Black Sea Germans
The Black Sea Germans are ethnic Germans who left their homelands starting in the late 18th century, but principally in the early 19th century at the behest of Emperor Alexander I of Russia, and settled in territories off the north coast of the Black Sea, mostly in the territories of the southern Russian Empire.
Black Sea Germans are distinct from similar groups of German settlers, who are separate chronologically, geographically and culturally.
History
began settling in southern Ukraine and the Crimean Peninsula in the late 18th century, but the bulk of immigration and settlement occurred during the Napoleonic period, from 1800 onward, with a concentration in the years 1803 to 1805. At the time, southern Ukraine was part of the Russian Empire. Designated New Russia, and often colloquially South Russia, these lands had been annexed by the Russian Empire during the reign of Catherine the Great after successful wars against the Ottoman Empire and the Crimean Khanate. The area of settlement was not as compact as that of the Volga territory; rather it was home to a chain of colonies. The first German settlers arrived in 1787, first from West Prussia, then later from Western and Southwestern Germany and Alsace, France; as well as from the Warsaw area. Catholics, Lutherans, and Mennonites were all known as capable farmers ; the Empress Catherine, herself an ethnic German, sent them a personal invitation to immigrate to the Russian Empire, as she felt they would make useful subjects and enrich her realm. She granted them certain privileges such as the free exercise of their religion and language within their largely closed communities, also exempt from military service and taxation.After the Bolshevik Revolution and the formation of the Soviet Union, Black Sea Germans, prior to World War II, were subjected to the forced starvation of man-made famines, the closure of German-language churches, schools, and community organisations, and were required to change their language of instruction from German to Russian. The 45,000 Germans in Crimea were forced into exile in Siberia and Kazakhstan, many into forced labour camps. Many did not survive the labor camps.
Many were deported as a result of the collectivization of all Soviet agricultural land in 1930/1931 by Stalin's first five-year plan. The German farmers were labelled kulaks by the Communist regime, and those who did not voluntarily agree to give up their land to the Soviet farming collectives were expelled to Siberia and Central Asia. The mass deportation of the Germans was based on social and ethnic criteria, the German Russian settlements probably suffered more than any other communities. About 1.2 percent of the Soviet population was classified as kulak and deported to the Gulag, based on a total Soviet population of 147 million, according to the 1926 census. The number of ethnic Germans sent to the camps as kulaks was about 50,000 out of a German population in the Soviet Union at the time of the same census of 1.239 million, that is, about 4 percent of the German population. The Germans were not the only ethnic group deported in large numbers during the collectivization drive, as many ethnic Poles also suffered the same fate. Germans, however, comprised the single largest foreign-origin minority sent into internal exile in the Soviet Union. There appeared to have been a deep prejudice against German communities because many Soviet officials considered all German farmers kulaks.
After Germany’s preemptive counter invasion of the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941, the Soviet leadership decided to label all ethnic Germans from Russia as enemies of the USSR, and accused them of collaborating with Nazis, most were arrested, even killed or deported into labour camps. The Supreme Soviet decreed the first evacuations, which were really expulsions, as the inhabitants were never allowed to return. Action to deport every ethnic German from the Crimea began on 15 August 1941. Although the decree stated that old people would not have to leave, everyone was expelled, first to Stavropol, and then to Rostov in southeastern Ukraine, near the Crimea, but then all were sent on to camps and special settlements in Kazakhstan. Given only three or four hours to pack, the deportees were not told where they were going, how long they would stay there, or how much food to take. The result was starvation for many and, due to the confusion, the separation of many families. In all, perhaps as many as 60,000 ethnic Germans were expelled from the Crimean peninsula alone at this time. Other parts of Southern Russian were also affected.
Although the majority of the Black Sea Germans avoided deportation due to the rapid advance of the German Army, Stalin, nevertheless, had sufficient time to arrest and exile those living east of the Dnieper River. Between 25 September 1941 and 10 October 1941, approximately 105,000 ethnic Germans were exiled from this region and forcibly deported to Soviet-held areas far to the east beyond the Ural mountains. In terms of total numbers deported to Siberia and Central Asia, between 15 August and 25 December 1941, the Soviet authorities expelled and exiled 856,000 German from Russia.
