The 1959 Soviet census conducted in January 1959 was the first post-World War II census held in the Soviet Union.[1]
Background
editFor a decade after World War II, there were no new population statistics released by the Soviet Union,[2] and a proposal for a new Soviet census for 1949 was rejected by Soviet leader Joseph Stalin.[3] During this time, most Western experts estimated that the population of the Soviet Union was between 215 and 220 million people, but in June 1956 (after Stalin's death), the Soviet government announced that the country's population at that point was only 200,200,000.[2]
Results
editThe new census announced the Soviet Union's population to be 208,826,650,[4] an increase of almost forty million from the results of the last (disputed) census from 1939.[5] A majority of this population increase was due to the Soviet territorial expansion of the 1939–1945 time period, rather than due to natural population growth.[6] The deficit of men to women in the total Soviet population massively increased between 1939 and 1959, in large part due to World War II.[6] The Soviet Union acquired some additional territories (after its 1939 census) in 1939–1945 in what is now Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova, the Baltic republics, Karelia, Tuva, and Kaliningrad Oblast. The Soviet Union was just 33% urban in 1939, but urbanized rapidly to become almost half (48%) urban in 1959.[7]
The 1959 Soviet Union census reported populations in 126 nationality (ethnic group) categories, in comparison to only 97 categories in the 1939 census.[8][9] Ethnic Russians still made up a majority of the Soviet population in 1959,[4] but their percentage was smaller than in 1939 (again, partly due to the acquisition of mainly non-Russian territories in 1939–1945).[5] Despite the acquisition of additional territories between these censuses, the Soviet Jewish population in 1959 (almost 2.3 million) was only about 75% of what it was in 1939, at least in large part due to the Holocaust.[4][5][10] The populations of the Baltic Soviet Socialist Republics (which were heavily affected by World War II) did not change much between 1939[11] and 1959, with Lithuania actually experiencing a population decline during this time period.[6] During the same time, the population of the Russian SFSR (which was heavily affected by World War II) increased by less than ten percent.[6] The population increase in Ukraine and Byelorussia between 1939 and 1959 was completely or almost completely due to the Soviet territorial expansions of 1939–1940.[6] Without these territorial expansions, Ukraine's population would have only barely increased and Belarus's population would have actually decreased between 1939 and 1959.[6] The Central Asian and Caucasian Soviet Socialist Republics experienced large population increases between 1939 and 1959 despite the fact that they did not acquire any new territories during this time period.[6]
This census is also noteworthy as being the first census to classify Brest Region population as Byelorussians.
City ranking
edit- Moscow – 5,045,905
- Leningrad – 3,321,196
- Kiev – 1,104,334
- Gor’ky – 941,962
- Kharkiv – 934,136
- Tashkent – 911,930
- Novosibirsk – 885,045
- Kuybyshev – 806,356
- Sverdlovsk – 778,602
- Stalino – 704,821
- Tbilisi – 694,664
- Chelyabinsk – 689,049
- Odessa – 667,182
- Dnepropetrovsk – 661,547
- Baku – 652,507
- Kazan – 646,806
- Perm – 629,118
- Rostov-on-Don – 599,542
- Stalingrad – 593,844
- Omsk – 581,108
- Riga – 580,423
- Ufa – 546,878
- Minsk – 509,500
- Yerevan – 509,340
Ethnic groups
edit- Russians – 114,113,579
- Ukrainians – 37,252,930
- Byelorussians – 7,913,488
- Uzbeks – 6,015,416
- Tatars – 4,917,991
- Kazakhs – 3,621,610
- Azerbaijanis – 2,939,728
- Armenians – 2,786,912
- Georgians – 2,691,950
- Lithuanians – 2,326,094
- Jews – 2,266,334
- Moldovans – 2,214,139
- Germans – 1,619,655
- Chuvash people – 1,469,766
- Latvians – 1,399,539
- Tajiks – 1,396,939
- Poles – 1,380,282
- Mordvins – 1,285,116
- Turkmens – 1,001,585
- Bashkirs – 989,040
- Estonians – 988,616
- Kyrgyz people – 968,659
References
edit- ^ "Russ Announce Plan for a Census in 1959". The Milwaukee Journal. Moscow, USSR (now Moscow, Russia). February 8, 1957. p. 34. Retrieved July 1, 2013.
- ^ a b "Soviet Union's Population Announced As 200,200,000". Toledo Blade. Moscow, USSR (now Moscow, Russia). June 8, 1956. p. 14. Retrieved July 1, 2013.
- ^ Tolts, Mark. "The Failure of Demographic Statistics: A Soviet Response to Population Troubles". Academia.edu. Retrieved 2013-06-14.
- ^ a b c "Демоскоп Weekly – Приложение. Справочник статистических показателей". Demoscope.ru. Retrieved 2013-06-14.
- ^ a b c "Демоскоп Weekly – Приложение. Справочник статистических показателей". Demoscope.ru. Retrieved 2013-06-14.
- ^ a b c d e f g Selegen, Galina (July 1960). "The First Report on the Recent Population Census in the Soviet Union" (PDF). Population Studies. 14 (1). London, England, United Kingdom: Population Investigation Committee: 17–27. doi:10.1080/00324728.1960.10406037. Retrieved July 1, 2013.
- ^ Wädekin, Karl-Eugen (October 1966). "Internal migration and the flight from the land in the USSR, 1939–1959". Soviet Studies. 18 (2). Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom: University of Glasgow: 131–152. doi:10.1080/09668136608410523. JSTOR 149517.
- ^ "Демоскоп Weekly – Приложение. Справочник статистических показателей". Demoscope.ru. 2007-05-27. Retrieved 2013-06-14.
- ^ The nationality categories reported in the census were based on a recoding from verbatim responses to a question on nationality. Census respondents were not provided with a list to choose from. Instead they simply were asked what is their nationality, as an open-ended question. See Brian D. Silver, "The Ethnic and Language Dimensions in Russian and Soviet Censuses," pp. 70–97 in Research Guide to Russian and Soviet Censuses, Ralph S. Clem, Ed., Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY, 1986, pp. 70–97.
- ^ "Russia (Former USSR): Virtual Jewish History Tour". Jewishvirtuallibrary.org. 1917-03-16. Retrieved 2013-07-14.
- ^ "OSS Report on Wartime Population Changes in the Baltic [1939–1944]". Lituanus.org. Retrieved 2013-06-14.