Rybinsk (, ) is the second-largest city of Yaroslavl Oblast, Russia. It lies on both banks of the Volga River at its confluence with the Sheksna and Cheremukha, about northwest of Yaroslavl and north of Moscow. As of the 2021 Census, its population was 177,295 (200,771 in 2010).
Historically a major transshipment and grain trading hub on the upper Volga and the Vyshny Volochyok/MariinskâÂÂTikhvin waterway system, Rybinsk expanded rapidly in the 18thâÂÂ19th centuries and was chartered as a town in 1777. In the Soviet era it developed into an engineering center and inland river port associated with the construction of the Rybinsk Reservoir and Rybinsk Hydroelectric Station. The city is noted for its 19thâÂÂcentury merchant architecture along the Volga embankment and is sometimes included in extended Golden Ring of Russia itineraries. Rybinsk has borne several names: UstâÂÂSheksna (until 1504), Rybnaya Sloboda (until 1777), Shcherbakov (1946âÂÂ1957), and Andropov (1984âÂÂ1989). In 2021 Rybinsk was awarded the honorary title âÂÂCity of Labour ValourâÂÂ.
Rybinsk (earlier Rybnaya Sloboda) arose on the right bank of the Volga at the mouth of the Cheremukha; the point of land between them is known as Strelka (âÂÂthe SpitâÂÂ). Across the river stood the older settlement of UstâÂÂSheksna at the mouth of the Sheksna, first attested in 1071 in the Laurentian Chronicle during the suppression of a pagan revolt near Rostov. Excavations there have uncovered an early 11thâÂÂcentury settlement (over 3 ha) with imported Byzantine and Scandinavian goods and hoards of 10thâÂÂcentury Arab silver; by the 13th century a 30âÂÂhectare craftâÂÂandâÂÂtrade center had formed with evidence of blacksmithing, metallurgy, jewelry production, ceramics and woodworking, as well as numerous lead seals indicating administrative functions on the Volga trade route. The settlement was devastated in the Mongol invasion of 1238 and later lost its administrative role as the Muscovite state consolidated in the late 15th century.
On the right bank, crownâÂÂestate Rybnaya Sloboda in the 16thâÂÂ17th centuries held monopoly rights to catch âÂÂred fishâ (sturgeon, beluga, sterlet) on stretches of the Volga, Sheksna and Mologa to supply the Muscovite court. The first stone churches appeared in the 17th century; the oldest surviving building in the modern city is the Kazan Church (1697).
In 1777 Catherine the Great granted town rights; the name Rybinsk (influenced by the district name) became standard. After the capital moved to St Petersburg and Baltic trade boomed, Rybinsk prospered at the junction of routes from St Petersburg to the Caspian and from Siberia (via the Kama) to the Baltic. Because the upper Volga above Rybinsk was often shallow, heavy barges from the Middle and Lower Volga unloaded here to smaller craft able to navigate the Vyshny Volochyok Waterway and, later, the Mariinsk Canal system and Tikhvin Canal system. Rybinsk developed grain warehouses, salt depots, inns, and a river port that became known as the âÂÂcapital of barge haulers.â The Neoclassical SaviorâÂÂTransfiguration Cathedral (1838âÂÂ1851) dominates the embankment. Rail arrived with the RybinskâÂÂBologoye railway line (1870), expanding transshipment onto trains and spurring industry (mills, breweries, ropeâÂÂmaking, ironfounding and shipbuilding, including a Nobel Brothersâ shipyard founded in 1907).
Soviet power was established on 2 March 1918; an antiâÂÂBolshevik uprising on 8 July 1918 was quickly suppressed. Rybinsk briefly served as the center of Rybinsk Governorate (1921âÂÂ1923) and Rybinsk Okrug (1929âÂÂ1930). Industrialization transformed the city into a machineâÂÂbuilding center: the âÂÂRusskiy Renaultâ auto plant (founded 1916) evolved into a major aeroâÂÂengine works (later ODKâÂÂSaturn); a terminal grain elevator built in 1936 near RybinskâÂÂTovarny Station was among the largest in Europe at the time. In 1936 construction began on the Rybinsk hydroelectric complex as part of the âÂÂBig Volgaâ project; reservoir filling started in 1941 and continued to 1947. Two units went online in late 1941âÂÂearly 1942, supplying wartime power (including to Moscow via a dedicated underground reserve cable). The reservoir inundated large areas, including the town of Mologa, whose residents were largely resettled in Rybinsk.
On 13 September 1946 the city was renamed Shcherbakov after A. S. Shcherbakov; the historic name Rybinsk was restored in October 1957. On 15 March 1984 it was renamed Andropov after Yuri Andropov; the name Rybinsk returned on 4 March 1989. Postwar decades saw growth in instrumentâÂÂmaking, electrical engineering, optics, shipbuilding, and machine construction; housing estates (Veretye, Severny, Zapadny) and infrastructure were built, including a road bridge over the Volga (1963) and a trolleybus system (1976).
