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This is a list of cities and towns in Russia. According to the data of 2010 Russian Census , there are 1,117 cities and towns in Russia. After the Census, Innopolis , a town in the Republic of Tatarstan , was established in 2012 and granted town status in 2015.
The city of Zelenograd (a part of the federal city of Moscow) and the municipal cities/towns of the federal city of St. Petersburg are also excluded, as they are not enumerated in the 2021 census as stand-alone localities. Note that the sixteen largest cities have a total population of 35,509,177, or roughly 24.1% of the country's total population.
List of renamed cities and towns in Russia; List of cities of the Russian Empire in 1897; T. List of cities in Russia by average winter temperature
a particularly large number of cities and towns were renamed in Russia after the October Revolution of 1917 more renamings happened during the whole history of the Soviet Union for political reasons in 1945, German cities around Königsberg were made part of the Kaliningrad Oblast exclave, see list of cities and towns in East Prussia
In the course of the Russian municipal reform of 2004–2005, all federal subjects of Russia streamlined the structures of local self-government, which is guaranteed by the Constitution of Russia. The reform mandated that each federal subject have a unified structure of municipal government bodies by January 1, 2005, and a law enforcing the ...
Cities and towns under jurisdiction of Saint Petersburg (3 C, 10 P) Cities and towns in the Sakha Republic (1 C, 12 P) Cities and towns in Sakhalin Oblast (1 C, 14 P)
Sochi (Russian: Сочи, IPA: ⓘ, from Ubykh: Шъуача – seaside) is the largest resort city in Russia. The city is situated on the Sochi River, along the Black Sea in the North Caucasus of Southern Russia, with a population of 466,078 residents, [12] and up to 600,000 residents in the urban area.
Map of the Kievan Rus', whose people were the main subject of the list. The List of Russian cities, far and near [a] [b] is a commonly accepted tentative title for the 14th–15th century appendix found in several manuscripts, including the Commission Scroll of the Novgorod First Chronicle (1440s), Voskresenskaia Chronicle [], and Ermolinskaia Chronicle [], usually prefaced with the phrase ...