German merchants established a trading post at
Novgorod, which they called Peterhof. In 1229, German merchants at Novgorod were granted certain privileges that made their positions more secure. The earliest German settlement in
Moscow dates to the reign of
Vasili III, Grand Prince of Moscow, from 1505 to 1533. A handful of German and Dutch craftsmen and traders were allowed to settle in Moscow's
German Quarter (
Немецкая слобода, or Nemetskaya
sloboda), as they provided essential technical skills in the capital. Gradually, this policy extended to a few other major cities. In 1682, Moscow had about 200,000 citizens; some 18,000 were classified as
Nemtsy, which means either "German" or "western foreigner". The international community located in the German Quarter greatly influenced
Peter the Great (reigned 1682–1725). His efforts to transform Russia into a more modern European state are believed to have derived in large part from his experiences among Russia's established Germans. By the late 17th century, foreigners were no longer so rare in Russian cities, and Moscow's German Quarter had lost its ethnic character by the end of that century.
Vistula Germans (Poland) Through wars and the partitions of Poland,
Prussia acquired an increasing amount of northern, western, and central Polish territory. The
Vistula River flows south to north, with its mouth on the
Baltic Sea near
Danzig (now
Gdańsk). Germans and
Dutch settled its valley beginning at the sea coast and gradually moving further south to the interior. Eventually, Prussia acquired most of the Vistula's watershed, and the central portion of then-Poland became
South Prussia. Its existence was brief - 1793 to 1806, but by its end many German settlers had established
Protestant agricultural settlements within its earlier borders. By contrast, most Polish were Roman Catholics. Some German
Roman Catholics also entered the region from the southwest, especially the area of Prussian
Silesia. The 1935 "Breyer Map" shows the distribution of German settlements in what became central Poland.
Napoleon's victories ended the short existence of South Prussia. The French Emperor incorporated that and other territories into the
Duchy of Warsaw. After Napoleon's defeat in 1815, however, the Duchy was divided. Prussia annexed the western
Posen region, and what is now central Poland became the Russian client-state known as
Congress Poland. Many Germans continued to live in this central region, maintaining their middle-German Prussian dialect, similar to the Silesian dialect, and their Protestant and Catholic religions. (The Russian population was primarily
Russian Orthodox, which was the established national church.) During both World Wars, the eastern front was fought over in this area. The Soviet government increased the conscription of young men. The rate of Vistula Germans' migrations to this area from Congress Poland increased. Some became
Polonized, however, and their descendants remain in Poland. During the last year of and after World War II, many ethnic Germans fled or were forcibly
expelled by the Russians and the Poles from Eastern Europe, particularly those who had maintained their German language and separate religions. The Russians and Poles blamed them for being allies of the Nazis and the reason that Nazi Germany had invaded the East in its program of
lebensraum. The Germans were also held to have abused the native populations in internal warfare, allied with the Germans during their occupation. Under the
Potsdam Agreement, major population transfers were agreed to by the Allies. The deportees generally lost all their property and were often attacked during their deportations. Those who survived joined millions of other
displaced peoples on the road after the war.
Volga Germans (Russia) - the most famous Russian Empress of German descent Czarina
Catherine II was German, born in
Stettin in Pomerania (now
Szczecin in Poland). After gaining her power, she proclaimed open immigration for foreigners wishing to live in the Russian Empire on 22 July 1763, marking the beginning of a wave of German migration to the Empire. She wanted German farmers to redevelop farmland that had been fallow after conflict with the Ottomans. German
colonies were founded in the lower
Volga river area almost immediately afterward. These early colonies were attacked during the
Pugachev uprising, which was centred on the Volga area, but they survived the rebellion. German immigration was motivated in part by religious intolerance and warfare in central Europe, as well as by frequently difficult economic conditions, particularly among the southern principalities. Catherine II's declaration freed German immigrants from requirements for military service (which was imposed on native Russians) and from most taxes. It placed the new arrivals outside of Russia's feudal hierarchy and granted them considerable internal autonomy. Moving to Russia gave German immigrants political rights that they would not have possessed in their own lands. Religious minorities found these terms very agreeable, particularly
Mennonites from the
Vistula River valley. Their unwillingness to participate in military service, and their long tradition of dissent from mainstream
Lutheranism and
Calvinism, made life under the Hohenzollerns very difficult for them. Nearly all of the Prussian Mennonites emigrated to Russia over the following century, leaving no more than a handful in Prussia. Other German minority churches took advantage of Catherine II's offer as well, particularly
Evangelical Christians such as the
Baptists. Although Catherine's declaration forbade them from proselytizing among members of the
Orthodox Church, they could evangelize Russia's
Muslim and other non-Christian minorities. German colonization was most intense in the
Lower Volga, but other areas also received immigrants. Many settled in the area around the
Black Sea, and the Mennonites favoured the lower
Dnieper river area, around Ekaterinoslav (now
Dnipro) and Aleksandrovsk (now
Zaporizhia). In 1803, Catherine II's grandson,
Tsar Alexander I, reissued her proclamation. In the chaos of the
Napoleonic wars, Germans responded in great numbers, fleeing their war-torn land. The Tsar's administration eventually imposed minimum financial requirements on new immigrants, requiring them to have either 300
gulden in cash or special skills in order to be accepted for entry to Russia. The abolition of
serfdom in the Russian Empire in 1861 created a shortage of labour in agriculture. The need for workers attracted new German immigration, particularly from the increasingly crowded central European states. There was no longer enough fertile land there for full employment in agriculture. according to 1897 census Furthermore, a sizable portion of Russia's ethnic Germans migrated into Russia from its Polish possessions. The 18th-century
partitions of Poland (1772–1795) dismantled the Polish-Lithuanian state, dividing it among Austria, Prussia and Russia. Many Germans already living in those parts of Poland transferred to Russia, dating back to
medieval and later migrations. Many Germans in Congress Poland migrated further east into Russia between then and
World War I, particularly in the aftermath of the
Polish insurrection of 1830. The
Polish insurrection in 1863 added a new wave of German emigration from Poland to those who had already moved east, and led to the founding of extensive German colonies in
Volhynia. When Poland reclaimed its independence in 1918 after
World War I, it ceased to be a source of German emigration to Russia, but by then many hundreds of thousands of Germans had already settled in enclaves across the Russian Empire. Germans settled in the
Caucasus area from the beginning of the 19th century and in the 1850s expanded into the
Crimea. In the 1890s, new German colonies opened in the
Altay mountain area in Russian Asia (see
Mennonite settlements of Altai). German colonial areas continued to expand in
Ukraine as late as the beginning of
World War I. According to the
first census of the Russian Empire in 1897, about 1.8 million respondents reported German as their
mother tongue.
