List of cities in Odesa Oblast

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There are 19 populated places in Odesa Oblast, Ukraine, that have been officially granted city status (Ukrainian: місто, romanized: misto) by the Verkhovna Rada, the country's parliament.[2] Settlements with more than 10,000 people are eligible for city status, although the status is typically also granted to settlements of historical or regional importance.[3][4][5] As of 5 December 2001, the date of the first and only official census in the country since independence,[a] the most populous city in the oblast was the regional capital, Odesa, with a population of 1,029,049 people, while the least populous city was Teplodar, with 8,830 people.[6][7] After the enactment of decommunization laws, two cities within the oblast were renamed in 2016 for their former names' connection to people, places, events, and organizations associated with the Soviet Union.[8][9] The renamed cities Chornomorsk and Podilsk were previously named Illichivsk and Kotovsk, respectively.[10] In 2024, following the passage of derussification laws, the city of Yuzhne was renamed Pivdenne.[11]

Map of Odesa Oblast in Ukraine with post-2020 administrative divisions
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
List of cities in Odesa Oblast
Location of cities in Odesa Oblast[1]

From independence in 1991 to 2020, nine cities in the oblast were designated as cities of regional significance (municipalities), which had self-government under city councils, while the oblast's remaining ten cities were located amongst twenty-six raions (districts) as cities of district significance, which are subordinated to the governments of the raions.[12][13][7] On 18 July 2020, an administrative reform abolished and merged the oblast's raions and cities of regional significance into seven new, expanded raions.[3][14] The seven raions that make up the oblast are Berezivka, Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi, Bolhrad, Izmail, Odesa, Podilsk, and Rozdilna.[15]

One city in the oblast, the regional capital Odesa, was awarded by Soviet officials with the honorary title Hero City of Ukraine in 1965 for its resistance to the Axis invasion of the Soviet Union during World War II; the title was renewed in 2022 by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.[16][17] The city has also been recognized by UNESCO as one of Ukraine's eight World Heritage Sites since 25 January 2023.[18][19][20] Due to Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, since 24 February 2022, the oblast's Black Sea ports of Chornomorsk, Odesa, and Pivdennyi Port (located close to Pivdenne),[21][22][23] together with its Danube river ports of Izmail, Reni, and Ust-Danube (located in Vylkove and Kiliia),[24][b] have served as the primary route for Ukraine's international shipping.[25][26][27] Frequent Russian airstrikes have inflicted significant damage to cities in the oblast,[28] particularly Odesa,[29][30] the historic center of which was added on UNESCO's List of World Heritage in Danger immediately following its recognition.[20][31]

List of cities

Photo of Odesa, capital and most populous city in Odesa Oblast
Odesa, capital and most populous city in Odesa Oblast[2][32]
Photo of Izmail, the oblast's second most populous city and a major Ukrainian city on the Danube
Izmail, the oblast's second most populous city and a major Ukrainian city on the Danube[2][33]
Photo of Chornomorsk, a key Black Sea port city and third most populous city in the oblast
Chornomorsk, a key Black Sea port city and third most populous city in the oblast[2][34]
More information Name, Raion (district) ...
Cities in Odesa Oblast
Name Name
(in Ukrainian)[2][c]
Raion (district) Popu­lation
(2022 esti­mates)[2]
Popu­lation
(2001 census)[7]
Popu­lation
change
Ananiv Ананьїв Podilsk 7,626 9,476 −19.52%
Artsyz Арциз Bolhrad 14,355 16,370 −12.31%
Balta Балта Podilsk 17,854 19,962 −10.56%
Berezivka Березівка Berezivka 9,428 9,481 −0.56%
Biliaivka Біляївка Odesa 12,355 14,294 −13.57%
Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi Білгород-Дністровський Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi 47,727 51,890 −8.02%
Bolhrad Болград Bolhrad 14,818 17,353 −14.61%
Chornomorsk Чорноморськ Odesa 57,983 54,151 +7.08%
Izmail Ізмаїл Izmail 69,932 84,815 −17.55%
Kiliia Кілія Izmail 18,745 22,594 −17.04%
Kodyma Кодима Podilsk 8,404 9,634 −12.77%
Odesa Одеса Odesa 1,010,537 1,029,049 −1.80%
Pivdenne Південне Odesa 32,677 23,977 +36.28%
Podilsk Подільськ Podilsk 39,220 40,718 −3.68%
Reni Рені Izmail 17,736 20,481 −13.40%
Rozdilna Роздільна Rozdilna 17,441 17,754 −1.76%
Tatarbunary Татарбунари Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi 10,836 10,797 +0.36%
Teplodar Теплодар Odesa 9,958 8,830 +12.77%
Vylkove Вилкове Izmail 7,712 9,260 −16.72%
Close

See also

Notes

  1. As of 11 July 2023[6]
  2. The Port of Kiliia has been owned and operated by the Ust-Danube Port Authority since 1998. Vylkove's port serves as the administrative headquarters for Ust-Danube.[24]
  3. Links to the Ukrainian Wikipedia articles for each city

References

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