1926 Soviet census



The 1926 Soviet census (Всесоюзная перепись населения, All-Union census) took place in December 1926. It was the first complete all-Union census in the Soviet Union and was an important tool in the state-building of the USSR, provided the government with important ethnographic information, and helped in the transformation from Imperial Russian society to Soviet society. The decisions made by ethnographers in determining the ethnicity (narodnost) of individuals, whether in the Asiatic or European parts of the former Russian Empire, through the drawing up of the "List of Ethnicities of the USSR", and how borders were drawn in mixed areas had a significant influence on Soviet policies. Ethnographers, statisticians, and linguists were drawing up questionnaires and list of ethnicities for the census. However, they also had the more ambitious goal of deliberately transforming their identities according to the principles of Marxism–Leninism. As Anastas Mikoyan put it, the Soviet Union was "creating and organising new nations".

Previous censuses
The first all-Union census was preceded by two partial censuses carried out by the Bolsheviks after their seizure of power in Russia. The first, the general census of 1920, took place during the Civil War and the Soviet-Polish War. It was thus unable to deal with the Crimea, much of Transcaucasia, Ukraine, Byelorussia, Far Eastern, Siberian, and Central Asian parts of the Soviet Union as well as with its Far Northern parts. Yet it is worth to note that there was only 15,000,000 population increase between 1920 and 1926 constituting in some 131,304,931 people according to the TIME magazine while is still undisclosed in Russian history. The 1923 Census was restricted to cities. Prior to the Russian Revolution, the only Russian Empire Census was done in 1897.

Methodology
By classifying the population in terms of narodnosti (nationalities)—as opposed to tribe or clan—along with policies which gave these nations land, resources, and rights, experts and local elites were encouraged to interfere with the information collecting.

The Georgian and Ukrainian delegations each had concerns with the formulation of narodnosti proposed in the census. The Georgian delegation proposed classifying the population in terms of natsionalʹnosti, as they considered it better suited for developed nations like Georgians. Ukrainian representatives preferred to use native language for classification instead of nationality. These protests did not lead to changes.

Responses to the question of nationality were at times reevaluated (changed) by census takers or later by state analysts for "correctness", as it was believed that some people would "confuse" nationality with such other categories as place of residence, native language, or clan.

List of ethnicities
This list, called, vol. 7, , Moscow 1927, was developed by the Central Statistical Administration of the USSR. In preparation to the census


