Administrative centers of Russian regions
It was necessary to find data on the administrative centers of Russian regions in Excel format. I searched on the Internet - in text format as much as I wanted, but I couldn’t find the excel tables “Administrative centers of the regions of Russia”. I had to do it myself. At the same time I added the population according to census data. In 2022, the excel table was supplemented with data on the population of Russia for 2018 - 2022. Data from the Rosstat report - Demographic Yearbook of Russia 2019
I thought it might be useful to someone - use it.
Content
- 1 Large cities 250-500 thousand people 1.1 Bryansk
- 2.1 Klintsy
- 3.1 Starodub
Regions of Russia and their capitals on the map
We study the regions of Russia and their capitals on the map (list 47) → included in the Russian Federation. All cities on the map and regions of Russia - alphabetical list, their locations, regional centers in English
№ | Letter | Region | Capital |
1 | A | Amurskaya | Blagoveshchensk – satellite – panorama |
2 | A | Arkhangelskaya | Arkhangelsk - satellite - panorama |
3 | A | Astrakhan | Astrakhan – satellite – panorama |
4 | B | Belgorodskaya | Belgorod – satellite – panorama |
5 | B | Bryansk | Bryansk - satellite - panorama |
6 | IN | Vladimirskaya | Vladimir – satellite – panorama |
7 | IN | Volgogradskaya | Volgograd – satellite – panorama |
8 | IN | Vologda | Vologda – satellite – panorama |
9 | IN | Voronezh | Voronezh - satellite - panorama |
10 | AND | Ivanovskaya | Ivanovo – satellite – panorama |
11 | AND | Irkutsk | Irkutsk – satellite – panorama |
12 | TO | Kaliningradskaya | Kaliningrad – satellite – panorama |
13 | TO | Kaluzhskaya | Kaluga - satellite - panorama |
14 | TO | Kemerovo | Kemerovo - satellite - panorama |
15 | TO | Kirovskaya | Kirov – satellite – panorama |
16 | TO | Kostromskaya | Kostroma – satellite – panorama |
17 | TO | Kurganskaya | Kurgan – satellite – panorama |
18 | TO | Kursk | Kursk – satellite – panorama |
19 | L | Leningradskaya | St. Petersburg – satellite – panorama |
20 | L | Lipetskaya | Lipetsk – satellite – panorama |
21 | M | Magadan | Magadan – satellite – panorama |
22 | M | Moscow | Moscow – satellite – panorama |
23 | M | Murmansk | Murmansk – satellite – panorama |
24 | N | Nizhny Novgorod | Nizhny Novgorod – satellite – panorama |
25 | N | Novgorodskaya | Novgorod – satellite – panorama |
26 | N | Novosibirsk | Novosibirsk – satellite – panorama |
27 | ABOUT | Omsk | Omsk – satellite – panorama |
28 | ABOUT | Orenburgskaya | Orenburg - satellite - panorama |
29 | ABOUT | Orlovskaya | Eagle – satellite – panorama |
30 | P | Penza | Penza – satellite – panorama |
31 | P | Pskovskaya | Pskov – satellite – panorama |
32 | R | Rostov | Rostov-on-Don – satellite – panorama |
33 | R | Ryazan | Ryazan – satellite – panorama |
34 | WITH | Samara | Samara – satellite – panorama |
35 | WITH | Saratovskaya | Saratov - satellite - panorama |
36 | WITH | Sakhalinskaya | Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk – satellite – panorama |
37 | WITH | Sverdlovskaya | Ekaterinburg – satellite – panorama |
38 | WITH | Smolenskaya | Smolensk – satellite – panorama |
39 | T | Tambovskaya | Tambov – satellite – panorama |
40 | T | Tverskaya | Tver - satellite - panorama |
41 | T | Tomsk | Tomsk - satellite - panorama |
42 | T | Tula | Tula – satellite – panorama |
43 | T | Tyumen | Tyumen – satellite – panorama |
44 | U | Ulyanovskaya | Ulyanovsk - satellite - panorama |
45 | H | Chelyabinsk | Chelyabinsk - satellite - panorama |
46 | I | Yaroslavskaya | Yaroslavl – satellite – panorama |
47 | E | Jewish Autonomous Region | Birobidzhan – satellite – panorama |
List of subjects - regions of the Russian Federation + capital:
- Amur region, Blagoveshchensk
- Arkhangelsk region, Arkhangelsk
- Astrakhan region, Astrakhan
- Belgorod region, Belgorod
- Bryansk region, Bryansk
- Vladimir region, Vladimir
- Volgograd region, Volgograd
- Vologda region, Vologda
- Voronezh region, Voronezh
- Ivanovo region, Ivanovo
- Irkutsk region, Irkutsk
- Kaliningrad region, Kaliningrad
- Kaluga region, Kaluga
- Kemerovo region, Kemerovo
- Kirov region, Kirov
- Kostroma region, Kostroma
- Kurgan region, Kurgan
- Kursk region, Kursk
- Leningrad region, St. Petersburg
- Lipetsk region, Lipetsk
- Magadan region, Magadan
- Moscow region, Moscow
- Murmansk region, Murmansk
- Nizhny Novgorod region, Nizhny Novgorod
- Novgorod region, Novgorod
- Novosibirsk region, Novosibirsk
- Omsk region, Omsk
- Orenburg region, Orenburg
- Oryol region, Oryol
- Penza region, Penza
- Pskov region, Pskov
- Rostov region, Rostov-on-Don
- Ryazan region, Ryazan
- Samara region, Samara
- Saratov region, Saratov
- Sakhalin region, Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk
- Sverdlovsk region, Ekaterinburg
- Smolensk region, Smolensk
- Tambov region, Tambov
- Tver region, Tver
- Tomsk region, Tomsk
- Tula region, Tula
- Tyumen region, Tyumen
- Ulyanovsk region, Ulyanovsk
- Chelyabinsk region, Chelyabinsk
- Yaroslavl region, Yaroslavl
- Jewish Autonomous Region, Birobidzhan
Small towns of less than 20 thousand people
Starodub
Population 18,156 people (2020).
Karachev
Population 17,169 (2020).
Zhukovka (Bryansk region)
There are other settlements and objects with the same name
Population 16,448 (2020).
Seltso (Bryansk region)
There are other settlements and objects with the same name
Population 16,368 (2020).
Pochep
Population 16,389 (2020).
Trubchevsk
Population 13,613 (2020).
Fokino (Bryansk region)
There are other settlements and objects with this name, see Fokino
Population 12,759 (2020).
Suraj
Population 10,728 (2020).
Mglin
Population 7,145 (2020).
Sevsk
Population 6,563 (2020).
Zlynka
Population 5,340 people (2020).
Regions and areas in Russia on the map + capitals
The table is alphabetical, it contains all the regions of the Russian Federation (Russia), which are united into a single form of government, which have common borders. Both land/by land and sea/by sea. The above regional regions are evenly present in all federal districts of the Russian Federation
According to the list, there are 47 regions of the Russian Federation + the Jewish Autonomous Region, the center of the region is the city of Birobidzhan. A detailed geographical diagram of their location in the world; for clarification, switch to the “MAP” or “SATELLITE” view type. It is easy to find the regions of central Russia, the nearest countries with the territories around them: western, eastern, northern, southern. Here on the map are 22 republics of the Russian Federation and their locations in the world
Center - Moscow
Now you know how many regions there are in the Russian Federation!
Urban settlements
- Navlya
Population 14,210 (2020).
- Klimovo
Population 12,743 (2020).
- Kletnya
Population 12,284 (2020).
- Elbow
Population 9,243 (2020).
- Suzemka
Population 8,554 (2020).
- White Shores
Population 8,450 (2020).
- Fire
Population 8,351 (2020).
- Komarichi
Population 7,714 (2020).
- Dubrovka
Population 7,046 people (2020).
- Red Mountain
Population 6,332 (2020).
- And so
Population 6,189 (2020).
- Lyubohna
Population 6,067 people (2020).
- Bolshoye Polpino
Population 5,985 (2020).
- White Birch
Population 5,555 (2020).
- Vygonichi
Population 5,006 people (2020).
- Bytosh
Population 4,379 (2020).
- Old
Population 4,323 (2020).
- Raditsa-Krylovka
Population 3,334 (2020).
- Rognedino
Population 2,856 (2020).
- Vyshkov
Population 2,673 (2020).
- Kokorevka
Population 1,694 (2020).
- Altuhovo
Population 1,608 people (2020).
- Ramasuha
Population 390 people (2020).
Subjects of the Russian Federation
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entertainment industry | 7.0 |
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see also
- Bryansk region
- Symbols and landmarks of the Bryansk region
- Cities of Russia
[ + ] Cities by regions of Russia | |
Cities of the North-West (NWFD) | St. Petersburg (and its cities) • Leningrad region (historical Staraya Ladoga) • Arkhangelsk region • Vologda region • Kaliningrad region • Karelia • Komi • Murmansk region • Nenets Autonomous Okrug • Pskov region |
Cities of the Volga region (Volga Federal District) | Bashkortostan • Volgograd region • Kalmykia • Kirov region • Mari El • Mordovia • Nizhny Novgorod region • Orenburg region • Penza region • Perm region • Samara region • Saratov region • Tatarstan • Udmurtia • Ulyanovsk region • Chuvashia |
Cities of Southern Russia (SFD) | Sevastopol (including Inkerman) • Republic of Crimea • Adygea • Astrakhan region • Krasnodar region • Rostov region |
Cities of the North Caucasus (NCFD) | Dagestan • Ingushetia • Kabardino-Balkaria • Karachay-Cherkessia • North Ossetia - Alania • Stavropol Territory • Chechen Republic |
Cities of the Urals (Ural Federal District) | Kurgan region • Sverdlovsk region • Tyumen region • Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug - Yugra • Chelyabinsk region • Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug |
Cities of Siberia (Siberian Federal District) | Altai Republic • Altai Territory • Irkutsk Region • Kemerovo Region • Krasnoyarsk Region • Novgorod Region • Novosibirsk Region • Omsk Region • Tomsk Region • Tyva • Khakassia |
Cities of the Far East (FEFD) | Amur Region • Buryatia • Jewish Autonomous Region • Trans-Baikal Territory • Kamchatka Territory • Magadan Region • Primorsky Territory • Sakha (Yakutia) • Sakhalin Region • Khabarovsk Territory • Chukotka Autonomous Region |
see also | Cities of the DPR, LPR, Transnistria, South Ossetia • Regions of Russia • Cities of Russia |
Administrative center (Regional center)
Russia is a federal state. This is defined in the Constitution of the Russian Federation. Russia includes 85 constituent entities of the Russian Federation that have equal rights. Sometimes they are simply called "regions". Thus, the Region, from the point of view of administrative division, is a subject of the Russian Federation.
From this point of view, the concept “Administrative” is synonymous. The subjects of the Russian Federation include: republics, territories, regions, cities of federal significance, autonomous regions, autonomous okrugs. Each territorial unit specified in the Constitution must have governing bodies. Their composition is determined by the Federal Law “On the general principles of organization of legislative (representative) and executive bodies of state power of the constituent entities of the Russian Federation” dated October 6, 1999 N 184-FZ.
In many cases, in the subjects of the Federation the administration acts as a kind of summary executive body. Thus, the concept of Administrative Center reflects the location of the regional governing body - the local administration.
Regions of Russia, alphabetical list
On December 1, 2005, the Perm region became part of the new Perm Territory, formed as a result of the merger of the region with the Komi-Permyak Autonomous Okrug following the results of a referendum held on March 7, 2003.
On July 1, 2007, the Kamchatka region became part of the new Kamchatka Territory, formed as a result of the merger of the region with the Koryak Autonomous Okrug following the results of a referendum held on October 23, 2005.
On March 1, 2008, the Chita region became part of the new Trans-Baikal Territory, formed as a result of the merger of the region with the Aginsky Buryat Autonomous Okrug following the results of a referendum held on March 11, 2007.
Population of regional centers of Russia
Listed above are the cities where a population numbering in the millions lives, as well as those that are the administrative centers of the respective regions.
There are a number of cities in the Russian Federation that are also the main ones, but they are home to less than one million people, these include:
- Krasnoyarsk;
- Saratov;
- Voronezh;
- Yaroslavl;
- Izhevsk;
- Krasnodar;
- Irkutsk;
- Ulyanovsk;
- Barnaul;
- Vladivostok.
This list can also include cities with a population of slightly more than 500 thousand people, although they are regional centers of Russia. These are the cities: Penza, Lipetsk, Orenburg, Astrakhan, Khabarovsk, Ryazan, Tyumen.
The smallest regional centers and some exceptions
Russia is a very large country, and not all of its territory has a high population density. This characteristic may even apply to administrative centers that are among the most developed. This is especially evident in the North Caucasus, as, for example, in the Chechen Republic. Thus, only 220 thousand people live in Grozny. And in the north of our country, where the Komi Republic is located, in the republican capital Syktyvkar, there are 230 thousand people.
This list also includes cities such as Blagoveshchensk, Veliky Novgorod, Yakutsk, Pskov, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk and Maykop.
As mentioned above, the largest cities in an administrative entity of a state are not always regional centers of Russia, but this is rather an exception to the rule. For example, the city of Novokuznetsk has long been the administrative center of the Kemerovo region. Only in 2015 the city of Kemerovo received this status.
Exceptions also include the Republic of Ingushetia, where the main city is Magas, with a population of 7 thousand people, while there is a larger city - Nazran with a population of 110 thousand people.
This list also includes the Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous Okrug with the administrative center of Khanty-Mansiysk and the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug, where the main city is Salekhard.