Market reforms and the 1990s crisis hit local industry; some plants closed while others restructured. In the 2000sâÂÂ2020s, new and retooled enterprises appeared (e.g., ODKâÂÂGas Turbines, cable and food plants), and an IT sector emerged (Krista, branches of Tensor, etc.). Urban renewal restored the Transfiguration Cathedral, Krasnaya Square, parks, and the railway station area.
Rybinsk stands on the MologaâÂÂSheksna Lowland near the outlet of the Volga from the Rybinsk Reservoir, created where the Sheksna meets the Volga. It is at the northernmost point of the Volga: upstream the river flows generally northeast; at Rybinsk it turns southeast. The city extends about along the river, with a width up to . The area marks a transition between mixed forest and southern taiga.
The historic center is bounded by the Volga, the Cheremukha (right tributary of the Volga), the Korovka (left tributary of the Cheremukha), and the Dresvyanka/Pakhomovsky stream (left tributary of the Korovka). The small Utkash River isolates the eastern suburb of Kopaevo; the Fominsky stream separates the northwestern suburb of Perebory. On the left bank, the Krutets stream and the Selyanka River mark the edge of the Zavolzhye (leftâÂÂbank) part of the city. The Rybinsk hydroengineering complex spans both the Volga and the Sheksna; the confluence of the Volga, Sheksna and Mologa formed a broad, shallow reservoir and a long island between the old Sheksna bed, the reservoir and the Volga.
Rybinsk has a fourâÂÂseason humid continental climate with cold winters and warm summers. Winters (midâÂÂNovember to midâÂÂMarch) feature frequent thaws; July is the warmest month and often reaches around 30 ðC on hot days. The mean annual temperature is about and annual precipitation about 650 mm.
The cityâÂÂs coat of arms was granted with town status by Catherine II on 3 August 1777 and confirmed in law on 20 June 1778. It shows, above a stylized river, the Yaroslavl bear with a golden axe, signifying the cityâÂÂs affiliation with the Yaroslavl lands; in the lower part two sterlets indicate the abundance of valuable fish and the historic role of Rybinsk as a supplier of âÂÂred fishâ to the Muscovite court. The quayside stairs allude to Catherine IIâÂÂs ceremonial visit on 9 May 1767.
Within the framework of administrative divisions, Rybinsk serves as the administrative center of Rybinsky District, even though it is not a part of it. As an administrative division, it is incorporated separately as the city of oblast significance of RybinskâÂÂan administrative unit with the status equal to that of the districts. As a municipal division, the city of oblast significance of Rybinsk is incorporated as Rybinsk Urban Okrug.
Population: 177,295 (2021 Census); 200,771 (2010 Census).
Registered population on 1 January 2021: 182,383.
By ethnicity (Rosstat volume for the âÂÂ2020â census of Yaroslavl Oblast), Russians form the large majority; minorities include Ukrainians, Tajiks, Armenians and many smaller communities.
Rybinsk is a major machineâÂÂbuilding center. Leading sectors include gas turbine engines and industrial gasâÂÂturbine packages (ODKâÂÂSaturn), power and gasâÂÂcompression units (ODK â Gas Turbines), shipbuilding (Vympel Shipyard; the Nobel Brothersâ Shipyard builds and repairs tankers and dryâÂÂcargo vessels), instrumentâÂÂmaking (Rybinsk InstrumentâÂÂMaking Plant, âÂÂLuchâÂÂ), cable manufacturing (Rybinskkabel; Rybinskelectrocable), road machinery (Raskat), and snowmobiles/ATVs (Russkaya Mekhanika). Grain handling and milling remain traditional sectors (elevators and mills). An IT sector has developed (Krista; branches of Tensor, etc.; a 300âÂÂworkplace IT center is under construction).
RybinskâÂÂPassenger lies on the Northern RailwayâÂÂs BologoyeâÂÂRybinskâÂÂYaroslavl axis. A direct sleeper to Moscow runs several times per week via Sonkovo and Savyolovo; other through services link Samara, Ivanovo, Ufa and Kostroma with Saint Petersburg (seasonal variations apply). A limitedâÂÂstop âÂÂChaikaâ express connects Rybinsk and Yaroslavl. The 1905 station building is a federal architectural monument.
Regional highways link Rybinsk with Yaroslavl, Tutaev, Poshekhonye, Myshkin, Uglich, and Cherepovets. Crossing of the Volga is via the 1963 road bridge and the Rybinsk HPP dam (used mainly by transit trucks). City transit comprises buses and trolleybuses; route taxis also operate.