Because of the quick conquest of Soviet territory by the Axis in the early months of their invasion, the Soviet regime was not able to deport the majority of the ethnic Germans from the western part of the Soviet Union, that is, the area west of the Dnieper river. The German towns and villages in the Western Ukraine, in Volhynia, and the Black Sea region all came under Nazi German rule, first under a military government and then under that of the Nazi Party or the SS, as Reichskommissariat Ukraine.
Evacuation of Ethnic Germans during World War II
With the defeat of the German Army at Stalingrad in the winter of 1942–1943, the Soviet Red Army began its offensive, recapturing more and more German-occupied territory. SS Head Heinrich Himmler made a decision to evacuate all ethnic Germans and bring them to the Reich. Evacuations began in scattered German communities in the North Caucasus, where in February 1943, 11,000 people were transferred. Shortly thereafter, 40,000 German Russians were sent westward from the area between the Don and Dnieper Rivers. When the Soviet troops neared the Dnieper River in October 1943, the Chortitza Mennonite communities, totaling about 35,000 people, had to flee. In October, 45,000 ethnic Germans from Volhynia were also forced to leave, and, by February 1944, it became clear to the Germans in Southern Ukraine that the Red Army could not be stopped; thus, they began their hurried evacuation. About 135,000 fled to the West. Approximately 280,000 ethnic Germans were successfully brought out of the occupied Soviet Union, which represented almost 90 percent of the registered German population, according to the 1943 Reich census.On the basis of the articles pertaining to the repatriation of nationals in the Yalta Agreement, the United States and the Soviet Union agreed to return each other's nationals at the end of the war. Of the almost 300,000 ethnic Germans who were evacuated by the Germans from the Soviet Union, about 200,000 were caught and sent to the labour camp Gulags by the Red Army, either as they fled from the Warthegau in Western Poland, previously incorporated into the German state,, or elsewhere in Eastern Europe or when they were forcibly repatriated from occupied Germany to the Soviet Union.
Colonies
[Schwedengebiet] (Swedish DistrictThis is the English version of the German name of the area, though the literal German translation is ''Swedes' district'')
This small enclave of German settlement, established by the Russian imperial government, lies on the west bank of the Dnieper river in the Beryslav district of Kherson province, Ukraine, some 12 kilometers east-north-east of the town of Beryslav on the same side of the river.Originally settled in 1782 by manumitted ethnic Swedish serfs from the Baltic island of Dagö in present-day Estonia who were freed by Catherine the Great and invited to settle here also, the district took its German name from these earlier settlers, despite the fact that once the Germans began to arrive as official settlers during the Napoleonic period to replenish the population of the district, they soon outnumbered their Swedish precursors.
Due to attrition, Swedish numbers had fallen sharply within a few years of their leaving their Baltic homeland. To make up for this shortfall, new settlers, mostly ethnic Germans originating in the lands of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation, such as Württemberg, and the Austrian Habsburg hereditary lands, as well as Poland and Alsace-Lorraine, were invited to settle in the area from the turn of the 19th century. Both the arrival of the Swedes and the later advent of the Germans formed two stages of the same official Russian imperial policy designed to secure what was then a relatively new part of the Russian Empire which had only been in Russia's sway since they had defeated of the Ottoman Empire in 1774 and won these vast southern territories, known first as New Russia, and later as Southern Russia.
