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  1. World Encyclopedia
  2. Kherson - Wikipedia
Kherson - Wikipedia
Coordinates: 46°38′33″N 32°37′30″E / 46.64250°N 32.62500°E / 46.64250; 32.62500
Extended-protected article
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
City in Kherson Oblast, Ukraine
This article is about the modern city. For the Greek colony, see Chersonesus. For other uses, see Kherson (disambiguation).

City in Kherson Oblast, Ukraine
Kherson
Херсон
City
Clockwise from top: St Catherine's cathedral, Memorial in Park Slavy, view of the Dnieper in Kherson, the clock tower of the Kherson Regional Art Museum, a monument to Potemkin in Potomkinskyi Garden Square
Clockwise from top: St Catherine's cathedral, Memorial in Park Slavy, view of the Dnieper in Kherson, the clock tower of the Kherson Regional Art Museum, a monument to Potemkin in Potomkinskyi Garden Square
Flag of Kherson
Flag
Coat of arms of Kherson
Coat of arms
Map
Interactive map of Kherson
Kherson is located in Kherson Oblast
Kherson
Kherson
Location of Kherson
Show map of Kherson Oblast
Kherson is located in Ukraine
Kherson
Kherson
Kherson (Ukraine)
Show map of Ukraine
Kherson is located in Black Sea
Kherson
Kherson
Kherson (Black Sea)
Show map of Black Sea
Coordinates: 46°38′33″N 32°37′30″E / 46.64250°N 32.62500°E / 46.64250; 32.62500
Country Ukraine
OblastKherson Oblast
RaionKherson Raion
HromadaKherson urban hromada
Founded18 June 1778
Government
 • Head of the city Military Administration [uk][1]Yaroslav Shanko [uk][2]
Area
 • Total
135.7 km2 (52.4 sq mi)
Elevation
46.6 m (153 ft)
Population
 (2025)
 • Total
66,000 Decrease[3]
 • Density490/km2 (1,300/sq mi)
Postal code
73000
Area code+380 552
Primary airportKherson International Airport
Websitemiskrada.kherson.ua

Kherson (Ukrainian and Russian: Херсон, Ukrainian: [xerˈsɔn] ⓘ, Russian: [xʲɪrˈson]) is a port city in southern Ukraine that serves as the administrative centre of Kherson Oblast. Located by the Black Sea and on the Dnieper River, Kherson is the home to a major ship-building industry and is a regional economic centre.[4] At the beginning of 2022, its population was estimated at 279,131.[4]

The city was founded as a base for the Russian Empire's Black Sea Fleet on the site of a fortress previously established by Zaporozhian Cossacks.[5] During the 19th and early 20th century Kherson served as the regional capital of eponymous governorate, becoming a major centre of trade and transport. Under the Soviet rule the city became a major scientific, cultural and industrial centre known for its shipbuilding industry.[6] In modern Ukraine the city is also famous for its watermelons.

From March to November 2022, the city was occupied by Russian forces during their invasion of Ukraine. Ukrainian forces recaptured the city on 11 November 2022. In June 2023, part of the city was flooded following the Russian[7] destruction of the nearby Kakhovka Dam.[8]

Etymology

As the first new settlement in the "Greek project" of Empress Catherine and her favourite Grigory Potemkin, it was named after the Heraclea Pontic colony of Chersonesus (Ancient Greek: Χερσόνησος, romanized: Khersónēsos [kʰer.só.nɛː.sos][a]) which was located on the Crimean Peninsula, meaning 'peninsular shore'.[9][10]

History

Historical affiliations
  • Crimean Khanate 1648–1774
  • Russian Empire 1774–1917
  • Beginning of 1917–1921 Revolution
  • Russian Provisional Government/Russian Republic Mar–Nov 1917
  • UPR Nov 1917 – Jan 1918
  • UPRS Jan–Apr 1918
  • Ukrainian People's Republic/Ukrainian State Apr 1918 – Jan 1919
  • Southern Russia Intervention Jan–Mar 1919
  • Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic Ukrainian SSR Mar–May 1919
  • Borotbists May–Jul 1919
  • Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic Ukrainian SSR Jul 1919
  • ARSR Jul 1919 – Apr 1920
  • Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic Ukrainian SSR Apr 1920 – Dec 1922
  • End of 1917–1921 Revolution
  • Soviet Union 1922–1941
  • Nazi Germany 1941–1944 (occupation)
  • Soviet Union 1944–1991
  • Ukraine 1991–2022
  • Russia Sep–Nov 2022 (occupation)
  • Ukraine 2022–present

Early days and Russian Empire era (until 1917)

Kherson was preceded by the town of Bilechowisce, first marked on a map by Guillaume Le Vasseur de Beauplan from 1648. Bilchowisce was listed as one of the three chief towns of Yedisan in a 1701 book by English cartographer Herman Moll.[11] A French-language map of the site in 1769 (inset) shows a Russian-built fort or sconce named St. Alexandre. This had been built in 1737 during the Russo-Turkish War and served the Zaporizhian Sich as an administrative center, run by local Cossacks.

1648 map showing the settlement of Bilechowisce
Kherson in 1855

The Russian Empire annexed the territory from the Crimean Khanate in 1774, and a decree of Catherine the Great on 18 June 1778 founded Kherson on the high bank of the Dnieper as a central fortress of the Black Sea Fleet.

1783 saw the city granted the rights of a district town and the opening of a local shipyard where the hulls of the Russian Black Sea fleet were laid. Within a year the Kherson Shipping Company began operations. By the end of the 18th century, the port had established trade with France, Italy, Spain and other European countries. Between 1783 and 1793 Poland's maritime trade via the Black Sea was conducted through Kherson by the Kompania Handlowa Polska. The Poles leased a piece of the shoreline and built houses, exchange offices, workshops and warehouses.[12] There was substantial immigration of Poles and a Polish consulate was established in 1783.[12] In 1791, Potemkin was buried in the newly built St. Catherine's Cathedral. In 1803 the city became the capital of the Kherson Governorate.[4]

Industry, beginning with breweries, tanneries and other food and agricultural processing, developed from the 1850s.[citation needed] According to the Geographical Dictionary of the Kingdom of Poland and other Slavic Countries from 1880, the city was mostly inhabited by Ukrainians, Greeks and Jews.[13] According to the 1897 census, the population of the city was 59,076 of which, on the basis of their first language, 47.2% were recorded as Russian, 29.1% as Jewish, 19.6% Ukrainian, 1.7% Polish.[14][15] During the revolution of 1905 there were workers' strikes and an army mutiny (an armed demonstration by soldiers of the 10th Disciplinary Battalion) in the city.[16]

Soviet era (1917–1991)

Early Bolshevik period

In the Russian Constituent Assembly election held in November 1917—the first and last free election in Kherson for 70 years—Bolsheviks who had seized power in Petrograd and Moscow received just 13.2 percent of the vote in the Governorate. The largest electoral bloc in the district, with 43 percent of the vote, was an alliance of Ukrainian Socialist Revolutionaries (SRs), Russian Socialist Revolutionaries and the United Jewish Socialist Workers Party.[17]

The Bolsheviks dissolved SR-dominated Assembly after its first sitting,[18] and proceeded to force from Kiev the Central Council of Ukraine (Tsentralna Rada) whose response to the Leninist coup had been to proclaim the independence of the Ukrainian People's Republic (UPR). But, before the Bolsheviks could secure Kherson, they were obliged to cede the region under the terms of the March 1918 Treaty of Brest-Litovsk to the German and Austrian controlled Ukrainian State. After the withdrawal of German and Austrian forces in November 1918, the efforts of the UPR (the Petluirites) to assert authority were frustrated by a French-led Allied intervention which occupied Kherson in January 1919.[19]