Locks at the hydrocomplex provide navigation on the VolgaâÂÂBaltic Waterway and Moscow Canal routes. The city has a freight river port and seasonal passenger services. A hydrofoil route between Yaroslavl and Tver with intermediate stops, including Rybinsk, launched in 2025.
Local airfields Staroselye and Yuzhny do not have scheduled passenger service. The nearest airport with regular flights is Tunoshna Airport near Yaroslavl (about ).
As of 2019 the municipal system comprised 92 institutions: 56 preschools, 27 general education schools, five supplementary education institutions, two support institutions, four higherâÂÂeducation institutions and nine secondary vocational colleges.
Secondary vocational institutions include the Rybinsk Aviation College, the Rybinsk Polygraphic College, the Rybinsk River College named after V. I. Kalashnikov (branch of the Volga State University of Water Transport), a medical college, transport/technological and industrial/economic colleges, a college of urban infrastructure and a forestry college. Higher education is represented by the Rybinsk State Aviation Technical University named after P. A. Solovyov and several local branches of external universities. The âÂÂKvantoriumâ childrenâÂÂs technopark serves c.800 students, and a dual education program runs at the Industrial and Economic College in partnership with ODKâÂÂSaturn.
Rybinsk has 15 sports schools (eight with OlympicâÂÂreserve status) and 321 sports facilities. Main venues include Saturn Stadium (under reconstruction), Meteor, Metallist, Pereborets and Avangard; the Polet Sports Palace (1977; rebuilt 2013; c.1,700 seats) hosts ice sports and youth hockey. Nearby, the Demino Ski Center has FISâÂÂcertified courses and has hosted CrossâÂÂCountry World Cup races; it hosted Russian biathlon championships in January 2020.
Cultural institutions include the Rybinsk Drama Theater (founded 1825), the Rybinsk Puppet Theater (1933), smaller theater companies, a centralized library system, and several houses of culture (community centers). Cinemas include âÂÂKosmosâ and âÂÂCinema Vâ (five screens) in the Vikonda mall.
The Rybinsk Museum-Reserve holds over 120,000 items, including collections from noble estates. Other museums include the Memorial HouseâÂÂMuseum of Academician A. A. Ukhtomsky; the Museum of the Mologa Region and the âÂÂSubmerged Sanctuaries of the Mologa LandâÂÂ; the private âÂÂNobels and the Nobel Movementâ museum; âÂÂRybinskâÂÂCinemaâÂÂHollywoodâ (about brothers Joseph and Nicholas Schenck); the âÂÂSoviet Eraâ display; an Admiral F. F. Ushakov museum complex; a Marine Museum; and a boutique piano workshop museum.
Recurring events include the Demino Ski Marathon (Worldloppet), a winter Ded Moroz parade, the Ushakov Festival, MerchantâÂÂs Day, City Day, the Lev Oshanin poetry and song festival, the Rybinsk HalfâÂÂMarathon, and openâÂÂair âÂÂJazz in Karyakinsky Garden.âÂÂ
Orthodoxy is predominant; Orthodox parishes belong to the Rybinsk Diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church. The 1697 Kazan Church (the cityâÂÂs oldest surviving building) and the Neoclassical Transfiguration Cathedral are notable.
A large Polish community in the late 19thâÂÂearly 20th centuries funded the NeoâÂÂGothic Roman Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus; today the building houses the âÂÂPrometeyâ student club. A Jewish community (âÂÂLechaim,â under FEOR) has existed since the 19th century; the 1916 brick synagogue was returned to believers in 2014 after decades of other uses. A local Muslim community has operated since 2018 (prayer room).
Rybinsk retains a large ensemble of 18thâÂÂearly 20thâÂÂcentury architecture along the Volga embankment. The pair of Grain Exchange buildings are landmarks: the older in strict classicism, and the 1912 âÂÂnew exchangeâ in a revival âÂÂRussian styleâ with tile facingâÂÂtoday housing the Rybinsk MuseumâÂÂReserve. Together with the Transfiguration Cathedral and the Volga road bridge they form the cityâÂÂs signature panorama.
On Krasnaya (Red) Square a monument to Emperor Alexander II (A. M. OpekushinâÂÂs last monumental work) was erected in 1914 and destroyed in 1918; a statue of Lenin now stands on its pedestal. Periodic proposals to restore the Alexander II monument have not advanced. The Mother Volga statue (1953) stands on the Rybinsk HPP spillway dam and was named the cityâÂÂs symbol in a 2016 online vote.
Near Rybinsk, fossils of Early Triassic temnospondyls have been discovered. Remains of Thoosuchus and Benthosuchus have been found in Lower Olenekian deposits.
Rybinsk is twinned with: