Yekaterinoslav Viceroyalty

Summary

The Yekaterinoslav Viceroyalty[a] was an administrative-territorial unit (namestnichestvo) of the Russian Empire, which was created on 26 March 1783 by merging Novorossiya Governorate and Azov Governorate. On 31 December 1796, it was incorporated into re-established Novorossiya Governorate.

Yekaterinoslav Viceroyalty
Екатеринославское наместничество
Viceroyalty of Russian Empire
1783–1796
Coat of arms of Yekaterinoslav
Coat of arms

Map of 1792
CapitalKremenchug (1783), Yekaterinoslav (1789-1796)
History 
• Established
March 26 1783
• Disestablished
December 31 1796
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Novorossiya Governorate
Azov Governorate
Don Host Oblast
Novorossiya Governorate
Yekaterinoslav Governorate
Today part ofUkraine
Russia

Composition edit

The Viceroyalty was divided into counties known as uyezds. There were around 15 counties.

Former Novorossiysk Governorate edit

  • Poltava Province
    • Kremenchuk county (capital)
    • Kobelyaki county (previously Novye Sanzhary county)
    • Poltava county
  • Yelizavetgrad Province
    • Yelizavetgrad county
    • Olviopol county (previously Yekaterinine county)
    • Petrikovka county (previously Kryukov county)
  • Nikopol Province (previously Slaviansk Province)
    • Krivoy Rog county (previously Ingul county)
    • Nikopol county (previously Slaviansk county)
    • Novye Kodaki county (previously Saksangan county)
  • Kherson Province
    • Kazykermen county
    • Novopavlovka county
    • Kherson county

Former Azov Governorate (II) edit

  • Bakhmut county
  • Aleksandrovsk county (New Dnieper fortification line and portion of Kalmius Palatinate)
  • Yekaterinine county (Samar Palatinate)
  • Marienpol county
  • Natalkov county
  • Pavlov county (main part of Kalmius Palatinate)
  • Taganrog county
  • Tor county
  • Tsarychan county (Orel and Protovcha palatinates and Donets pikers regiment)

Viceroyalty governors edit

Governor-General (Viceroy) edit

Viceroyalty governors edit

  • 1783—1784 — Timofei Tutomlin
  • 1784—1788 — Ivan Sinelnikov
  • 1789—1794 — Vasiliy Kakhovskiy
  • 1794—15.12.1796 — Joseph Horvat

References edit

  1. ^
    • Russian: Екатеринославское наместничество, romanizedYekaterinoslavskoye namestnichestvo
    • Ukrainian: Катеринославське намісництво, romanizedKaterynoslavske namisnytsvo

See also edit