Ranked List According To Census
Rank (2010) |
Rank (2002) |
Federal subject | Population (2002 Census) |
Population (2010 Census, preliminary) |
% change |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
— | — | Russia | 145,166,731 | 142,856,536 | -1.59% |
1 | 1 | Federal city of Moscow | 10,382,754 | 11,503,501 | 10.79% |
2 | 2 | Moscow Oblast | 6,618,538 | 7,095,120 | 7.20% |
3 | 3 | Krasnodar Krai | 5,125,221 | 5,226,647 | 1.98% |
4 | 4 | Federal city of Saint Petersburg | 4,661,219 | 4,879,566 | 4.68% |
5 | 5 | Sverdlovsk Oblast | 4,486,214 | 4,297,747 | -4.20% |
6 | 6 | Rostov Oblast | 4,404,013 | 4,277,976 | -2.86% |
7 | 7 | Republic of Bashkortostan | 4,104,336 | 4,072,292 | -0.78% |
8 | 8 | Republic of Tatarstan | 3,779,265 | 3,786,488 | 0.19% |
9 | 9 | Chelyabinsk Oblast | 3,603,339 | 3,476,217 | -3.53% |
10 | 10 | Nizhny Novgorod Oblast | 3,524,028 | 3,310,597 | -6.06% |
11 | 11 | Samara Oblast | 3,239,737 | 3,215,532 | -0.75% |
12 | 21 | Republic of Dagestan | 2,576,531 | 2,910,249 | 12.95% |
13 | 12 | Krasnoyarsk Krai | 2,966,042 | 2,828,187 | -4.65% |
14 | 15 | Stavropol Krai | 2,735,139 | 2,786,281 | 1.87% |
15 | 13 | Kemerovo Oblast | 2,899,142 | 2,763,135 | -4.69% |
16 | 17 | Novosibirsk Oblast | 2,692,251 | 2,665,911 | -0.98% |
17 | 14 | Perm Krai | 2,819,421 | 2,635,276 | -6.53% |
18 | 16 | Volgograd Oblast | 2,699,223 | 2,610,161 | -3.30% |
19 | 18 | Saratov Oblast | 2,668,310 | 2,521,892 | -5.49% |
20 | 20 | Irkutsk Oblast | 2,581,705 | 2,428,750 | -5.92% |
21 | 19 | Altai Krai | 2,607,426 | 2,419,755 | -7.20% |
22 | 22 | Voronezh Oblast | 2,378,803 | 2,335,380 | -1.83% |
23 | 23 | Orenburg Oblast | 2,179,551 | 2,033,072 | -6.72% |
24 | 24 | Omsk Oblast | 2,079,220 | 1,977,665 | -4.88% |
25 | 25 | Primorsky Krai | 2,071,210 | 1,956,497 | -5.54% |
26 | 27 | Leningrad Oblast | 1,669,205 | 1,716,868 | 2.86% |
27 | 26 | Tula Oblast | 1,675,758 | 1,553,925 | -7.27% |
28 | 30 | Belgorod Oblast | 1,511,620 | 1,532,526 | 1.38% |
29 | 35 | Khanty–Mansi Autonomous Okrug | 1,432,817 | 1,532,243 | 6.94% |
30 | 28 | Udmurt Republic | 1,570,316 | 1,521,420 | -3.11% |
31 | 29 | Vladimir Oblast | 1,523,990 | 1,443,693 | -5.27% |
32 | 33 | Penza Oblast | 1,452,941 | 1,386,186 | -4.59% |
33 | 32 | Tver Oblast | 1,471,459 | 1,353,392 | -8.02% |
34 | 34 | Khabarovsk Krai | 1,436,570 | 1,343,869 | -6.45% |
35 | 31 | Kirov Oblast | 1,503,529 | 1,341,312 | -10.79% |
36 | 39 | Tyumen Oblast1 | 1,325,018 | 1,340,608 | 1.18% |
37 | 36 | Ulyanovsk Oblast | 1,382,811 | 1,292,799 | -6.51% |
38 | 37 | Bryansk Oblast | 1,378,941 | 1,278,217 | -7.30% |
39 | 38 | Yaroslavl Oblast | 1,367,398 | 1,272,468 | -6.94% |
40 | 49 | Chechen Republic | 1,103,686 | 1,268,989 | 14.98% |
41 | 40 | Chuvash Republic | 1,313,754 | 1,251,619 | -4.73% |
42 | 42 | Vologda Oblast | 1,269,568 | 1,202,444 | -5.29% |
43 | 41 | Arkhangelsk Oblast2 | 1,294,993 | 1,185,536 | -8.45% |
44 | 45 | Lipetsk Oblast | 1,213,499 | 1,173,513 | -3.30% |
45 | 44 | Ryazan Oblast | 1,227,910 | 1,154,114 | -6.01% |
46 | 43 | Kursk Oblast | 1,235,091 | 1,127,081 | -8.75% |
47 | 47 | Zabaykalsky Krai | 1,155,346 | 1,107,107 | -4.18% |
48 | 46 | Tambov Oblast | 1,178,443 | 1,091,994 | -7.34% |
49 | 48 | Ivanovo Oblast | 1,148,329 | 1,061,651 | -7.55% |
50 | 51 | Tomsk Oblast | 1,046,039 | 1,047,394 | 0.13% |
