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The Black Sea Germans (German: Schwarzmeerdeutsche; Russian: черноморские немцы, romanized: chernomorskiye nemtsy; Ukrainian: чорноморські німці, romanized: chornomors'ku nimtsi) are ethnic Germans who left their homelands (starting in the late-18th century, but mainly in the early-19th century at the behest of ...
Several ethnic German national raions were all so set up in the 1920s in Ukraine, Crimea, north Caucasus, Georgia, Orenburg and Siberia. The Lutheran church , like nearly all religious affiliations in Russia, was ruthlessly suppressed under Stalin.
13 paź 2020 · Out of the 30,000 ethnic Germans who spread out in almost all regions of Ukraine between the 9th and 20th centuries, around 3,000 live in cities and villages of Zakarpattia. The German settlers in this region best preserved local German dialects, traditions, and culture, while in most of the other regions, the German descendants assimilated ...
Definition. The group of settlers commonly referred to as "Germans from Odessa and the Black Sea" were immigrants from western and southern Germany (followed later by Prussian Mennonites and Swabians) who settled on the northern coast of the Black Sea between Odessa and the Caucasus.
28 gru 2022 · The Black Sea Germans were ethnic Germans who left Germany in the 18th and 19th centuries and settled in South Russia, near the north coast of the Black Sea.
2 paź 2022 · Within the framework of a German nationalist “völkisch” movement, politicians used the German-speaking population of Eastern Europe as a basis for a revisionist foreign policy that assumed a German civilizing mission in Eastern Europe.
27 lis 2015 · A large number of ethnic Germans moved to settle in the prairies of the Dakotas from territories now part of Ukraine or Moldova in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.