From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following is a
timeline of the
history of the
city of
Odessa ,
Ukraine .
13th to 17th century
18th century
19th century
1802 – Population: 9,000.
1803 –
Duc de Richelieu in power.
1804 – Commercial school founded.
1805
Odessa becomes administrative center of New Russia.
Theatre opens.
Russian Orthodox church built.
1808 – Troitzkaya Church active.
1809
Cathedral built.
Opera house built.
1812 – Plague.
1814 – Population: 25,000.
1816 –
Louis Alexandre Andrault de Langeron in power.
1817 – Richelieu Lyceum established.
1819 – Odessa becomes a
free port .
1821
1824 – Odessa becomes "seat of the governors-general of Novorossia and Bessarabia".
1825 –
Archeological Museum founded.[
citation needed ]
1826
Fyodor Palen in power.
Jewish school established.
Richelieu Monument unveiled.
1828 – Imperial Rural Association for Southern Russia founded.
[10]
1830
1838 – Plague.
1841 –
Giant Staircase constructed.
1846 -
Londonska Hotel opens.[
citation needed ]
1847 – Novobazarnaya Church built.
1850 – Population: 100,000.
1853
Bombardment of Odesa, 1854
Odesa Opera and Ballet Theatre in 1896
1897 – Lutheran Church built.
1899
1900 – Population: 449,673.
20th century
1902 – Cadet School active.
1905
1906
Uprising.
Municipal Library built.
1907 – Myrograph film studio in business.
1910
Electric
Tram begins operating.
[17]
Trade fair held.
1913
Conservatoire founded.
Sergiyev Artillery School active.
Population: 631,040.
[18]
1917 – City occupied by
Ukrainian
Tsentral'na Rada ,
French Army ,
Red Army , and
White Army following the
Bolshevik Revolution .[
citation needed ]
1918
1919 –
Odesa Film Studio founded.
1920 –
Red Army in power.
1921 –
Odesa State Economics University established.
1922
1924 –
Odesa Philharmonic Theater opens.
1926 –
State Odesa Russian Drama Theatre established.
1928 –
Spartak Stadium opens.
1933 –
School of Stolyarsky established.
1935 – Kosior Memorial Stadium built.
1936
1937 – Mass murder of around 1,000
Poles during the
Polish Operation of the NKVD .
[21]
1941
1944
1945 – Odesa designated a
Hero City of the USSR.
1952 –
Railway Station rebuilt.
1961
1963 –
Avangard rugby club formed.
1965 – Population: 735,000.
[22]
1973 – April 10:
Humorina festival begins.
[23]
1979 – Population: 1,072,000.
[24]
1984 –
Deribasivska Street pedestrianized.
1985 – Population: 1,126,000.
[25]
1989 –
Outdoor market relocates to Odesa-Ovidiopol highway.
1992 –
BIPA-Moda basketball club formed.
1994
1998 –
Rouslan Bodelan becomes mayor.
1999 –
Odesa Numismatics Museum established.
2000 – Quarantine Pier designated
free economic zone and port.
21st century
See also
References
^
"ОДЕСІ-600. О.В. Болдирєв : Мемуары об Одессе, проза, поэзия, живопись : Одессика - энциклопедия об Одессе" [ODESA-600. O.V. Boldyrev: Memoirs about Odesa, prose, poetry, painting: Odesa - encyclopedia about Odesa]. odessa.club.com.ua (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 9 April 2020 .
^
"Історія Одеси" [History of Odesa] (in Ukrainian). 2 December 2013. Archived from
the original on 2 December 2013. Retrieved 9 April 2020 .
^ State Institute of History of Ukraine.
"Одеса" [Odesa]. Encyclopedia of the History of Ukraine (in Ukraininan) (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 9 April 2020 .
^ Department of Agriculture Ministry of Crown Domains for the World's Columbian Exposition at Chicago (1893),
The Industries of Russia: Agriculture and Forestry , vol. 3, St. Petersburg {{
citation }}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link )
^
"Leading Libraries of the World: Russia and Finland" . American Library Annual . New York:
R.R. Bowker Co. 1916. pp. 477–478.
^ "Russia".
Statesman's Year-Book . London: Macmillan and Co. 1880.
hdl :
2027/nyp.33433081590436 .
^ "Russia". Statesman's Year-Book . London: Macmillan and Co. 1885.
hdl :
2027/nyp.33433081590469 .
^
"Aged Beauty Gets a Face Lift From a Geologist" . New York Times . 1 November 1999.
^
a
b
"Odessa" .
Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe . New York:
Yivo Institute for Jewish Research . Archived from
the original on 15 October 2014.
^
"История Одесского трамвая" [History of the Odesa tram] (in Russian). Archived from
the original on 2 November 2017.
^ "Russia: Principal Towns: European Russia". Statesman's Year-Book . London: Macmillan and Co. 1921.
hdl :
2027/njp.32101072368440 .
^ Pope, Stephen; Wheal, Elizabeth-Anne (1995). "Select Chronology".
Dictionary of the First World War . Macmillan. p. 523+.
ISBN
978-0-85052-979-1 .
