Uyezd, the number of the Orthodox exceeded the number of Catholics by about 5%. In remaining areas the number of Catholics exceeded the number of the Orthodox. Due to the 1905 Decree of Tolerance (also known as The Edict of Toleration) by Tsar Nicholas II many Orthodox people in what later became the Kholm Governorate started converting to Roman Catholicism, which caused the decline of the percentage of Orthodox population in the area during the following years. The share of Orthodox Christians further declined during the evacuation of the population as part of the Great Retreat.

According to the Russian census of 1897 the share of each religion in eight uyezds which later became the Kholm Governorate was 344,098 Roman Catholics (43.6%), 314,404 Orthodox Christians (39.8%), 107,238 Jews (13.6%), 22,766 Protestants (2.9%) and 1,424 people of other religions (0.2%). According to the Polish census of 1921 the share of each religion in eight counties which used to form the Kholm Governorate before, was 494,819 Roman Catholics (65.7%), 140,549 Orthodox Christians (18.7%), 104,667 Jews (13.9%), 10,057 Protestants (1.3%) and 2,956 people of other religions (0.4%).

The total population of eight districts in 1897 was 789,930 and in 1921 it was 753,048.

Religious composition of the population according to the 1897 Russian census[4] !Uyezd!Population 1897!Roman Catholic!%!Orthodox!%!Jewish!%!Protestant!%!Other religion!%
Konstantinovsky613333433556.0%1874230.6%818513.3%00.0%710.1%
Belsky766873034039.6%2908137.9%1665821.7%3840.5%2240.3%
Vlodavsky980352235222.8%5572856.8%1548915.8%43914.5%750.1%
Kholmsky1375854784934.8%5448539.6%1748612.7%1714812.5%6170.4%
Grubeshovsky1013922966629.3%5605855.3%1477814.6%8430.8%470.0%
Zamostsky1197838068567.4%2422420.2%1475112.3%00.0%1230.1%
Tomashevsky987834294443.5%4471545.3%1093311.1%00.0%1910.2%
Belgoraisky963325592758.1%3137132.6%89589.3%00.0%760.1%
Total in eight districts78993034409843.6%31440439.8%10723813.6%227662.9%14240.2%
Religious composition of the population according to the 1921 Polish census[5] !County!Population 1921!Roman Catholic!%!Orthodox!%!Jewish!%!Protestant!%!Other religion!%
Konstantynów650555366782.5%40126.2%724111.1%100.0%1250.2%
Biała Podlaska595203723962.6%955116.0%1155019.4%2260.4%9541.6%
Włodawa767184088153.3%2010426.2%1356217.7%20172.6%1540.2%
Chełm1214756877056.6%2470120.3%1991216.4%74766.2%6160.5%
Hrubieszów1038415073548.9%3846837.0%1396713.5%2730.3%3980.4%
Zamość14261411976984.0%54413.8%1722512.1%340.0%1450.1%
Tomaszów928095786962.4%2238924.1%1215413.1%110.0%3860.4%
Biłgoraj910166588972.4%1588317.5%90569.9%100.0%1780.2%
Total in eight districts75304849481965.7%14054918.7%10466713.9%100571.3%29560.4%
In the 1931 census data Konstantynów county is counted as part of Biała Podlaska county:
Religious composition of the population according to the 1931 Polish census[6] !County!Population 1931!Roman Catholic!%!Orthodox!%!Jewish!%!Protestant!%!Other religion!%
Biała Podlaska1162668264771.1%1819215.6%1428812.3%3330.3%8060.7%
Włodawa1135665793951.0%3338229.4%1818816.0%35223.1%5350.5%
Chełm1623408848854.5%3753023.1%2285214.1%106096.5%28611.8%
Hrubieszów1299576336548.8%4912837.8%1578512.1%4190.3%12601.0%
Zamość14954812524983.8%67784.5%1673811.2%590.0%7240.5%
Tomaszów1211247302160.3%3305927.3%1420411.7%260.0%8140.7%
Biłgoraj1169518261470.6%2091317.9%1293811.1%310.0%4550.4%
Total in seven districts90975257332363.0%19898221.9%11499312.6%149991.6%74550.8%

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. [Norman Davies]
  2. Book: W obronie ziemi . 46.
  3. http://www.hist.msu.ru/Labs/UkrBel/sklarov.htm (in Russian)
  4. Web site: Languages and religions in the districts of the Russian Empire .
  5. Web site: Skorowidz miejscowości Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej opracowany na podstawie wyników Pierwszego Powszechnego Spisu Ludności z dn. 30 września 1921 r. i innych źródeł urzędowych. T. 4 : Województwo Lubelskie .
  6. Web site: 1938 . Plik:Woj.lubelskie-Polska spis powszechny 1931.pdf – Wikipedia, wolna encyklopedia . 2024-10-06 . commons.wikimedia.org . pl.