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Russians in Ukraine

Russians in Ukraine
Ukrainian: Росіяни в Україні
Rosiyany v Ukrayini
Russian: Русские в Украине
Russkiye в Ukrainye
Total population
(In the 2001 Ukrainian census, 8,334,100 identified themselves as ethnic Russians
(17.3% of the population of Ukraine).)
Regions with significant populations
Donbass, Crimea
Flag of Donetsk Oblast.svg Donetsk Oblast 1,844,399 (2001)
Flag of Crimea.svg Crimea (w/o Sevastopol) 1,180,441 (2001)
Flag of Luhansk Oblast.svg Luhansk Oblast 991,825 (2001)
Flag of Kharkiv Oblast.svg Kharkiv Oblast 742,025 (2001)
Flag of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.svg Dnipropetrovsk Oblast 627,531 (2001)
Flag of Odesa Oblast.svg Odessa Oblast 508,537 (2001)
Flag of Zaporizhia Oblast.svg Zaporizhia Oblast 476,748 (2001)
Flag of Kyiv Kurovskyi.svg Kyiv 337,323 (2001)
Flag of Sevastopol.svg Sevastopol 269,953 (2001)
Ukraine other regions of Ukraine 1,355,359 (2001)
Languages
Russian (95.9%, 2001) • Ukrainian (54.8%, 2001)
Related ethnic groups
Slavic people (East Slavs, West Slavs, South Slavs)

Russians in Ukraine (Ukrainian: Росіяни в Україні, Rosiyany v Ukrayini; Russian: Русские на Украине, Russkiye na Ukrainye) — the largest ethnic minority in the country, which community forms the largest single Russian diaspora in the world. In the 2001 Ukrainian census, 8,334,100 identified as ethnic Russians (17.3% of the population of Ukraine), this is the combined figure for persons originating from outside of Ukraine and the native population declaring Russian ethnicity.

Ethnic Russians live throughout Ukraine. They comprise a notable fraction of the overall population in the east and south, a significant minority in the center, and larger minority in the west.

The west and the center of the country feature a higher percentage of Russians in cities and industrial centers and much smaller percentage in the overwhelmingly Ukrainophone rural areas. Due to the concentration of the Russians in the cities, as well as for historic reasons, most of the largest cities in the center and the south-east of the country (including Kiev where Russians amount to 13.1% of the population) remained largely Russophone as of 2003.

Traditionally mixed Russo-Ukrainian populated territories are mainly historic Novorossiya (New Russia) and Sloboda Ukraine - now both split between the Russian Federation and Ukraine.

Russians constitute the majority in the Crimea (71.7% in Sevastopol and 58,5% in the Autonomous republic of Crimea), the southern peninsula which the Soviet government transferred from the Russian SFSR to the Ukrainian SSR in 1954.


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