^ Ceranka, Paweł; Szczepanik, Krzysztof (2020). Urzędy konsularne Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej 1918–1945. Informator archiwalny (in Polish). Warszawa: Naczelna Dyrekcja Archiwów Państwowych,
Ministerstwo Spraw Zagranicznych . p. 292.
ISBN
978-83-65681-93-5 .
^ Deportacje ludności polskiej do Kazachstanu w 1936 roku. Zarys historyczny (in Polish). Warszawa: Kancelaria
Senatu . 2016. p. 37.
^
"Population of capital cities and cities of 100,000 and more inhabitants" . Demographic Yearbook 1965 . New York:
Statistical Office of the United Nations . 1966.
^ Barry, Ellen (1 April 2013).
"New York Times" .
^ Morton, Henry W.; Stuart, Robert C., eds. (1984).
The Contemporary Soviet City . New York: M.E. Sharpe. p.
4 .
ISBN
978-0-87332-248-5 .
^
United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs , Statistical Office (1987).
"Population of capital cities and cities of 100,000 and more inhabitants" . 1985 Demographic Yearbook . New York. pp. 247–289. {{
cite book }}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link )
^ Derks, Thea (1998). "Odessa". Tempo . New Series, No. 206.
^
"Odessa Mayor" . Odessa City Council. Archived from
the original on 14 August 2009.
^
"Odessa Mayor" . Odessa City Council. Archived from
the original on 30 September 2011.
^
"Ukraine Crisis: Timeline" . BBC News . 13 November 2014. Retrieved 28 February 2015 .
^
"Будівництво бази Військово-морських Сил України в Одесі" [Construction of the Ukrainian Navy base in Odesa]. Український мілітарний портал (in Ukrainian). 19 March 2017. Retrieved 9 April 2020 .
^ "Table 8 - Population of capital cities and cities of 100,000 or more inhabitants",
Demographic Yearbook – 2020 , United Nations
Bibliography
Published before 1950
Dearborn, H. A. S. (1819),
"Odesa" , A Memoir on the Commerce and Navigation of the Black Sea , Boston: Wells & Lilly
Sicard, Charles (1819), An Account of Odesa , Newport, R.I., USA: Printed by William Simons,
OL
24661988M
Bremner, Robert (1840),
"Odesa" , Excursions in the interior of Russia (2nd ed.), London: H. Colburn
"Odesa" , Hand-book for Northern Europe; including Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Russia (New ed.), London:
John Murray , 1849
de Demidoff, Anatole (1853),
"Odesa" , Travels in southern Russia and the Crimea , London: J. Mitchell,
OCLC
14437725
Alden, Henry Mills ;
Allen, Frederick Lewis ; Hartman, Lee Foster; Wells, Thomas Bucklin (1854).
"The Steppes, Odessa, and the Crimea" . Harper's New Monthly Magazine .
Koch, Charles W. (1855), The Crimea: with a visit to Odessa , London:
Routledge ,
OCLC
12097882 ,
OL
23534204M
"Odesa" . Hand-book for Travellers in Russia, Poland, and Finland (2nd ed.). London: John Murray. 1868.
McCulloch, John Ramsay (1877), "Odesa", in Reid, Hugh G. (ed.), A Dictionary, Practical, Theoretical and Historical of Commerce and Commercial Navigation , London:
Longmans, Green, and Co. ,
hdl :
2027/njp.32101079877088 – via Hathi Trust
Meakin, Annette M. B. (1906).
"Odessa" . Russia, Travels and Studies . London: Hurst and Blackett.
OCLC
3664651 .
Kropotkin, Peter Alexeivitch; Bealby, John Thomas (1910).
"Odessa" .
Encyclopædia Britannica . Vol. 20 (11th ed.). pp. 3–4.
Curtis, William Eleroy (1911). "Odesa". Around the Black Sea . New York:
Hodder & Stoughton .
hdl :
2027/uc2.ark:/13960/t3222tf2d .
Wood, Ruth Kedzie (1912).
"Odesa" . The Tourist's Russia . New York: Dodd, Mead and Company.
OCLC
526774 .
"Odesa" . Russia . Leipzig:
Karl Baedeker . 1914.
OCLC
1328163 .
Published since 1950
Dzhumyga, Ievgen. "The Home Front In Odessa During The Great War (July 1914–February 1917): The Gender Aspect Of The Problem." Danubius 31 (2013):pp 223+
online
Herlihy, Patricia (1973). "Odessa: Staple Trade and Urbanization in New Russia". Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas . Neue Folge, Bd. 21.
Zipperstein, Steve J. (1982). "Jewish Enlightenment in Odessa: Cultural Characteristics, 1794-1871". Jewish Social Studies . 44 (1): 19–36.
JSTOR
4467153 .
Herlihy, Patricia. "The ethnic composition of the city of Odessa in the nineteenth century." Harvard Ukrainian Studies 1.1 (1977): 53–78.
External links
Images
Map of Odesa region, 1809
Odesa, 1830s
Odesa, 1850s
Port Practique, Odessa, ca.1890s
Unveiling of Catherine II monument, 1900
Odesa, 1917
Countries bordering the Black Sea Cities