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The next census conducted in most of the territory of Western Ukraine (Eastern Galicia) was the Polish census of 1921, while the 1921 Czechoslovakia Census took place on the territory of the Zakarpattia Oblast. In 1930 another census took place in both regions as part of their respective national censuses that were conducted in the same year.
The final major resettlement from Ukraine took place in 1862–66 with 1142 people. In the census for 1926-7 there were 1,222,140 Ukrainians in the Kuban region, who made up 55% of the population of the area. Mapping of USSR 1926 Census including the Kuban region USSR Census 1926: Major nationalities of the Kuban region
The 1926 Soviet official census recorded the urban population as 5,373,553 and the rural population as 23,669,381 – a total of 29,042,934, however the borders of the administrative region of the Soviet Ukrainian SSR were noticeably different from those of the Reichskommissariat. In 1939, a new census reported the Ukrainian urban population as ...
The Kuban Rada was formed by Cossack delegates of the regional congress of representatives from the settlements of Kuban following the February Revolution of 1917. In November of the same year, it elected its own regional government from among the members, then declared the creation of the Kuban People's Republic on January 28, 1918. this state was centered around the city of Yekaterinodar ...
In the 1920s the administration of the Ukrainian SSR insisted in vain on reviewing the border between the Ukrainian Soviet Republics and the Russian Soviet Republic based on the 1926 First All-Union Census of the Soviet Union that showed that 4.5 millions of Ukrainians were living on Russian territories bordering Ukraine. [66]
Population of Ukraine from 1950 [23] [24] According to estimates by the State Statistics Service of Ukraine, the population of Ukraine (excluding Crimea) on 1 May 2021 was 41,442,615. [1] The country's population has been declining since the 1990s because of a high emigration rate, coupled with high death rates and low birth rates.
Source (census) Today part of: Soviet Ukraine 476,435 1926 Soviet census Ukraine: Soviet Belarus 97,498 1926 Soviet census Belarus: Soviet Russia 197,827 1926 Soviet census Russia: rest of the USSR 10,574 1926 Soviet census 3. Interwar Baltic states Ethnic Poles according to official census Source (census) Today part of: Lithuania 65,599 [Note 1]
The data fail to add up to the differences between the results of the 1926 Census and the 1937 Census. [140] Kulchytsky summarized the declassified Soviet statistics as showing a decrease of 538,000 people in the population of Soviet Ukraine between 1926 census (28,926,000) and 1937 census (28,388,000). [140]