 * 1) Russian – 77 791 124
 * 2) Ukrainian – 31 194 976
 * 3) Belarusian – 4 738 923
 * 4) Polish – 782 334
 * 5) Czech
 * 6) Slovak
 * 7) Serb
 * 8) Bulgarian – 111 296
 * 9) Latvian – 151 410
 * 10) Lithuanian – 41 463
 * 11) Latgalian
 * 12) Samogitian (Zhmud)
 * 13) German – 1 238 549
 * 14) British
 * 15) Swedish
 * 16) Dutch
 * 17) Italian
 * 18) French
 * 19) Romanian – 278 903
 * 20) Moldavians – 278 903
 * 21) Greek – 213 765
 * 22) Albanian (Arnaut)
 * 23) Jewish (Ashkenazi) – 2,599,973
 * 24) Crimean Jewish – 6,383
 * 25) Mountain Jewish (Dag Chufut) – 25,974
 * 26) Georgian Jewish – 21,471
 * 27) Bukharan Jewish (Dzhugur) – 18,698
 * 28) Karaim – 8,324
 * 29) Finnish
 * 30) Leningrad Finnish (Chukhontsy)
 * 31) Karelian
 * 32) Tavastian
 * 33) Estonian – 154 666
 * 34) Vepsian (Chud)
 * 35) Vod (Vote)
 * 36) Izhorian (Ingrian)
 * 37) Kven
 * 38) Lopars (Sami people)
 * 39) Zyrian
 * 40) Permyak
 * 41) Udmurt (Votiak)
 * 42) Besermyan
 * 43) Mari (Cheremis)
 * 44) Mordva (Moksha, Erzya, Teryukhan, Karatai)
 * 45) Magyar (Hungarian)
 * 46) Gagauz
 * 47) Chuvash – 1 117 419
 * 48) Tatar – 2 916 536
 * 49) Mishar (Meshcheriak)
 * 50) Bashkir – 713 693
 * 51) Nagaybak
 * 52) Nogai
 * 53) Gypsy
 * 54) Kalmyk
 * 55) Mongol
 * 56) Buryat
 * 57) Sart-Kalmyk
 * 58) Mansi (Vogul)
 * 59) Khanty (Ostyak)
 * 60) Selkup (Ostyak-Samoyed)
 * 61) Nenets (Samoyed)
 * 62) Yurak
 * 63) Soyot (Uriankhai)
 * 64) Barabin (Barbara Tartar)
 * 65) Bukharan (Bukharlyk)
 * 66) Chernevyy Tatar (Tubalar, Tuba-Kizhi)
 * 67) Altai (Altai-Kizhi, Mountain or White Kalmyk)
 * 68) Teleut
 * 69) Telengit (Telengut)
 * 70) Kumandin (Lebedin, Ku-Kohzi)
 * 71) Shors
 * 72) Kharagas (Tuba, Kharagaz)
 * 73) Kızıl (Kyzyl)
 * 74) Kachin
 * 75) Sagai
 * 76) Koybal
 * 77) Beltir
 * 78) Dolgan (Dolgan-Iakut)
 * 79) Yakut (Sakha, Urangkhai-Sakha) – 240 709
 * 80) Tungus (Ovenk, Murchen)
 * 81) Lamut
 * 82) Orochon
 * 83) Golds (Nanai people)
 * 84) Olchi (Mangun, Ulchi)
 * 85) Negidal (Negda, Eleke Beye)
 * 86) Orochi
 * 87) Udegei (Ude)
 * 88) Orok
 * 89) Manegir - 59 persons. A former division of Evenks. They lived along the Kumara River, hence an alternative designation, "Kumarchen"
 * 90) Samogir (Самогиры), Nanai people Tungusic people
 * 91) Manchurian
 * 92) Chukchi
 * 93) Koryaks
 * 94) Kamchadal (Itel'men)
 * 95) Gilyak (Nivkhi)
 * 96) Yukagir
 * 97) Chuvan
 * 98) Aleut
 * 99) Eskimo
 * 100) Enisei (Ket, Enisei Ostiak)
 * 101) Aino (Ainu, Kuchi)
 * 102) Chinese
 * 103) Korean
 * 104) Japanese
 * 105) Georgian (Kartvelian) – 1 821 184
 * 106) Ajar
 * 107) Megeli (Mingrelian)
 * 108) Laz (Chan)
 * 109) Svan (Svanetian)
 * 110) Abkhaz (Abkhazian) – 56 957
 * 111) Cherkess (Adyghe)
 * 112) Beskesek-Abaza (Abazin)
 * 113) Kabard
 * 114) Ubykh
 * 115) Chechen (Nakh, Nakhchuo)
 * 116) Ingush (Galgai, Kist)
 * 117) Batsbi (Tsova-Tish, Batswa)
 * 118) Maistvei (Майствеи), combined into Chechen people
 * 119) Lezgin
 * 120) Tabasaran
 * 121) Agul
 * 122) Archi
 * 123) Rutul (Mykhad)
 * 124) Tsakhur
 * 125) Khinalug
 * 126) Dzhek (Dzhektsy)
 * 127) Khaput (Gaputlin, Khaputlin)
 * 128) Kryz
 * 129) Budukh (Budug)
 * 130) Udin
 * 131) Dargin
 * 132) Kubachin (Ughbug)
 * 133) Lak (Kazi-Kumukh)
 * 134) Avar (Avartsy, Khunzal)
 * 135) Andi (Andiitsy, Kwanally)
 * 136) Botlog (Buikhatli)
 * 137) Godoberi
 * 138) Karatai
 * 139) Akhvakh
 * 140) Bagulal (Kvanandin)
 * 141) Chamalal
 * 142) Tindi (Tindal, Idera)
 * 143) Didoi (Tsez)
 * 144) Kvarshi
 * 145) Kapuchin (Bezheta)
 * 146) Khunzal (Enzebi, Nakhad)
 * 147) Armenian – 1 567 568
 * 148) Hemshin
 * 149) Arab
 * 150) Aisor (Assyrian, Syriac, Chaldean)
 * 151) Kaytak (Karakaitak)
 * 152) Bosha (Karachi, Armenian Gypsy)
 * 153) Ossetian – 272 272
 * 154) Kurd
 * 155) Yazid
 * 156) Talysh
 * 157) Tat
 * 158) Persian
 * 159) Karachai
 * 160) Kumyk
 * 161) Balkar (Mountain Tartar, Malkar)
 * 162) Karakalpak
 * 163) Turk
 * 164) Ottoman Turk (Osmanli)
 * 165) Samarkand and Fergana Turk
 * 166) Turkmen – 763 940
 * 167) Kirgiz (Kyrgyz, Kara-Kirgiz)
 * 168) Karakalpak – 146 317
 * 169) Kypchak
 * 170) Kashgar
 * 171) Taranchi
 * 172) Kazakh (Kirgiz-Kazakh, Kirgiz-Kaisak) – 3 968 289
 * 173) Kurama
 * 174) Uzbek – 3 904 622
 * 175) Dungan
 * 176) Afghan
 * 177) Tajik – 978 680
 * 178) Vakhan
 * 179) Ishkashimi people
 * 180) Shugnan
 * 181) Yagnob
 * 182) Yazgul
 * 183) Iranian
 * 184) Jemshid
 * 185) Beludji
 * 186) Berber
 * 187) Khazara (Hazaras)
 * 188) Hindu (Indian)
 * 189) Other Ethnicities
 * 190) Ethnicities not noted or noted inexactly
 * a) Tavlin
 * b) Kryashen
 * c) Teptyar
 * d) Uigar
 * e) Oirot
 * f) Khakass
 * g) Others