An aerial view of the city in 1918

In March 1919, the Green Army of local warlord Otaman Nykyfor Hryhoriv ousted the French and Greek garrison and precipitated the Allied evacuation from Odesa. In July, the Bolsheviks defeated Hryhoriv who had called upon the Ukrainian people to rise against the "Communist impostors" and their "Jewish commissars",[20] and had perpetrated pogroms,[20] including in the Kherson region.[21] Kherson itself was occupied by the counter-revolutionary Whites before finally falling to the Bolshevik Red Army in February 1920.[4] In 1922 the city and region was formally incorporated into the Ukrainian SSR a constituent republic of the Soviet Union.[citation needed]

The population was radically reduced from 75,000 to 41,000 by the famine of 1921–1923, but then rose steadily, reaching 97,200 in 1939.[22]

World War II and post-War period

In 1940, the city was one of the sites of executions of Polish officers and intelligentsia committed by the Soviets as part of the Katyn massacre.[23]

Further devastation and population loss resulted from the German occupation during the Second World War. The German occupation, which lasted from August 1941 to March 1944, contended with both Soviet and Ukrainian nationalist (OUN) underground cells. The Kherson district leadership of the OUN was headed by Bohdan Bandera [uk] (brother of OUN leader Stepan Bandera).[24]

In September 1941, the Germans executed the city's remaining Jewish population, several thousand men, women and children, in anti-tank ditches near the village of Zelenivka.[25] Later, they used the place to bury Soviet soldiers from a prisoner-of-war camp in the city (Stalag 370).[26][27]

In the post-war decades, which saw substantial industrial growth, the population more than doubled, reaching 261,000 by 1970.[28] The new factories, including the Comintern Shipbuilding and Repairs Complex, the Kuibyshev Ship Repair Complex, and the Kherson Cotton Textile Manufacturing Complex (one of the largest textile plants in the Soviet Union), and Kherson's growing grain-exporting port, drew in labour from the Ukrainian countryside. This changed the city's ethnic composition, increasing the Ukrainian share from 36% in 1926 to 63% in 1959, while reducing the Russian share from 36 to 29%. The Jewish population never recovered from the Holocaust visited by the Germans: accounting for 26% of residents in 1926, their number had fallen to just 6% in 1959.[28]

In independent Ukraine

With a turnout of 83.4% of eligible voters, 90.1% of the votes cast in Kherson Oblast affirmed Ukrainian independence in the national referendum of 1 December 1991.[29] With the collapse of the Soviet Union, Kherson and its industries experienced severe dislocation. Over the following three decades, the population of both the city and the region declined, reflecting both a significant excess of deaths over live births and persistent net-emigration from the area.[30][31]

The 2014 pro-Russian unrest in eastern and southern Ukraine was marked in Kherson by a small demonstration of some 400 persons.[32] Following the Russian occupation of Crimea in 2014, Kherson housed the office of the Ukrainian President's representative in Crimea.[33]

In July 2020, as part of the general administrative reform of Ukraine, the Kherson Municipality was merged as Kherson urban hromada into newly established Kherson Raion, one of five raions in the Kherson Oblast of which the city remained the administrative centre.[34][35]

Kherson in 2021

A "City Profile", part of the SCORE (Social Cohesion and Reconciliation)[36] Ukraine 2021 project funded by USAID, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), and the European Union, concluded that "more than 80% of citizens in Kherson city feel their locality is a good place to live, work, and raise a family". This was despite a low level of trust in the local authorities in whom corruption was perceived to be high. It also found that, while more inclined to express support for co-operation with Russia than for membership of the EU, "citizens in Kherson feel attached to their Ukrainian identity".[37]

2020 local election

In the last free elections before the 2022 Russian invasion, the Ukrainian local elections held on 25 October 2020, the results of Kherson City Council elections were as follows:[38]

Kherson City Council election, 2020
Party Percentage of vote Seats
We Have to Live Here! 23.1% 17 seats
Opposition Platform – For Life 14.5% 11 seats
Servant of the People 13.0% 10 seats
Volodymyr Saldo Bloc 11.8% 9 seats
European Solidarity 8.6%

The parties widely perceived as pro-Russian, and Euro-skeptic,[39] Opposition Platform, Volodymyr Saldo Bloc, and Party of Shariy (3.9%) had a combined vote of just over 30% of the total, and secured 20 out of the 54 seats on the city council. In the wake of the invasion, the Opposition Platform and the Party of Shariy were banned by the National Security Council for alleged ties to the Kremlin.[40][41][42]

The Volodymyr Saldo Bloc dissolved; its deputies in Kyiv joined the newly formed faction "Support to the programs of the President of Ukraine".[43] From 26 April 2022, Volodymyr Saldo himself, who had been mayor of Kherson from 2002 to 2012, went on to serve the Russian occupiers, as head of the Kherson military–civilian administration.[44][45]

Russian invasion from February 2022

Further information: Battle of Kherson, Russian occupation of Kherson Oblast, Liberation of Kherson, and Bombing of Kherson (2022–present)

Kherson witnessed heavy fighting in the first days of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine (Kherson offensive).[46] As of 2 March the city was under Russian control,[47][48] and as early as 8 March the Russian FSB was reported to be tasked with crushing resistance.[49]

Under the Russian occupation, locals continued to stage street protests against the invading army's presence and in support of the unity of Ukraine.[50][51] According to the Ukrainian government, the Russian military sought to create a puppet Kherson People's Republic in the style of the Russian-backed separatist polities in the Donbas region and tried to coerce local councillors into endorsing the move, detaining those activists and officials who opposed their design.[52]

By 26 April 2022, Russian troops had taken over the city's administration headquarters and had appointed both a new mayor,[53] former KGB agent Alexander Kobets, and ex-mayor Volodymyr Saldo as a new civilian-military regional administrator.[54] The next day, Ukraine's Prosecutor General said that troops used tear gas and stun grenades to disperse a further pro-Ukraine rally in the city centre.[53] In an indication of an intended split from Ukraine, on the 28th the new administration announced that from May it would switch the region's payments to the Russian ruble. Citing unnamed reports about alleged discrimination against Russian speakers, its deputy head, Kirill Stremousov, said that "reintegrating the Kherson region back into a Nazi Ukraine is out of the question".[55]

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy with soldiers who distinguished themselves during the liberation of Kherson

On 30 September 2022, the Russian Federation claimed to have annexed Kherson Oblast.[56] The United Nations General Assembly condemned the proclaimed annexations with a vote of 143–5.[57]

Russian forces were ordered to withdraw from the city by defence minister Sergei Shoigu and regroup on the eastern side of the Dnieper on 9 November 2022. Ukrainian officials claimed that Russian troops were destroying bridges connecting the city to the other bank of the river.[58][59] On 11 November, Ukraine announced that its forces had entered the city following the Russian withdrawal.[60][61]

Kherson after shelling by the Russian army on 15 January 2023

Before retreating, the Russian army destroyed infrastructure facilities of the city (communications, water, heat, electricity, TV tower),[62][63] looted two main museums (Local History Museum and the Art Museum), transporting their items to Crimean museums,[64][65] and took away several monuments to historical figures.[66][67]

In June 2023, the city was flooded following the Russian[7] destruction of the nearby Kakhovka Dam.[8]

On 23 October 2023, online voting concluded on the renaming of numerous streets and localities in Kherson for purposes of decolonization and derussification. This was in accordance with Law of Ukraine "On Condemnation and Prohibition of Propaganda of Russian Imperial Policy in Ukraine and Decolonization of Toponymy", giving local councils six months to remove problematic toponymy.[68]