51 | 52 | Kaluga Oblast | 1,041,641 | 1,010,930 | -2.95% |
52 | 55 | Astrakhan Oblast | 1,005,276 | 1,010,073 | 0.48% |
53 | 50 | Smolensk Oblast | 1,049,574 | 985,537 | -6.10% |
54 | 56 | Republic of Buryatia | 981,238 | 972,021 | -0.94% |
55 | 58 | Sakha Republic | 949,280 | 958,528 | 0.97% |
56 | 57 | Kaliningrad Oblast | 955,281 | 941,873 | -1.40% |
57 | 53 | Kurgan Oblast | 1,019,532 | 910,807 | -10.66% |
58 | 54 | Komi Republic | 1,018,674 | 901,189 | -11.53% |
59 | 60 | Kabardino-Balkar Republic | 901,494 | 859,939 | -4.61% |
60 | 62 | Republic of Mordovia | 888,766 | 834,755 | -6.08% |
61 | 59 | Amur Oblast | 902,844 | 830,103 | -8.06% |
62 | 61 | Murmansk Oblast | 892,534 | 795,409 | -10.88% |
63 | 63 | Oryol Oblast | 860,262 | 786,935 | -8.52% |
64 | 68 | Republic of North Ossetia–Alania | 710,275 | 712,980 | 0.38% |
65 | 66 | Mari El Republic | 727,979 | 696,459 | -4.33% |
66 | 64 | Pskov Oblast | 760,810 | 673,423 | -11.49% |
67 | 65 | Kostroma Oblast | 736,641 | 667,562 | -9.38% |
68 | 67 | Republic of Karelia | 716,281 | 643,548 | -10.15% |
69 | 69 | Novgorod Oblast | 694,355 | 634,111 | -8.68% |
70 | 71 | Republic of Khakassia | 546,072 | 532,403 | -2.50% |
71 | 72 | Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug | 507,006 | 522,904 | 3.14% |
72 | 70 | Sakhalin Oblast | 546,695 | 497,973 | -8.91% |
73 | 75 | Karachay–Cherkess Republic | 439,470 | 478,859 | 8.96% |
74 | 74 | Republic of Adygea | 447,109 | 439,996 | -1.59% |
75 | 73 | Republic of Ingushetia | 467,294 | 412,529 | -11.72% |
76 | 76 | Kamchatka Krai | 358,801 | 322,079 | -10.23% |
77 | 77 | Tuva Republic | 305,510 | 307,930 | 0.79% |
78 | 78 | Republic of Kalmykia | 292,410 | 289,481 | -1.00% |
79 | 79 | Altai Republic | 202,947 | 206,168 | 1.59% |
80 | 80 | Jewish Autonomous Oblast | 190,915 | 176,558 | -7.52% |
81 | 81 | Magadan Oblast | 182,726 | 156,996 | -14.08% |
82 | 82 | Chukotka Autonomous Okrug | 53,824 | 50,526 | -6.13% |
83 | 83 | Nenets Autonomous Okrug | 41,546 | 42,090 | 1.31% |
^1 Data excludes Khanty–Mansi and Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrugs.
^2 Data excludes Nenets Autonomous Okrug.
Read more about this topic: List Of Federal Subjects Of Russia By Population
Famous quotes containing the words ranked and/or list:
“When I think of him, and his six sons, and his son-in-law, not to enumerate the others, enlisted for this fight, proceeding coolly, reverently, humanely to work, for months if not years, sleeping and waking upon it, summering and wintering the thought, without expecting any reward but a good conscience, while almost all America stood ranked on the other side,I say again that it affects me as a sublime spectacle.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“I am opposed to writing about the private lives of living authors and psychoanalyzing them while they are alive. Criticism is getting all mixed up with a combination of the Junior F.B.I.- men, discards from Freud and Jung and a sort of Columnist peep- hole and missing laundry list school.... Every young English professor sees gold in them dirty sheets now. Imagine what they can do with the soiled sheets of four legal beds by the same writer and you can see why their tongues are slavering.”
—Ernest Hemingway (18991961)