Black Sea Germans (Moldova and Ukraine) The Black Sea Germans - including the
Bessarabian Germans and the
Dobrujan Germans - settled the territories of the northern bank of the
Black Sea in present-day Ukraine in the late 18th and the 19th century.
Catherine the Great had gained this land for Russia through her two wars with the
Ottoman Empire (1768–1774) and from the annexation of the
Crimean Khanates (1783). The area of settlement did not develop as compactly as that of the
Volga territory, and a chain of ethnic German colonies resulted. The first German settlers arrived in 1787, first from
West Prussia, followed by immigrants from Western and Southwestern Germany (including Roman Catholics), and from the
Warsaw area. Also many Germans, beginning in 1803, immigrated from the northeastern area of
Alsace west of the
Rhine River. They settled roughly 30 miles northeast of Odesa (city) in Ukraine, forming several enclaves that quickly expanded, resulting in daughter colonies springing up nearby. ;Crimea From 1783 onward the Crown initiated a systematic settlement of
Russians,
Ukrainians, and Germans in the
Crimean Peninsula (in what was then the
Crimean Khanate) in order to dilute the native population of the
Crimean Tatars. In 1939, around 60,000 of the 1.1 million inhabitants of Crimea were ethnic German. Two years later, following the end of the alliance and the Nazi German invasion of the Soviet Union, the government
deported ethnic Germans from the Crimea to
Central Asia in the Soviet Union's program of population transfers. Conditions were harsh and many of the deportees died. It was not until the period of
Perestroika in the late 1980s that the government granted surviving ethnic Germans and their descendants the right to return from Central Asia to the peninsula.
Volhynian Germans (Poland and Ukraine) The migration of Germans into
Volhynia ( covering northwestern
Ukraine from a short distance west of Kiev to the border with Poland) occurred under significantly different conditions than those described above. By the end of the 19th century, Volhynia had more than 200,000 German settlers. Their migration began was encouraged by local noblemen, often Polish landlords, who wanted to develop their significant land-holdings in the area for agricultural use. Probably 75% or more of the Germans came from Congress Poland, with the balance coming directly from other regions such as East and West Prussia, Pomerania, Posen, Württemberg, and
Galicia, among others. Shortly after 1800, the first German families started moving into the area. A surge occurred after the first
Polish rebellion of 1831 but by 1850, Germans still numbered only about 5000. The largest migration came after the second
Polish rebellion of 1863, and Germans began to flood into the area by the thousands. By 1900 they numbered about 200,000. The vast majority of these Germans were Protestant
Lutherans (in Europe they were referred to as Evangelicals). Limited numbers of
Mennonites from the lower Vistula River region settled in the south part of Volhynia.
Baptists and
Moravian Brethren settled mostly northwest of
Zhitomir. Another major difference between the Germans here and in other parts of Russia is that the other Germans tended to settle in larger communities. The Germans in Volhynia were scattered about in over 1400 villages. Though the population peaked in 1900, many Germans had already begun leaving Volhynia in the late 1880s for North and South America. Between 1911 and 1915, a small group of Volhynian German farmers (36 families - more than 200 people were relocated to Eastern Siberia. They also were instructed that they would now be official citizens of Russia, including the requirement of military service and contribution of taxes. They were able to also make use of the resettlement subsidies of the government's
Stolypin reform of 1906–1911. They settled in three villages (Pikhtinsk, Sredne-Pikhtinsk, and Dagnik) in what is today
Zalarinsky District of
Irkutsk Oblast, where they became known as the "Bug Hollanders". They apparently were not using the German language anymore, but rather spoke Ukrainian and Polish. They used
Lutheran Bibles that had been printed in
East Prussia, in the
Polish form known as
fraktur. Their descendants, many with German surnames, continue to live in the district into the 21st century.
Caucasus Germans A German minority of about 100,000 people existed in the
Caucasus region, in areas such as the
North Caucasus,
Georgia, and
Azerbaijan. In 1941
Joseph Stalin ordered all inhabitants with a German father to be deported, mostly to
Siberia or
Kazakhstan. == Mass emigration of Germans from Russia to the Americas, 1870s to 1910s==