Elizavetpol Governorate

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Settlement short description".Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for conflicting parameters".Expression error: Unexpected < operator. Script error: No such module "Sidebar". Script error: No such module "Sidebar". The Elizavetpol Governorate,Template:Efn also known after 1918 as the Ganja Governorate,Template:Efn was a province (guberniya) of the Caucasus Viceroyalty of the Russian Empire, with its capital in Yelisavetpol (present-day Ganja). The area of the governorate stretched Script error: No such module "convert". and was composed of 1,275,131 inhabitants in 1916. The Elizavetpol Governorate bordered the Erivan Governorate to the west, the Tiflis Governorate and Zakatal Okrug to the north, the Dagestan Oblast to the northeast, the Baku Governorate to the east, and Iran to the south.

Geography

The area of the governorate includes the southern slope of the main Caucasus range in the northeast, where Mount Bazardüzü and other peaks rise above the snow-line; the arid steppes beside the Kura river, reaching 1000 ft. of altitude in the west and sinking to 100–200 ft. in the east, where irrigation is necessary; and the northern slopes of the Transcaucasian escarpment and portions of the Armenian Highlands, which is intersected towards its western boundary, near Lake Sevan, by chains of mountains consisting of trachytes and various crystalline rocks.[1]

Elsewhere the country has the character of a plateau, 7,000 to 8,000 ft. high, deeply trenched by tributaries of the Aras. All varieties of climate are found in the snowclad peaks, Alpine meadows, and stony deserts of the high levels, to that of the hill slopes and of the arid Caspian steppes.[1]

History

Elizavetpol Governorate was created by the decree "On the transformation of the administration of the Caucasian and Transcaucasian region" dated December 9, 1867.[2] The province included the Elizavetpol uezd of the Tiflis Governorate, the Nukha and Shusha uezds of the Baku Governorate and part of the abolished Ordubad uezd.[3] By the same decree, the Kazakh and Zangezur uezds were formed as part of the province. In 1873, three new uezds were formed in the Governorate - Aresh, Jebrail and Jevanshir.[4] The governorate included lands of the former Ganja Khanate, Shaki Khanate, and Karabakh Khanate. It bordered with Baku Governorate, Tiflis Governorate, Erivan Governorate, Dagestan Oblast, and Persia.

From 1905, there were attempts by Armenian intelligentsia of the Russian Empire to separate the highland areas (commonly known as Mountainous Karabakh) from the rest of Elizavetpol into a zemstvo (self-governing rural community) province.

On the establishment of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic in May 1918, the Elizavetpol Governorate was renamed Ganja Governorate to de-Russify the region. The neighboring Democratic Republic of Armenia claimed the entirety of the western highland sections of the governorate which as a whole formed a small Armenian majority, however, Armenian control did not exceed the western parts of Zangezur, Kazakh and Karabakh. In 1919, the entirety of Karabakh south of the Murov Range with British support was separated into the Karabakh General Governorship, following the subjugation of the Karabakh Armenian Council.

The governorate provincial system was abolished in the early 1920s after the Sovietization of Azerbaijan. In early 1921—after the Sovietization of Armenia—a Dashnak Armenian revolt that spawned in Yerevan spread to the Zangezur uezd, becoming known as the Republic of Mountainous Armenia. The rebels led by Garegin Nzhdeh finally departed Zangezur in the summer of 1921 after receiving guarantees the district would remain part of Soviet Armenia.

In the present-day, the territory of the former Elizavetpol Governorate forms the bulk of western Azerbaijan and adjacent areas of northeastern and southeastern Armenia.

Administrative divisions

The counties (uezds) of the Elizavetpol Governorate in 1917 were as follows:Template:Sfn

Name Administrative centre Population Area
1897[5] 1916[6] 1897 1916
Aresh uezd (Template:Langx) Aresh (Agdash) 528 --- 67,277 99,400 Script error: No such module "convert".
Jevanshir uezd (Template:Langx) Terter (Tartar) 752 --- 72,719 75,730 Script error: No such module "convert".
Elizavetpol uezd (Template:Langx) Yelisavetpol (Ganja) 33,625 57,731 162,788 272,477 Script error: No such module "convert".
Zangezur uezd (Template:Langx) Gerusy (Goris) 1,450 2,201 137,871 226,398 Script error: No such module "convert".
Kazakh uezd (Template:Langx) Kazakh (Qazax) 1,769 --- 112,074 137,049 Script error: No such module "convert".
Karyagino uezd (Template:Langx) Karyagino (Fuzuli) --- 66,360 89,584 Script error: No such module "convert".
Jebrayil 520 ---
Nukha uezd (Template:Langx) Nukha (Shaki) 24,734 52,243 120,555 185,748 Script error: No such module "convert".
Shusha uezd (Template:Langx) Shusha 25,881 43,869 138,771 188,745 Script error: No such module "convert".

Demographics

The 1886 population estimate was 728,943, living in 3 cities (Elizavetpol, Nukha, and Shusha) and 1521 villages.[7] According to 1886 statistics reported in Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary,[7] the Orthodox Christians constituted 0.21% of the Governorate's population, and various sektanty ("sectarians") around 1% (~7,300 people). This means that most of the ethnic Russians in the governorate at the time (1.11% of the Governorate's 728,943 population in 1886) were members of various sectarian communities such as Doukhobors and Molokans.

