Raion


A raion is a type of administrative unit of several post-Soviet states. The term is used for both a type of subnational entity and a division of a city. The word is from the French rayon, and is commonly translated as 'district' in English.
A raion is a standardized administrative entity across most of the former Soviet Union and is usually a subdivision two steps below the national level, such as a subdivision of an oblast. However, in smaller USSR republics, it could be the primary level of administrative division. After the fall of the Soviet Union, some of the republics kept the raion while others dropped it.
In Bulgaria, it refers to an internal administrative subdivision of a city not related to the administrative division of the country as a whole, or, in the case of Sofia municipality a subdivision of that municipality.

Etymology

The word raion is derived from French rayon, which is itself derived from Frankish *hrātu 'honeycomb'. It is used in many languages spanning Central Europe to Central Asia and Siberia. For instance, ; ; ; tr; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; and.

List of countries with raion subdivisions

Fourteen countries have or had entities that were named "raion" or the local version of it.
CountryFromUntilLocal nameCommentDetails
Abkhazia araion inherited from the Abkhaz ASSRDistricts of Abkhazia
Armenia1995inherited from the Armenian SSRDistricts of the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic
Austria~ 1918Rayon, RajonUsed only by the k.k. Gendarmerie to designate police districts.
Azerbaijanrayon, pl. rayonlar;inherited from the Azerbaijan SSRDistricts of Azerbaijan
Belarusinherited from the Byelorussian SSRDistricts of Belarus
Bulgariaрайон, pl. райони raions are subdivisions of three biggest cities: Sofia, Plovdiv and Varna. Sofia is subdivided to 24 raions, Plovdiv - 6, Varna - 5 raions
Chinarestricted to the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region as influenced by the USSR. The districts of Ürümqi City and Karamay City are called رايون in Uyghur.
Crimea 2014-03-162014-03-16inherited from Ukraine. The Republic is now split into the federal subjects of Russia named Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol
Estonia19501990, pl. rajoonidused in the Estonian SSR. In 1990, transformed into counties Counties of Estonia
Georgia2006რაიონი raioniinherited from the Georgian SSR; 2006 as first-level entities reorganized into municipalities. A raioni remains a territorial subdivision of Georgia's capital, Tbilisi.List of municipalities in Georgia
Kazakhstaninherited from the Kazakh SSRDistricts of Kazakhstan
Latvia2009-07-01rajons; pl. rajoniinherited from the Latvian SSRDistricts of Latvia
Lithuania1994inherited from the Lithuanian SSR. In 1994 transformed into district municipalities Municipalities of Lithuania
MoldovaRomanian: raionintroduced in administrative reform in 2003Districts of Moldova
Romania1968-02-16one of the Administrative divisions of the People's Republic of RomaniaDistricts of the People's Republic of Romania
Russian Federationinherited from the Russian SFSRDistricts of Russia
South Ossetia-Alania inherited from the South Ossetian AODistricts of South Ossetia
Soviet Union1991-12-26 At various levels below the constituent republics.
Transnistria inherited from the Moldavian SSRRaions of Transnistria
Ukraine490 raions were inherited from the Ukrainian SSR, which were replaced by 136 new raions in 2020. Major Ukrainian cities are also subdivided into raions, constituting a total of 118 nationwide.Raions of Ukraine

History

Raions in the Soviet Union

In the Soviet Union, raions were administrative divisions created in the 1920s to reduce the number of territorial divisions inherited from the Russian Empire and to simplify their bureaucracies. The process of conversion to the system of raions was called raionirovanie. It was started in 1923 in the Urals, North Caucasus, and Siberia as a part of the Soviet administrative reform and continued through 1929, by which time the majority of the country's territory was divided into raions instead of the old volosts and uyezds.
The concept of raionirovanie was met with resistance in some republics, especially in Ukraine, where local leaders objected to the concept of raions as being too centralized in nature and ignoring the local customs. This point of view was backed by the Soviet Russian People's Commissariat of Nationalities. Nevertheless, eventually all of the territory of the Soviet Union was regionalized.
Soviet raions had self-governance in the form of an elected district council and were headed by the local head of administration, who was either elected or appointed.

Raions outside the Soviet Union

Following the model of the Soviet Union, raions were introduced in Bulgaria and Romania. In China the term is used in Uyghur in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.
In February 1968 the 177 raions of Romania were reconstituted into 39 counties which was the administrative term used before the communist era. This was done partly for nationalist reasons and partly to centralize the power of Nicolae Ceaușescu.

Raions after the dissolution of the Soviet Union

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, raions as administrative units continue to be used in Azerbaijan, Belarus, Moldova, Russia, and Ukraine.
They are also used in breakaway regions: Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Transnistria.
SetQuantityComment
Districts of Abkhazia7first-level
Districts of Azerbaijan59first-level, 18 other entities at that level exist
Districts of Belarus118second-level below oblasts and Minsk City
Districts of Moldova32first-level, 5 other entities at that level exist
Districts of South Ossetia4first-level, 1 other entity at that level exists
Districts of Russia1731second-level below federal subjects
Districts of Transnistria5first-level
Districts of Ukraine136 and 118 city raionssecond-level, numbers as of 2020, including Sevastopol and Crimea

In Georgia they exist as districts in Tbilisi.

Modern raions

Abkhazia

Abkhazia is divided into seven districts.

Azerbaijan

Belarus

In Belarus, raions are administrative units subordinated to oblasts. See also: :Category:Districts of Belarus.

Bulgaria

In Bulgaria, raions are subdivisions of three biggest cities: Sofia, Plovdiv and Varna. Sofia is subdivided to 24 raions, Plovdiv - 6, Varna - 5 raions.

Moldova

  • Administrative divisions of Moldova

    South Ossetia

Transnistria

Russia

Ukraine

In Ukraine, there are a total of 136 raions which are the administrative divisions of oblasts and the Autonomous Republic of Crimea. Major cities as well as the two national cities with special status are also subdivided into raions.