Zaporizhia Raion


Zaporizhia Raion is one of the 20 raions of Zaporizhia Oblast in southern Ukraine. The administrative center of the raion is located in the city of Zaporozhia, which is administratively separate from the raion itself due to its status of a city of regional significance. Population: According to the 2001 census, its population was 54,804.

Geography

The Zaporizhia Raion is located in the northeast portion of the Zaporizhia Oblast, surrounding the oblast's administrative center Zaporizhia. Its total area constitutes. The Dnipro and Konka Rivers flow through the raion.

History

The territory which is now the Zaporizhia Raion was first established as the Voznesenskyi Raion on 7 March 1923 as part of a full-scale administrative reorganization of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.
In 1926, it was renamed to the Khortytsia Raion. From 1929 to 1930, it was named the Khortytsia German Raion. On 11 February 1939, the Zaporizhia Raion itself was created.
After World War II, the raion was disestablished, only to be recreated again on 14 January 1965.

Government

The Zaporizhia Raion is governed by the Zaporizhia Raion Council, which consists of 38 locally elected deputies. The raion is represented by the No.82 single-mandate constituency for parliamentary elections in Ukraine.

Administrative divisions

The Zaporizhia Raion is divided in a way that follows the general administrative scheme in Ukraine. Local government is also organized along a similar scheme nationwide. Consequently, raions are subdivided into councils, which are the prime level of administrative division in the country.
Each of the raion's urban populated places administer their own councils, often containing a few villages and rural settlements within its jurisdiction. However, only a handful of rural populated places are organized into councils, which also may contain a few villages and rural settlements within its jurisdiction.
Accordingly, the Zaporizhia Raion is divided into:
Overall, the raion has a total of 71 populated places, consisting of three urban-type settlements, 61 villages, and seven rural settlements.

Demographics

In the 2001 Ukrainian census, the raion's total population was 54,804. The percentage of the population which indicated Ukrainian as their native language constituted 50.2 percent, compared to 48.19% for the Russian language.