Russian Empire Census

According to the Russian Empire Census, the Elizavetpol Governorate had a population of 878,415 on 28 January [O.S. 15 January] 1897, including 34,776 men and 22,702 women. The majority of the population indicated TatarTemplate:Caucasian Tatars to be their mother tongue, with a significant Armenian speaking minority.[8]

Linguistic composition of the Elizavetpol Governorate in 1897[8]
Language Native speakers %
TatarTemplate:Efn 534,086 60.80
Armenian 292,188 33.26
Kyurin 14,503 1.65
Russian 14,146 1.61
Udi 7,040 0.80
German 3,194 0.36
Kurdish 3,042 0.35
Belarusian 2,868 0.33
Tat 1,753 0.20
Georgian 1,239 0.14
Ukrainian 861 0.10
Polish 616 0.07
Kazi-Kumukh 581 0.07
Greek 558 0.06
Avar-Andean 461 0.05
Persian 338 0.04
Jewish 185 0.02
Lithuanian 116 0.01
Romanian 106 0.01
Other 534 0.06
TOTAL 878,415 100.00
Religious composition of the Elizavetpol Governorate in 1897[9]
Faith Male Female Both
Number %
Muslim 308,927 243,895 552,822 62.93
Armenian Apostolic 155,257 143,428 298,685 34.00
Eastern Orthodox 7,150 3,279 10,429 1.19
Old Believer 4,907 4,600 9,507 1.08
Judaism 1,013 1,017 2,030 0.23
Lutheran 1,605 1,616 3,221 0.37
Roman Catholic 685 183 868 0.10
Baptist 382 329 711 0.08
Armenian Catholic 68 37 105 0.01
Reformed 6 9 15 0.00
Anglican 5 6 11 0.00
Buddhist 1 1 2 0.00
Karaite 0 1 1 0.00
Mennonite 1 0 1 0.00
Other Christian denomination 1 2 3 0.00
Other non-Christian denomination 4 0 4 0.00
TOTAL 480,012 398,403 878,415 100.00

Linguistic composition of uezds in the Tiflis Governorate in 1897[10]

Uezd Tatar Armenian Lezgian Russian Udi TOTAL
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
Aresh 47,133 70.06 13,822 20.54 5,997 8.91 155 0.23 4 0.01 67,277
Jevanshir 52,041 71.56 19,551 26.89 84 0.12 206 0.28 0 0.00 72,719
Elizavetpol 103,970 63.87 43,040 26.44 246 0.15 7,224 4.44 4 0.00 162,788
Zangezur 71,206 51.65 63,622 46.15 7 0.01 841 0.61 0 0.00 137,871
Kazakh 64,101 57.2 43,555 38.86 4 0.00 3,373 3.01 0 0.00 112,074
Nukha 83,578 69.33 18,899 15.68 8,740 7.25 196 0.16 7,030 5.83 120,555
Shusha 62,868 45.3 73,953 53.29 1 0.00 1,442 1.04 2 0.00 138,771
TOTAL 534,086 60.8 292,188 33.26 15,084 1.72 14,146 1.61 7,040 0.8 878,415

Kavkazskiy kalendar

According to the 1917 publication of Kavkazskiy kalendar, the Elizavetpol Governorate had a population of 1,275,131 on 14 January [O.S. 1 January] 1916, including 676,377 men and 598,754 women, 1,213,626 of whom were the permanent population, and 61,505 were temporary residents.Template:Sfn

Nationality Urban Rural TOTAL
Number % Number % Number %
Shia MuslimsTemplate:Efn 66,500 42.62 411,434 36.77 477,934 37.48
Armenians 45,254 29.00 373,605 33.38 418,859 32.85
Sunni MuslimsTemplate:Efn 34,405 22.05 270,726 24.19 305,131 23.93
Russians 8,111 5.20 28,666 2.56 36,777 2.88
North Caucasians 493 0.32 10,673 0.95 11,166 0.88
Asiatic Christians 58 0.04 10,808 0.97 10,866 0.85
Other Europeans 367 0.24 7,048 0.63 7,415 0.58
Kurds 84 0.05 3,718 0.33 3,802 0.30
Jews 406 0.26 1,706 0.15 2,112 0.17
Georgians 366 0.23 664 0.06 1,030 0.08
Roma 0 0.00 39 0.00 39 0.00
TOTAL 156,044 100.00 1,119,087 100.00 1,275,131 100.00

Known governors

  • Fokion Bulatov, 1868–1876
  • Alexander Nakashidze, 1880–1897
  • Ivan Kireyev, 1897–1900
  • Nikolai Lutsau, 1900–1905
  • Yegor Baranovsky, 1905 (acting)
  • Alexander Kalachev, 1905–1907
  • Samkalov, 1907–1908
  • Georgi Kovalev, 1908–1916
  • Mikhail Poyarkov, 1916–1917[11]

Notes

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References

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  2. Полное собрание законов Российской империи. Собр. 2-е. Т. XLII. Ч. 2. Ст. 45259.
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  11. Lands of Ganja Template:Webarchive

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Bibliography

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