191. Foreign subjects

Composition of the USSR
For the Transcaucasian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic, Georgians were considered the Titular Nationality.

Population by republics

 * undefined – 100,891,244 (urban 17,442,655)
 * Kazakh ASSR – 6,503,006 (urban 539,249)
 * Kirghiz ASSR – 993,004 (urban 121,080)
 * undefined – 29,018,187 (urban 5,373,553)
 * Moldavian ASSR – 572,114
 * undefined – 5,272,801 (urban 1,102,218)
 * Tajik ASSR – 827,200
 * undefined – 4,983,240 (urban 847,830)
 * undefined
 * undefined – 2,666,494 (urban 594,221)
 * undefined – 2,314,571 (urban 649,557)
 * undefined – 880,464 (urban 167,098)
 * undefined – 1,000,914 (urban 136,982)
 * Total in the Soviet Union – 147,027,915 (urban 26,314,114)

Administrative divisions of Ukraine (1925–1932)
The census aggregated census data for several okruhas of Soviet Ukraine in a larger subdivision called a pidraion or podraion (подрайон; підрайон). There were six such subdivisions.

Subdistricts

 * Polissia Subdistrict (Poliskyi pidraion)
 * Chernihiv Okruha
 * Hlukhiv Okruha
 * Konotop Okruha
 * Korosten Okruha
 * Volyn Okruha
 * Right-bank Subdistrict (Pravoberezhnyi pidraion)
 * Bila Tserkva Okruha
 * Berdychiv Okruha
 * Kamianets Okruha
 * Kyiv Okruha
 * Mohyliv Okruha
 * Proskuriv Okruha
 * Tulchyn Okruha
 * Uman Okruha
 * Shevchenko Okruha
 * Shepetivka Okruha
 * Vinnytsia Okruha
 * Left-bank Subdistrict (Livoberezhnyi pidraion)
 * Izyum Okruha
 * Kharkiv Okruha
 * Kremenchuk Okruha
 * Kupiansk Okruha
 * Lubny Okruha
 * Nizhyn Okruha
 * Poltava Okruha
 * Pryluky Okruha
 * Romny Okruha
 * Sumy Okruha
 * Steppe Subdistrict (Stepovyi pidraion)
 * Zinovievsk Okruha
 * Mariupol Okruha
 * Melitopol Okruha
 * Mykolaiv Okruha
 * Odesa Okruha
 * Pervomaisk Okruha
 * Starobilsk Okruha (oscillated)
 * Kherson Okruha
 * Moldavian ASSR
 * Dnipropetrovsk Subdistrict (Dnipropetrovskyi pidraion)
 * Dnipropetrovsk Okruha
 * Zaporizhzhia Okruha
 * Kryvyi Rih Okruha
 * Mining Industrial Subdistrict (Hirnychopromyslovyi pidraion)
 * Artemivsk Okruha
 * Luhansk Okruha
 * Stalino Okruha