With Russian forces entrenched just across the Dnipro River, the city remains subject to frequent shelling,[69] and since May 2024, to small drone attacks that target civilians in a terror campaign that has become known as the ″human safari″. Drones, according to American freelance journalist Zarina Zabrisky many of them funded by Russian civilians, hit targets such as people at bus stops, commuters and children playing in parks, with footage of the attacks being shared and celebrated on Russian social media.[70][71] According to the Kherson City Council Executive Committee, between 1 May and 16 December 2024, drone attacks in Kherson killed at least 30 civilians and injured another 483.[72] In March 2025, the regional governor, Oleksandr Prokudin, was reporting between 600 and 700 drone attacks a week in the city.[73]

In these conditions, the city's pre-war population of 280,000[4] has shrunk to just 60,000.[73]

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1799 2,000—    
1846 23,650+5.40%
1859 43,900+4.87%
1897 59,076+0.78%
1913 81,000+1.99%
1920 74,500−1.19%
1923 41,300−17.85%
1926 57,376+11.58%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1939 96,987+4.12%
1959 157,995+2.47%
1970 260,687+4.66%
1979318,908+2.27%
1989355,379+1.09%
2001328,360−0.66%
2011302,528−0.82%
2021279,131−0.80%
Source: [22][74]

Ethnicity

According to the Ukrainian National Census in 2001, Kherson had a majority population of Ukrainians (76.5%), with a large minority of Russians (19.9%) and 3.6% others. The exact ethnic composition was as follows:[75]

Ethnic groups in Kherson
percent
Ukrainians
 
76.51%
Russians
 
19.93%
Belarusians
 
0.80%
Ashkenazi Jews
 
0.41%
Armenians
 
0.34%
Moldovans
 
0.19%
Tatars
 
0.15%
Poles
 
0.14%
Bulgarians
 
0.11%
Romani
 
0.09%
others
 
1.33%

Languages

Languages 1897[76] 2001[77]
Ukrainian 19.6% 53.4%
Russian 47.2% 45.3%
Yiddish 29.1%
Polish 1.7%
German 0.7%

Administrative divisions

There are three urban districts:

  • Tsentralnyi District, meaning the Central District,[78] is the central and oldest district of the city. Includes departments: Tavriiskyi [uk], Pіvnichnyi and Mlyny [uk].[citation needed] It was known as Suvorovskyi District until October 2023, when it was renamed in compliance with nationwide laws on derussification of toponymy. The old name was derived from that of the Tsarist Russian military leader Alexander Suvorov.[78]
  • Dniprovskyi District, named for the Dnieper river. Includes departments: Antonivka, Molodizhne, Zelenivka, Petrivka, Bohdanivka, Soniachne, Naddniprianske, Inzhenerne.[citation needed]
  • Korabelnyi District, which includes the following departments: Shumenskyi, Korabel, Zabalka, Sukharne, Zhytloselyshche, Selyshche-4, Selyshche-5.[citation needed]

Geography

Climate

Under the Köppen climate classification, Kherson has a humid continental climate (Dfa).[79]

Climate data for Kherson (1991–2020, extremes 1955–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 15.2
(59.4)
18.6
(65.5)
24.9
(76.8)
32.0
(89.6)
37.7
(99.9)
39.5
(103.1)
40.5
(104.9)
40.7
(105.3)
36.4
(97.5)
32.0
(89.6)
21.8
(71.2)
17.2
(63.0)
40.7
(105.3)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 1.4
(34.5)
3.1
(37.6)
8.8
(47.8)
16.5
(61.7)
22.9
(73.2)
27.5
(81.5)
30.3
(86.5)
30.1
(86.2)
23.7
(74.7)
16.1
(61.0)
8.4
(47.1)
3.3
(37.9)
16.0
(60.8)
Daily mean °C (°F) −1.6
(29.1)
−0.6
(30.9)
4.1
(39.4)
10.6
(51.1)
16.7
(62.1)
21.2
(70.2)
23.8
(74.8)
23.3
(73.9)
17.5
(63.5)
10.9
(51.6)
4.7
(40.5)
0.4
(32.7)
10.9
(51.6)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) −4.4
(24.1)
−3.8
(25.2)
0.0
(32.0)
5.0
(41.0)
10.6
(51.1)
15.3
(59.5)
17.5
(63.5)
16.7
(62.1)
11.8
(53.2)
6.3
(43.3)
1.6
(34.9)
−2.2
(28.0)
6.2
(43.2)
Record low °C (°F) −26.3
(−15.3)
−24.4
(−11.9)
−20.2
(−4.4)
−7.9
(17.8)
−1.5
(29.3)
5.5
(41.9)
9.2
(48.6)
6.6
(43.9)
−5.0
(23.0)
−7.6
(18.3)
−16.2
(2.8)
−22.2
(−8.0)
−26.3
(−15.3)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 33
(1.3)
28
(1.1)
30
(1.2)
32
(1.3)
43
(1.7)
59
(2.3)
44
(1.7)
29
(1.1)
38
(1.5)
36
(1.4)
34
(1.3)
38
(1.5)
444
(17.5)
Average extreme snow depth cm (inches) 2
(0.8)
3
(1.2)
1
(0.4)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
1
(0.4)
3
(1.2)
Average rainy days 9 7 9 12 11 11 9 6 9 9 12 10 114
Average snowy days 11 10 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.3 4 8 39
Average relative humidity (%) 86.5 82.6 75.9 66.7 65.2 63.6 60.1 57.8 65.8 76.2 84.8 87.1 72.7
Mean monthly sunshine hours 66 89 142 215 275 301 333 307 233 152 76 49 2,238
Source 1: Pogoda.ru.net[80]
Source 2: NOAA (humidity and sun 1991–2020)[81]

Transport

Kherson railway station

Kherson has a seaport on the Dnieper river – the Port of Kherson – and a port on the Koshevaya or Koshova [uk] river – the Kherson River Port.

Kherson is connected to the national railroad network of Ukraine. There are daily long-distance services to Kyiv, Lviv and other cities.

Kherson is served by Kherson International Airport.[82] It operates a 2,500 x 42-meter concrete runway, accommodating Boeing 737, Airbus 319/320 aircraft, and helicopters of all series.[83]

Economy

  • Kherson Shipyard
  • VVV-Spetstekhnika dredger factory

Education

Kherson State Maritime Academy [uk]

There are 77 high schools as well as 5 colleges. There are 15 institutions of higher education, including:

  • Kherson State Maritime Academy [uk]
  • Kherson State Agrarian and Economic University [uk]
  • Kherson State University
  • Kherson National Technical University
  • International University of Business and Law

The documentary Dixie Land was filmed at a music school in Kherson.[84]

Main sights

St. Catherine's Cathedral, Kherson
  • The Church of St. Catherine – was built in the 1780s, supposedly to Ivan Starov's designs, and contains the tomb of Prince Grigory Potemkin.
  • Jewish cemetery – Kherson has a large Jewish community which was established in the mid-nineteenth century.[85]
  • Kherson TV Tower
  • Adziogol Lighthouse, a hyperboloid structure designed by Vladimir Shukhov in 1911
  • The Kherson Art Museum[86] has a collection of icons, and Ukrainian and Russian paintings and sculptures. Particularly noteworthy are Portrait of a Woman (1883) by Konstantin Makovsky; The Tempest is Coming by Ivan Aivazovsky; Sunset by Alexei Savrasov; Cattle Yard in Abramtsevo by Vasily Polenov; At the Stone by Ivan Kramskoi; The Charioteer, by Peter Clodt von Jürgensburg (sculptor); Prince Svyatoslav by Eugene Lanceray (sculptor); Mephistopheles by Mark Antokolsky (sculptor); Near the Monastery by German painter August von Bayer (1859); Oaks (1956); Moloditsya (1938) and Still Life with the Blue Broom (1930), by Oleksii Shovkunenko (born in Kherson).

Notable people

Main category: People from Kherson
Lev Bronstein (Leon Trotsky), 1924
Ihor Kolykhaiev, 2020
Portrait of Grigory Potemkin
  • Grigory Adamov (1886–1945), Soviet science fiction writer
  • Georgy Arbatov (1923–2010), Soviet and Russian political scientist.[87]
  • Vladimir Baranov-Rossine (1888–1944), Ukrainian/Russian/French painter, avant-garde artist and inventor.
  • Max Barskih (born 1990), Ukrainian singer and songwriter.
  • Kristina Berdynskykh (born 1983), political journalist.[88]
  • Stefania Berlinerblau (1852–1921), American anatomist and physician, investigated blood circulation
  • Maximilian Bern (1849–1923), German writer and editor.
  • Sergei Bondarchuk (1920–1994), Soviet and Russian actor, film director, and screenwriter
  • Lev Davidovitch Bronstein (1879–1940), better known as Leon Trotsky, Bolshevik revolutionary and Marxist theorist, was born in the village of Bereslavka, Kherson Governorate.[89]
  • Artem Datsyshyn (1979–2022), Ukrainian ballet dancer and soloist
  • Ivan Gannibal (1735–1801), eminent Russian military leader and a founder of the city
  • Sergei Garmash (born 1958), Soviet and Russian film and stage actor.
  • Yefim Golïshev (1897–1970), painter and composer associated with the Dada movement in Berlin.
  • Nikolai Grinko (1920–1989), Soviet and Ukrainian actor
  • Kateryna Handziuk (1985–2018), Ukrainian civil rights and anti-corruption activist
  • John Howard (1726–1790), English prison reformer; he died of typhus whilst in Kherson.[90]
  • Mircea Ionescu-Quintus (1917–2017), Romanian politician, writer and jurist
  • Yurii Kerpatenko (1976–2022), Ukrainian conductor
  • Ihor Kolykhaiev (born 1971), Ukrainian politician and entrepreneur, Mayor of Kherson since 2020
  • Samuel Maykapar (1867–1938), Russian romantic composer, pianist and professor of music
  • Yuriy Odarchenko (born 1960), a politician, Governor of Kherson Oblast since 2014
  • Nicholas Perry (born 1992), social media personality, known online as Nikocado Avocado
  • Sergei Polunin (born 1989), Russian ballet dancer, actor and model.[91]
  • Prince Grigory Potemkin (1739–1791), military leader, statesman and nobleman; a founder of the city.[92]
  • Maria Reva, Canadian writer of Ukrainian descent
  • Nissan Rilov (1922–2007), former soldier, Israeli artist and supporter of Palestinians
  • Salomon Rosenblum (1873–1925), later known as Sidney Reilly, a secret agent, adventurer and playboy, employed by the British Secret Intelligence Service; may have inspired spy character, James Bond.
  • Moshe Sharett (1894–1965), 2nd Prime Minister of Israel from 1953 to 1955
  • Viktor Petrovich Skarzhinsky [ru] (1787–1861), wealthy landowner; squadron commander in the Russian Patriotic War of 1812[93]
  • Inna Shevchenko (born 1990), Ukrainian feminist and leader of the women's movement FEMEN
  • Sergei Stanishev (born 1966), Bulgarian politician, 49th Prime Minister of Bulgaria
  • Prince Alexander Suvorov (1730–1800), Russian general; a founder of the city.[94]
  • Svitlana Tarabarova (born 1990), Ukrainian singer, songwriter, music producer and actress.
  • Mikhail Yemtsev (1930–2003), Soviet and Russian science fiction writer
Larisa Latynina, 2010

Sport

  • Anastasiia Chetverikova (born 1998), sprint canoeist, team silver medallist at the 2020 Summer Olympics
  • Inna Gaponenko (born 1976), chess player, International Master & Woman Grandmaster.
  • Oleksandr Holovko (born 1972), former footballer with 414 club caps and 58 for Ukraine
  • Pavlo Ishchenko (born 1992), Ukrainian-Israeli boxer
  • Oleksandr Karavayev (born 1992), footballer with over 250 club caps and 45 for Ukraine
  • Yevhen Kucherevskyi (1941–2006), Ukrainian football coach of Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
  • Larisa Latynina (born 1934), Soviet gymnast, has won nine Olympic gold medals
  • Tatiana Lysenko (born 1975), Soviet and Ukrainian gymnast, two gold and a bronze medal at the 1992 Summer Olympics
  • Yuriy Maksymov (born 1968), football coach and former midfielder with 384 club caps and 27 for Ukraine.
  • Kyrylo Marsak (born 2004), Ukrainian figure skater and olympic athlete
  • Yuri Nikitin (born 1978), gymnast and gold medallist at the 2004 Summer Olympics
  • Tancerev Mykola Olegovich (born 1997), professional rower
  • Sergei Postrekhin (born 1957), sprint canoer, gold and silver medallist at the 1980 Summer Olympics
  • Serhiy Shevchenko (1958-2024), Ukrainian football player and coach
  • Serhiy Tretyak (born 1963), retired Ukrainian footballer with over 500 club caps
  • David Tyshler (1927–2014), Ukrainian/Soviet fencer, two gold and a bronze medal at the 1956 Summer Olympics
  • Roman Vintov (born 1978), former Russian/Ukrainian footballer with over 460 club caps

Twin cities

  • Hungary Zalaegerszeg, Hungary
  • Bulgaria Shumen, Bulgaria
  • Turkey Izmit, Turkey
  • Tunisia Bizerte, Tunisia
  • Germany Bonn, Germany
  • Germany Kiel, Germany[95]

Notes

  1. ^ From two Greek words: khersos (χέρσος, "dry") and nesos (νῆσος, "land")

References

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External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kherson.
Look up kherson in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
  • "Kherson (town)" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 776.
  • "Kherson (government)" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 776.
  • Pictures of Kherson Archived 29 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  • The murder of the Jews of Kherson during World War II, at Yad Vashem website.
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  • Ivano-Frankivsk
  • Lutsk
  • Bila Tserkva
100,000-200,000
  • Kramatorsk
  • Melitopol
  • Kerch
  • Nikopol
  • Sloviansk
  • Berdiansk
  • Sievierodonetsk
  • Alchevsk
  • Pavlohrad
  • Uzhhorod
  • Brovary
  • Yevpatoria
  • Cities located in Russian-occupied territories of Ukraine
  • v
  • t
  • e
Catherinian pseudo-Hellenization
  • Ovidiopol
  • Odessa
  • Mariupol
  • Melitopol
  • Simferopol
  • Sevastopol
  • Kherson
  • Grigoriopol
  • Tiraspol
  • Olgopol
  • Olviopol
  • Nikopol
  • Feodosia
  • Yevpatoria
  • Stavropol
  • v
  • t
  • e
Hero Cities of Ukraine
  • Bashtanka
  • Bucha
  • Chernihiv
  • Druzhkivka
  • Hostomel
  • Huliaipole
  • Irpin
  • Kharkiv
  • Kherson
  • Kostiantynivka
  • Kramatorsk
  • Kupiansk
  • Marhanets
  • Mariupol
  • Mykolaiv
  • Nikopol
  • Okhtyrka
  • Orikhiv
  • Pavlohrad
  • Pokrovsk
  • Sloviansk
  • Starokostiantyniv
  • Sumy
  • Trostianets
  • Volnovakha
  • Voznesensk
  • v
  • t
  • e
Russo-Ukrainian war (2022–present)
Part of the Russo-Ukrainian war
Overview
General
  • Outline
  • Timeline
    • Prelude
    • Feb–Apr 2022
    • Apr–Aug 2022
    • Aug–Nov 2022
    • Nov 2022 – Jun 2023
    • Jun–Aug 2023
    • Sep–Nov 2023
    • Dec 2023 – Mar 2024
    • Apr–Jul 2024
    • Aug–Dec 2024
    • Jan–May 2025
    • Jun-Aug 2025
    • Sep–Dec 2025
    • Jan 2026 – present
  • Aerial warfare
  • Defense lines
  • Foreign fighters
  • Information war
  • Naval warfare
  • Legality
  • Map
  • Order of battle
  • Peace negotiations
    • Ukraine's Peace Formula
    • China peace proposal
    • June 2024 peace summit
    • Multinational Force
  • Proposed no-fly zone
  • Red lines
  • Reparations
  • Territorial control
Prelude
  • Reactions
  • Disinformation
    • Ukraine bioweapons conspiracy theory
    • Ukraine and weapons of mass destruction
  • 2021 Russia–United States summit
  • 2021 Black Sea incident
  • Belarus–European Union border crisis
  • "On the Historical Unity of Russians and Ukrainians"
  • Crimea Platform
  • Zapad 2021
  • December 2021 ultimatum
  • 2022 Ukraine cyberattacks
  • Zametil 2022
  • Union Resolve 2022
  • Stanytsia Luhanska kindergarten bombing
  • British–Polish–Ukrainian trilateral pact
  • Evacuation of the Donetsk PR and Luhansk PR
  • Mobilization in Donetsk PR and Luhansk PR
  • "Address concerning the events in Ukraine"
  • "On conducting a special military operation"
Background
  • 2014 pro-Russian unrest in Ukraine
  • Annexation of Crimea
    • reactions
  • War in Donbas
    • 2022 timeline
    • Minsk agreements
    • humanitarian situation
    • international recognition of the Donetsk PR and Luhansk PR
  • Putinism
    • Foundations of Geopolitics
    • Novorossiya
    • Ruscism
    • Russian irredentism
    • Russian imperialism
Foreign
relations
  • Russia–Ukraine
  • Belarus–Ukraine
  • Belarus–Russia
  • Russia–United States
  • Ukraine–United States
  • Russia–NATO
  • Ukraine–NATO
    • enlargement of NATO
    • eastward expansion controversy in Russia
    • open door policy
Military engagements
Southern
Ukraine
  • Snake Island campaign
  • Siege of Mariupol
  • Battle of Kherson
  • Capture of Melitopol
  • Battle of Mykolaiv
  • Battle of Enerhodar
  • Battle of Voznesensk
  • Kherson counteroffensive
    • Liberation of Kherson
  • Dnieper campaign
    • Destruction of the Kakhovka Dam
  • Huliaipole offensive
Eastern
Ukraine
  • Battle of Volnovakha
  • Battle of Kharkiv
  • Battle of Izium
  • Battle of Rubizhne
  • Battle of Popasna
  • Battle of Marinka
  • Battle of Donbas
    • Battle of the Siverskyi Donets
    • Battle of Sievierodonetsk
    • Battle of Lysychansk
    • Battle of Pisky
    • Battle of Bakhmut
    • Battle of Soledar
  • Battle of Vuhledar
  • Kharkiv counteroffensive
    • Battle of Lyman (September–October 2022)
  • Luhansk Oblast campaign
    • Kupiansk
    • Northeast Donetsk Oblast
  • Battle of Avdiivka
  • Battle of Chasiv Yar
  • Battle of Krasnohorivka
  • Battle of Ocheretyne
  • Battle of Toretsk
  • Pokrovsk offensive
  • Battle of Kurakhove
  • Novopavlivka offensive
  • Dobropillia offensive
Northern
Ukraine
  • Capture of Chernobyl
  • Russian Kyiv convoy
  • Battle of Kyiv
    • Battle of Antonov Airport
    • Battle of Hostomel
    • Battle of Bucha
    • Battle of Irpin
    • Battle of Makariv
    • Battle of Moshchun
    • Destruction of the Kozarovychi Dam
    • Battle of Brovary
  • Battle of Slavutych
  • Battle of Sumy
  • Siege of Chernihiv
  • Northeastern border skirmishes
    • 2025 Sumy offensive
Russia
  • Bryansk Oblast raid
  • Kremlin drone attack
  • Moscow drone strikes
  • 2023 Belgorod Oblast incursions
  • 30 December 2023 Belgorod shelling
  • February 2024 Belgorod missile strike
  • May 2024 Belgorod missile strike
  • March 2024 western Russia incursion
  • Kursk campaign
    • occupation
  • Toropets depot explosions
Airstrikes
by city
  • Chernihiv strikes
  • Dnipro strikes
  • Huliaipole strikes
  • Ivano-Frankivsk strikes
  • Kharkiv strikes
  • Kherson strikes
  • Khmelnytskyi strikes
  • Kryvyi Rih strikes
  • Kyiv strikes
  • Lviv strikes
  • Mykolaiv strikes
  • Odesa strikes
  • Rivne strikes
  • Vinnytsia strikes
  • Zaporizhzhia strikes
  • Zhytomyr strikes
Airstrikes
on military
targets
  • Chuhuiv air base attack
  • Millerovo air base attack
  • Chornobaivka attacks
  • 7 March 2022 Mykolaiv military barracks attack
  • Yavoriv military base attack
  • 18 March 2022 Mykolaiv military quarters attack
  • Berdiansk port attack
  • Sinking of the Moskva
  • Desna barracks airstrike
  • Attack on Nova Kakhovka
  • Crimea attacks
    • Saky air base attack
    • Drone attack on the Sevastopol Naval Base
    • Missile strike on the Black Sea Fleet headquarters
  • Dyagilevo and Engels air bases attacks
  • Makiivka military quarters shelling
  • Machulishchy air base attack
  • Zarichne barracks airstrike
  • Operation Spiderweb
Resistance
Russian-occupied Ukraine
  • Popular Resistance of Ukraine
  • Berdiansk Partisan Army
  • Yellow Ribbon
  • Atesh
Belarusian and Russian partisans
  • Assassination of Vladlen Tatarsky
  • Civic Council
  • Irpin Declaration
  • Killing of Darya Dugina
    • National Republican Army
  • Military commissariats arsons
    • Ust-Ilimsk military commissariat shooting
    • Black Bridge
  • Rail war in Russia
    • Stop the Wagons
    • Combat Organization of Anarcho-Communists
  • Rail war in Belarus
    • Busly liaciać
    • BYPOL
    • Community of Railway Workers
    • Cyber Partisans
Russian
occupations
  • Flags used in Russian-occupied Ukraine
Ongoing
  • Annexation referendums
  • Annexation of Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia oblasts
  • Elections in Russian-occupied Ukraine
  • Russian-occupied territories of Ukraine
    • Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol
    • Donetsk Oblast
    • Kharkiv Oblast
    • Kherson Oblast
    • Luhansk Oblast
    • Mykolaiv Oblast
    • Zaporizhzhia Oblast
    • Sumy Oblast (2025, reentry)
Previous
  • Chernihiv Oblast
  • Kyiv Oblast
  • Odesa Oblast
  • Sumy Oblast (2022)
  • Zhytomyr Oblast
Potentially
related
  • Black Sea drone incident
  • Bridge collapses in Russia
  • Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant drone strike
  • Russian mystery fires
  • Transnistria attacks
  • Zagreb Tu-141 crash
Other
  • Crimean Bridge explosions
    • 2022
    • 2023
    • 2025
  • Assassination attempts on Volodymyr Zelenskyy
  • Coup d'état attempt in Ukraine
  • Bridges in the Russo-Ukrainian War
  • Dragon drone
  • Violations of non-combatant airspaces
    • 2022 missile explosion in Poland
    • 2025 drone incursion into Poland
    • Operation Eastern Sentry
  • Operation Synytsia
  • Ukraine and electronic warfare
  • Use of long-range weapons by Ukraine in Russia
  • 2023 Ukrainian counteroffensive
  • 2024 Ukrainian cyberattacks against Russia
  • Wagner Group rebellion
War crimes
General
  • Accusations of genocide in Donbas
  • Allegations of genocide of Ukrainians
    • child abductions
  • Attacks
    • on hospitals
    • on infrastructures
  • Cluster munitions
  • Incendiary weapons
  • Landmines
  • Russian filtration camps
  • Russian mobile crematoriums
  • Russian theft of Ukrainian grain
  • Russian torture chambers
  • Looting
  • Sexual violence
  • Mistreatment of prisoners of war
Attacks on
civilians
  • February 2022 Kharkiv cluster bombing
  • Kharkiv government building airstrike
  • 3 March Chernihiv bombing
  • Irpin refugee column shelling
  • Mariupol hospital airstrike
  • Stara Krasnianka care house attack
  • Mykolaiv cluster bombing
  • March 2022 Donetsk attack
  • 2022 Borodianka airstrikes
  • Chernihiv breadline attack
  • Mariupol theatre airstrike
  • Kyiv shopping centre bombing
  • Sumykhimprom ammonia leak
  • March 2022 Kharkiv cluster bombing
  • Mykolaiv government building missile strike
  • Bucha massacre
  • Kramatorsk railway station attack
  • April 2022 Kharkiv cluster bombing
  • Bilohorivka school bombing
  • Shooting of Andrii Bohomaz
  • Maisky Market attack
  • Kremenchuk shopping mall attack
  • Serhiivka missile strike
  • Chasiv Yar missile strike
  • Olenivka prison massacre
  • Kharkiv dormitories missile strike
  • Chaplyne railway station attack
  • Izium mass graves
  • September 2022 Donetsk attack
  • Zaporizhzhia civilian convoy attack
  • Kupiansk civilian convoy shelling
  • Zaporizhzhia residential building airstrike
  • Russian strikes against Ukrainian infrastructure
  • 2023 Dnipro residential building airstrike
  • Sloviansk airstrike
  • Uman missile strike
  • Kramatorsk restaurant missile strike
  • Lyman cluster bombing
  • 2023 Pokrovsk missile strike
  • Chernihiv missile strike
  • Kostiantynivka missile strike
  • Hroza missile attack
  • Volnovakha massacre
  • December 2023 strikes
  • 2024 Pokrovsk missile strike
  • 2024 Donetsk attack
  • Lysychansk missile strike
  • 6 March 2024 Odesa strike
  • March 2024 strikes
  • Human safari (terror campaign)
  • May 2024 Kharkiv strikes
  • 8 July 2024 strikes
  • 2024 Kostiantynivka supermarket missile attack
  • 26 August 2024 strikes
  • September 2024 Poltava strike
  • November 2024 strikes
  • February 2025 Poltava strike
  • 2025 Sumy airstrike
  • 2025 Yarova attack
  • 2025 Ternopil attack
  • 2025 Khorly strike
Crimes
against
soldiers
  • Torture of Russian soldiers in Mala Rohan
  • Torture and castration of a Ukrainian POW in Pryvillia
  • Rape of Donetsk People's Republic soldiers by Kadyrovites
  • Murder of Yevgeny Nuzhin
  • Makiivka surrender incident
  • Execution of Oleksandr Matsievskyi
  • 2022 Ukrainian prisoner of war beheading
Legal cases
  • ICC investigation
    • Arrest warrants
  • ICJ court case
  • Task Force on Accountability
  • Universal jurisdiction
  • Crime of aggression tribunal
  • Criminal proceedings
    • Vadim Shishimarin
    • Alexander Bobikin and Alexander Ivanov
    • Anton Cherednik
Reactions
States
and
official
entities
General
  • Sanctions
    • people and organizations
    • restrictions on transit to Kaliningrad Oblast
  • Military aid
    • European Union Military Assistance Mission in support of Ukraine
    • People's Bayraktar
    • Signmyrocket.com
  • Humanitarian aid
  • Sanctioned yachts
  • Relations with Russia
Ukraine
  • Application to NATO
  • Be Brave Like Ukraine
  • Brave1
  • Bring Kids Back UA
  • Ban on Russia-associated religious groups
  • Coordination Headquarters for the Treatment of Prisoners of War
  • Decolonization and derussification law
  • Delta
  • Destroyed Russian military equipment exhibition
  • For Courage and Bravery (Ukraine)
  • Grain From Ukraine
  • Headquarters of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief
  • Hero City
  • I Want to Live
  • International Legion and other foreign units
    • Belarusian Volunteer Corps
      • Terror Battalion
    • Black Maple Company
    • Canadian-Ukrainian Brigade
    • Freedom of Russia Legion
    • German Volunteer Corps
    • Karelian National Battalion
    • Kastuś Kalinoŭski Regiment
    • Norman Brigade
    • Pahonia Regiment
    • Polish Volunteer Corps
    • Romanian Battlegroup Getica
    • Russian Volunteer Corps
    • Separate Special Purpose Battalion
    • Sibir Battalion
    • Turan Battalion
  • International Sponsors of War
  • Forced confiscation law of Russian property [ru; uk]
  • Look for Your Own
  • Lukoil sanctions
  • Martial law
  • Mobilization
  • Media Center Ukraine
  • National Council for the Recovery of Ukraine from the War [uk]
  • National Multi-Subject Test [uk]
  • North Korea–Ukraine relations
  • Points of Invincibility
  • Recognition of Ichkeria
  • Rescuer City
  • Save Ukrainian Culture [uk]
  • Syria–Ukraine relations
  • Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra
  • United24
  • United News
Russia
  • highways in the annexed territories
    • A290
    • A291 "Tavrida"
    • R260
    • R280 "Novorossiya"
  • 2022 Moscow rally
  • 2023 Moscow rally
  • 2022 Moscow Victory Day Parade
  • 2023 Moscow Victory Day Parade
  • 2024 Moscow Victory Day Parade
  • 2023 Presidential Address to the Federal Assembly
  • Blockade of Ukraine [ru]
  • Bohdan Khmelnytsky Battalion
  • Censorship in Russia [ru]
  • Chechnya
    • Pro-Ukrainian Chechen fighters
  • Conmemorative Medal "Participant of a Special Military Operation" [ru]
  • Conversations about Important Things
  • Krasovsky case
  • Legalization of parallel imports [ru]
  • Manifesto of the South Russian People's Council
  • Martial law
  • Masha Moskalyova case
  • Metropolis of Crimea
  • Mikhail Simonov case
  • Mobilization
    • Recruitment of irregular forces [ru]
  • Operation Doppelgänger
  • Opinion polling [ru]
  • Orthodox Christmas truce proposal
  • Wagner Group–Ministry of Defense conflict
  • Russian Orthodox clergymen appeal against war
  • Salvation Committee for Peace and Order
  • Special Coordinating Council
  • Ukraine bioweapons conspiracy theory
