- Tiflis Governorate
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Tiflis Governorate (English)
Тифлисская губерния (Modern Russian)
Тифлисская губернiя (Pre-1918 Russian)Coat of Arms
Coat of arms of Tiflis GovernorateEstablished 1847 Abolished 1917 Political status
RegionGovernorate
CaucasusArea Area
- Rank39,197 verst²
n/aPopulation (1897 census) Population
- Rank
- Density
- Urban
- Rural1,051,032 inhabitants
n/a
26.8 inhab. / verst²
19.72%
80.28%Government First Head
Last Headn/a
n/aTiflis Governorate (Old Russian: Тифлисская губернiя; Georgian: თბილისის გუბერნია) was one of the guberniyas of the Russian Empire with its centre in Tiflis (present-day Tbilisi, capital of Georgia). In 1897 it constituted 44,607 sq. kilometres in area and had a population of 1,051,032 inhabitants.[1] The governorate used to border Elisabethpol Governorate, Erivan Governorate, Kutaisi Governorate, Zakatali okrug, Dagestan Oblast, Terek Oblast, and Kars Oblast.
Tiflis Governorate was established in 1848 along with the Kutaisi Governorate, after the dissolution of the Georgia-Imeretia Governorate. In 1860 and 1868 parts of the Tiflis were used to form Elisabethpol Governorate and Dagestan Oblast. The governorate lasted in these boundaries for 50 years, until the Democratic Republic of Georgia was founded.[2]
Contents
Administrative divisions
Tiflis Governorate consisted of the following uyezds:[1]
- Tiflis
- Akhalkalaki
- Akhaltsikhe
- Aresh (attached to Elisabethpol Governorate in 1868)
- Borchali
- Elisabethpol (attached to Elisabethpol Governorate in 1868)
- Gori
- Kazakh (attached to Elisabethpol Governorate in 1868)
- Dusheti
- Signakhi
- Telavi
- Tianeti
Demographics
As of 1897, 1,051,032 lived in the governorate, with around 20% of them being urban. Ethnic Georgians constituted 44.3% of the population, followed by Armenians (18.7%), Azeris (10.2%), Russians (including Ukrainians and Old Believers, 9.7%), Ossetians (6.4%), Avars (3.2%), Greeks (2.6%), Turks (2.4%), etc. More than half of the population adhered to Eastern Orthodox Christianity with significant Muslim, Catholic and Jewish minorities.[1]
Ethnic groups in 1897 [3]
Uyezd Georgians Armenians Tatars Russians Ossetians Avars Greeks Turks Ukrainians Poles Germans Jews Kurds Chechens Dargins Lezgins TOTAL 44,3% 18,7% 10,2% 7,5% 6,4% 3,2% 2,6% 2,4% ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... Akhalkalaki 8,9% 72,3% 9,0% 7,1% ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 1,1% ... ... ... Akhaltsikhe 17,7% 22,0% 18,0% 2,5% ... ... ... 35,1% ... ... ... ... 2,0% ... ... ... Borchali 6,1% 36,9% 29,4% 6,3% ... ... 16,6% ... ... ... 1,9% ... ... ... ... ... Gori 65,0% 4,0% ... 2,8% 26,2% ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... Dusheti 73,4% 2,5% ... 1,4% 21,4% ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... Zakatala 14,7% 2,5% 34,4% ... 37,6% ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 8,8% 1,2% Signakhi 82,9% 6,2% 5,2% 4,3% ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... Telavi 85,9% 7,1% 2,8% 1,0% ... 2,6% ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... Tianeti 88,7% 1,6% ... 1,9% ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 6,2% ... ... Tiflis 34,2% 24,7% 5,9% 22,1% ... ... 1,9% ... 1,5% 2,1% 2,3% 1,4% ... ... ... ... Known governors
- Sergei Yermolov, 1847–1849
- Ivan Andronnikov (Andronikashvili), 1849–1855
- Nikolai Lukash, 1855–1857
- Alexander Kapker, 1858–1860
- Konstantin Orlovsky, 1860–1876
- Maxim Osten-Sacken, 1876–1878
- Konstantin Gagarin, 1878–1883
- Alexander Grossman, 1883–1887
- Karl Zisserman, 1887–1889
- Giorgi Shervashidze, 1889–1897
- Fiodor Bykov, 1897–1899
- Ivan Svechin, 1899–1905
- Paulus Rausch von Traubenberg, 1905–1907
- Mikhail Lozina-Lozinsky, 1907–1911
- Andrei Cherniavsky, 1911–1914
- Ivan Strakhovsky, 1914–1916
- Alexander Mandrika, 1916–1917 (acting)[4]
References
- ^ a b c Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopaedia: Tiflis Governorate (Russian)
- ^ Coats of Arms of the Cities of the Georgia-Imeretia Governorate of the Russian Empire
- ^ [1]
- ^ Tbilisi Lands
Categories:- Governorates of the Caucasus
- History of Georgia (country)
- States and territories established in 1847
- 1917 disestablishments
- History of Tbilisi
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