  • Unfriendly countries list
  • War censorship laws
  • We Are Together. Sports
  • "What Russia Should Do with Ukraine"
United
States
  • 2022 Joe Biden speech in Warsaw
  • 2022 State of the Union Address
  • Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2022
  • Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023
  • Disinformation Governance Board
  • Executive Order 14071
  • Pentagon document leaks
  • Task Force KleptoCapture
  • Ukraine Defense Contact Group
  • Ukraine Democracy Defense Lend-Lease Act
  • Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative
Other
countries
and regions
  • Belarus
  • Canada
    • Canada–Ukraine authorization for emergency travel
  • China
    • Chinese peace plan
  • Coalition of the willing
  • Croatia
  • Denmark
    • Danish European Union defence opt-out referendum
  • France
    • Mission Aigle
  • Georgia
  • Germany
    • German Taurus controversy
      • Taurus leak
    • Zeitenwende speech
  • Hong Kong
  • Hungary
  • India
    • Operation Ganga
  • Iran
  • Israel
    • Operation Israel Guarantees
  • Lithuania
  • Moldova
  • New Zealand
    • Russia Sanctions Act
  • North Korea
  • Poland
    • border crisis with Ukraine
  • Syria [ru]
  • Taiwan
  • United Kingdom
    • Economic Crime Act
    • Homes for Ukraine
    • Operation Interflex
    • 2025 London Summit on Ukraine
United
Nations
  • Emergency special session
    • Resolution ES-11/1
    • Resolution ES-11/2
    • Resolution ES-11/3
    • Resolution ES-11/4
    • Resolution ES-11/5
    • Resolution ES-11/6
    • Resolution ES-11/7
  • Security Council Resolution 2623
  • Resolution A/RES/77/229
  • Easter truce
International
organizations
  • Accession of Moldova to the EU
  • Accession of Ukraine to the EU
  • Brussels summit
  • European Political Community
    • 1st summit
    • 2nd summit
    • 3rd summit
  • Madrid summit
  • NATO virtual summit
  • Operation Oscar
  • PACE Platform for Dialogue with Russian Democratic Forces
  • Ramstein Air Base meeting
  • EU–Ukraine Summit
  • REPowerEU
  • Steadfast Defender 2024
  • SWIFT ban against Russian banks
  • Ukraine Recovery Conference
  • Versailles declaration
  • 2023 Vilnius summit
  • 15th BRICS summit
  • 2024 Washington summit
    • Declaration
    • JATEC
  • Weimar+
Other
  • Consecration of Russia
  • F-16 training coalition
  • Finland–NATO relations
  • Finland–Russia border barrier
  • Iron diplomacy
  • Proposed Russian annexation of South Ossetia
  • Removal of monuments and memorials
  • Streets renamed
    • Ukraine Square, Oslo
  • Serving heads of state and government that have visited Ukraine during the invasion
  • Sweden–NATO relations
    • Swedish anti-terrorism bill
Public
Protests
  • In Ukraine
    • in Russian-occupied Ukraine
    • demolition of monuments to Alexander Pushkin
    • ArmWomenNow
    • Ukrainian Artistic Front
  • In Russia
    • Angry patriots
      • Club of Angry Patriots
    • Anti-War Committee
    • Suspicious deaths of Russian businesspeople
    • Congress of People's Deputies
    • Council of Mothers and Wives
    • Feminist Anti-War Resistance
    • Flower protests
    • Marina Ovsyannikova
    • Russian Action Committee
    • North Caucasian protests
    • 2022 Russian Far East protests
    • State Duma initiative for charging Vladimir Putin of high treason
    • White-blue-white flag
  • In Belarus
  • In China
    • Great Translation Movement
  • In Czech Republic
    • Czech Republic First!
Companies
  • Address of the Russian Union of Rectors
  • Boycott of Russia and Belarus
    • "Do not buy Russian goods!"
  • E.N.O.T. Corp.
    • Igor Mangushev
  • McDonald's in Russia
    • Vkusno i tochka
  • NashStore [ru]
  • People's Satellite
  • Starlink satellites
  • Stop Bloody Energy
  • Wagner Group
    • Andrey Aleksandrovich Medvedev
    • Death of Nemes Tarimo
  • Yale CELI List of Companies
Technology
  • Anonymous and the invasion
  • alerts.in.ua
  • DDoS attacks on Romania
  • DeepStateMap.Live
  • Denys Davydov
  • IT Army of Ukraine
  • Killnet
  • Liveuamap
  • Open-source intelligence
  • peacenotwar
  • Russian Asset Tracker
  • Squad303 [pl]
  • Ukraine Siren Alerts
  • Wikipedia
    • threat to block in Russia
    • detention of Mark Bernstein
Spies
  • Diplomatic expulsions during the Russo-Ukrainian War
  • Russian spies in the Russo-Ukrainian War
Other
  • Association of Azovstal Defenders' Families
  • Black Sea Grain Initiative
  • Collaboration with Russia
    • Pavel Sudoplatov Battalion
    • We Are Together with Russia
  • Concert for Ukraine
  • Free Buryatia Foundation
  • Free Nations of Post-Russia Forum
  • Game4Ukraine
  • Get Lost
  • Global Tour for Peace
  • Go by the Forest
  • Guide to the Free World
  • Mozart Group
  • Olena Zelenska Foundation
  • Open letter from Nobel laureates
  • Rubikus.HelpUA
  • Ruslan Shostak Charitable Foundation
  • Russia's War Crimes House
  • Save Ukraine
  • Saving Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Online
  • Serhiy Prytula Charity Foundation
  • Spain letter bomb attacks
  • Yermak-McFaul Expert Group on Russian Sanctions
  • Pavel Filatyev
  • True Russia
  • Volos Declaration
  • Vyvozhuk
  • Wimbledon ban
Impact
Effects
  • Aircraft losses
  • Casualties
    • journalists killed
    • Russian generals killed
  • Economic impact
    • Inflation surge
    • 2022 Moldovan energy crisis
      • 2022–2023 protests
    • 2025 Moldovan energy crisis
    • Russia–EU gas dispute
      • 2022 Nord Stream pipelines sabotage
    • Russian debt default
    • 2022 Russian oil price cap
    • 2022-2024 German economic crisis
    • 2023 Russian oil products sanctions and price cap
    • EU natural gas price cap
  • Education
  • End of the Whisky War
  • Environmental impact
  • European re-armament
  • Eurovision Song Contest 2022
    • Russia
    • Ukraine
  • Eurovision Song Contest 2023
  • Food crises
  • Impact on theatre [uk]
  • List of notable deaths
  • Lukoil oil transit dispute
  • Nuclear power plants
    • Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant crisis
  • Nuclear risk
  • Religion
  • Russian emigration
    • The Ark
  • Ship losses
  • Ukrainian cultural heritage
    • art theft and looting
    • damaged cultural sites
  • Trauma
  • Urengoy–Pomary–Uzhhorod pipeline explosion
  • Ukrainian energy crisis
  • Violations of non-combatant airspaces
  • Women
Human
rights
  • Humanitarian impact
  • Ukrainian refugee crisis
    • 2025 Amsterdam stabbing attack
    • Sobieskiego 100
  • UN Commission of Inquiry
  • UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission
Terms,
phrases
  • "And now I will show you where the attack on Belarus was prepared from"
  • "Anglo-Saxons"
  • "Bavovna"
  • "Busification"
  • "Grandpa in his bunker"
  • "Good evening, we are from Ukraine"
  • "Orc"
  • "Putin khuylo!"
  • "Khuy Voyne!"
  • "Russia is here forever [uk]"
  • "Russian warship, go fuck yourself"
  • "Slava Ukraini!"
  • "Special military operation"
  • "To bomb Voronezh"
  • "Strength is in truth"
  • "Westsplaining"
  • "Where have you been for eight years?"
  • "Without you"
Popular
culture
Songs
  • "12"
  • "Bakhmut Fortress"
  • "Bayraktar"
  • "Bilia topoli"
  • "City of Mary"
  • "Flowers of Minefields"
  • "Generation Cancellation"
  • "Generation Z"
  • "I'm Russian"
  • "Oyda"
  • "Hey, Hey, Rise Up!"
  • "Mama ŠČ!"
  • "Oi u luzi chervona kalyna"
  • "Slava Ukraini!"
  • "Stefania"
  • "Ukraine"
  • "Crushed"
Films
  • 20 Days in Mariupol
  • A Rising Fury
  • Follow Me
  • Intercepted
  • Russians at War
  • Turn in the Wound
  • Ukraine on Fire 2 [uk]
Other
  • Babylon'13
  • Back to the Cold War
  • Borodianka cat [uk]
  • Ghost of Kyiv
  • Kherson watermelon
  • Královec Region
  • Madonna of Kyiv
  • North Atlantic Fella Organization
  • Newspeak in Russia
  • Patron
  • "Putler"
  • "Putinversteher"
  • Raccoon of Kherson
  • Saint Javelin
  • Saint Mariuburg [ru; uk]
  • Vasylkiv maiolica rooster
  • Vladimir Putin's meeting table
  • Walk of the Brave
  • "Z" military symbol
Key people
Ukrainians
  • Volodymyr Zelenskyy
  • Anatolii Kryvonozhko
  • Anatoliy Barhylevych
  • Andrii Hnatov
  • Andriy Biletsky
  • Andriy Yermak
  • Denys Shmyhal
  • Denys Kireyev  X
  • Denys Monastyrsky  †
  • Denys Prokopenko
  • Ihor Klymenko
  • Iryna Venediktova
  • Kyrylo Budanov
  • Mykhailo Drapatyi
  • Mykola Oleschuk
  • Oleksandr Pavlyuk
  • Oleksandr Syrskyi
  • Oleksii Reznikov
  • Oleksiy Danilov
  • Oleksiy Neizhpapa
  • Ruslan Khomchak
  • Rustem Umerov
  • Sergiy Kyslytsya
  • Serhiy Shaptala
  • Serhii Sternenko
  • Valerii Zaluzhnyi
  • Vasyl Malyuk
  • Vitali Klitschko
  • Yevhen Moisiuk
  • Yulia Svyrydenko
Russians
  • Vladimir Putin
  • Aleksandr Dvornikov
  • Aleksandr Lapin
  • Aleksey Dyumin
  • Aleksey Nagin  †
  • Alexander Bortnikov
  • Andrei Kolesnikov
  • Andrei Sychevoi
  • Andrey Belousov
  • Andrey Vorobyov
  • Dmitry Medvedev
  • Gennady Zhidko
  • Igor Kastyukevich
  • Ivan Popov
  • Mikhail Mishustin
  • Maria Lvova-Belova
  • Nikolai Patrushev
  • Oleg Salyukov
  • Oleg Tsokov  †
  • Ramzan Kadyrov
  • Roman Berdnikov
  • Rustam Muradov
  • Sergey Kobylash
  • Sergey Lavrov
  • Sergey Naryshkin
  • Sergei Shoigu
  • Sergey Surovikin
  • Timur Ivanov
  • Valery Gerasimov
  • Viktor Sokolov
  • Viktor Zolotov
  • Vitaly Gerasimov
  • Vyacheslav Gladkov
  • Vyacheslav Volodin
  • Yevgeny Prigozhin  X
Other
  • Alexander Lukashenko
  • Denis Pushilin
  • Leonid Pasechnik
  • Sergey Aksyonov
  • Vitaly Ganchev
  • Vladimir Saldo
  • Yevgeny Balitsky
  • Yuriy Barbashov
Related
  • 2022 visit by Volodymyr Zelenskyy to the United States
  • 2023 North Korea–Russia summit
  • 2023 visit by Volodymyr Zelenskyy to the United Kingdom
  • 2025 Budapest Summit
  • 2025 Putin–Trump call
  • 2025 Alaska Summit
  • August 2025 White House Multilateral Meeting on Ukraine
  • Anti-drone mesh
  • Anti-Russian sentiment
  • Anti-Ukrainian sentiment
  • Antonov An-225 Mriya
  • Azerbaijan Airlines Flight 8243
  • Azovstal Iron and Steel Works
  • Brovary helicopter crash
  • Bryansk Oblast military aircraft crashes
  • Claims of Vladimir Putin's incapacity and death
  • CRINK
  • Decolonization in Ukraine
  • Decommunization in Ukraine
  • Derussification in Ukraine
    • Demolition of monuments to Alexander Pushkin in Ukraine
  • Foreign leaders that have visited Russia during the invasion
    • 2023 visit by Xi Jinping to Russia
  • Foreign leaders that have visited Ukraine during the invasion
    • 2023 visit by Fumio Kishida to Ukraine
    • 2023 visit by Joe Biden to Ukraine
    • 2023 visit by Yoon Suk Yeol to Ukraine
  • Institute for the Study of War
  • Irkutsk Su-30 crash
  • Ivanovo Ilyushin Il-76 crash
  • Korochansky Ilyushin Il-76 crash
  • Kyivstar cyberattack
  • Lady R incident
  • visits to Europe
  • Moldovan coup d'état attempt allegations
  • Nord Stream 2
  • Operational Group of Russian Forces
  • Proposed Russian annexation of Transnistria
  • Punisher
  • Russian nuclear weapons
    • Sarmat
  • Rico Krieger
  • Ryazan Il-76 crash
  • Siberian wildfires
  • Sinhury mid-air collision [uk; zh]
  • Soloti military training ground shooting
  • Soviet imagery
  • Speeches by Zelenskyy
  • Territorial Center of Recruitment and Social Support
  • Time of Heroes
  • Turtle tank
  • U-24 association
  • Ukrainian-African Renaissance
  • Ukrainian conscription crisis
  • Western long-range weapons in Russia
  • Ural Airlines Flight 1383
  • "The Vladimir Putin Interview"
  • Voronezh An-26 crash
  • Wagner Group plane crash
  • Yeysk Su-34 crash
  • Yaroslav Hunka scandal
  • Category
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • VIAF
  • GND
National
  • Czech Republic
Geographic
  • MusicBrainz area
Other
  • Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine
  • Yale LUX
Retrieved from "https://teknopedia.ac.id/w/index.php?title=Kherson&oldid=1341187018"
Categories:
  • Kherson
  • Cities in Kherson Oblast
  • Port cities and towns in Ukraine
  • Port cities and towns of the Black Sea
  • Cities of regional significance in Ukraine
  • Populated places on the Dnieper in Ukraine
  • Oblast centers in Ukraine
  • Populated places established in 1778
  • 1778 establishments in the Russian Empire
  • Populated places established in the Russian Empire
  • Khersonsky Uyezd
  • Holocaust locations in Ukraine
  • Kherson urban hromada
  • Sites of massacres of Poles in World War II
Hidden categories:
  • Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
  • Pages with non-numeric formatnum arguments
  • Pages using the Phonos extension
  • Articles containing Ancient Greek (to 1453)-language text
  • CS1 Ukrainian-language sources (uk)
  • Articles containing Russian-language text
  • Articles containing Latin-language text
  • CS1 uses Ukrainian-language script (uk)
  • CS1 Polish-language sources (pl)
  • CS1 maint: location missing publisher
  • CS1 Russian-language sources (ru)
  • CS1 uses Russian-language script (ru)
  • CS1 French-language sources (fr)
  • Articles containing Ukrainian-language text
  • CS1 German-language sources (de)
  • Webarchive template wayback links
  • Articles with Ukrainian-language sources (uk)
  • CS1 maint: deprecated archival service
  • Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the 1922 Encyclopaedia Britannica with Wikisource reference
  • Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica with Wikisource reference
  • Articles with short description
  • Short description is different from Wikidata
  • Wikipedia extended-confirmed-protected pages
  • Use dmy dates from December 2024
  • Coordinates on Wikidata
  • Pages with Ukrainian IPA
  • Pages including recorded pronunciations
  • Pages with Russian IPA
  • Pages with Greek IPA
  • All articles with unsourced statements
  • Articles with unsourced statements from October 2023
  • Pages using bar box without float left or float right
  • Articles with unsourced statements from September 2023
  • Commons category link is on Wikidata
  • Interlanguage link template existing link
  • Pages using the Kartographer extension

  • indonesia
  • Polski
  • العربية
  • Deutsch
  • English
  • Español
  • Français
  • Italiano
  • مصرى
  • Nederlands
  • 日本語
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  • Sinugboanong Binisaya
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  • 中文
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Sunting pranala
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