The oldest village, first established in 1782, was the Swedish Lutheran village of Gammalsvenskby. In the period 1802-1806, after a generation alone, during which their numbers had been supplemented on occasion by Swedes captured in war and other, mostly temporary, sojourners from Danzig, the local Baltic Swedish community was faced with the unwelcome arrival of German speakers. This not only meant that they no longer had this area to themselves, but the Swedes had to share their original wooden church with some permanent incomers, ethnic German Lutherans. As it happened, the Germanophones also included Roman Catholics, which was another source of community tension. The Germans of either denomination called the village Alt-Schwedendorf after the existing Swedes settlers. Basing themselves in Alt-Schwedendorf for a time, the Germans established several entirely German colony villages. In addition, some Germans also remained in Alt-Schwedendorf. In all, there were the following four initial settlements. They were initially established along confessional lines first in 1782, with the latter ones created in the period 1802 to 1806, viz.:
- Alt-Schwedendorf : originally, and overwhelmingly, Lutheran, it was founded by Swedes in 1782, and later supplemented by German settlers, mostly Lutherans, in the period 1802 to 1806. As the oldest and, then, sole village already established, it served as the short-term mustering place from which three other colonies were settled according to religion and ethnicity. As such, for a time, its inhabitants included some German Roman Catholics who settled in to the north in the new village of Klosterdorf, or left the area entirely, for destinations such as the Taurien district of Crimea, further to the south. The majority of the influx, however, consisted of German Lutherans who were settled to the south of Alt-Schwedendorf in what were, at least, at the outset, the exclusively German Lutheran villages of Mühlhausendorf and Schlangendorf, for which, see below. After years of tension between the Lutheran Swedes and Lutheran Germans, the Swedes built their own parish church dedicated to St John the Baptist in the village of Gammalsvenskby/Alt-Schwedendorf, while the German Lutherans of the two southern neighbouring villages built their own house of worship between the two German Lutheran villages of Mühlhausendorf and Schlangendorf, and dedicated it to St Peter and St Paul. As for Alt-Schwedendorf, in 1915, it, along with the three other original villages, was subsumed into modern Zmiivka. As Gammalsvenskby, it is, however, accorded historic status in the region for its association with one of the few settlements of Swedish-speaking colonists in what was once known as South Russia or New Russia, and now forms part of Ukraine. The church records of the local Lutheran population, whether German or Swedish, survive for part of the nineteenth century, in the archives of the St Petersburg Evangelical Lutheran Consistory, and have been microfilmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah, and partially indexed. For many years, the records for Alt-Schwedendorf were recorded in tandem with those of Josefstal, an upriver village in the former Ekaterinoslav colonies over 250 km to the north whose Lutheran pastors visited Alt-Schwedendorf occasionally to perform marriages, leaving the baptisms and burials to be performed by laymen such as the church sexton or village schoolmaster. During that period, Alt-Schwedendorf was effectively a filial chapelry of Josefstal, meaning that many of the records relevant to its inhabitants have been indexed and appear under the mother parish's name rather than the daughter community to which these folk belonged. Confusing as this may be, successful research into this area can mean one encounters records and studies written not only in German, but in also Swedish, Russian, and English. To complicate matters further, when a large number of the ethnic Swedes of the area were allowed to leave the Soviet Union for Sweden, they were provided with a copy of their original parish registers dating back to the foundation of the Swedish colony in 1782. These registers include records covering the ethnic German Lutheran population particularly in cases of intermarriage, and cover the whole period of Swedish habitation up to the year of partial departure, i.e. 1929.
- Klosterdorf : Roman Catholic, founded in 1804. For many years, Klosterdorf did not have its own priest. Instead it was a filial chapelry served by priests from the city parish of St Pius and St Nicholas in Kherson, part of the Odessa deanery of the Tiraspol Roman Catholic diocese. By 1864, however, the local German Catholic community had raised enough funds to pay for a village chapel dedicated to St Vincent, which eventually became an independent parish church. The last priest, the Reverend Father Johann Lorenzovitch Thauberger, was martyred during the Soviet era repression of worship The whereabouts of any surviving original parish registers of this community are unknown. Under Russian law, however, annual returns copied from the parish registers of birth/baptism, marriage, and death/burial for this community were sent to archives designated by the civil authorities to act as civilian record repositories to document the populace for the purpose of control, taxation, and military service. From 1853 until the shortly after the end of the Russian imperial era, the surviving returns for the area are held in the Tiraspol Roman Catholic Consistory fonds at the Saratov State Archives in Saratov, Russia. Earlier church records are to be found in the fonds covering the Mohilev Roman Catholic Consistory, for the period from 1801 to 1853, with some overlap in the Kherson Roman Catholic Consistory, until, with the establishment of the diocese of Tiraspol, coverage, backdated by almost a half a decade, became effective from 1853 to 1918.
- Mühlhausendorf : Lutheran when founded in 1803-1805, with a later admixture of Roman Catholic Germans.
- Schlangendorf : Lutheran when founded in 1803-1805, with a later admixture of Roman Catholic Germans. It now incorporates the area covered by the three other original villages listed above.
- Alt-Schwedendorf: 515 inhabitants with 65 houses and one Lutheran church
- Klosterdorf: 773 inhabitants with 52 houses and one Roman Catholic chapel
- Mühlhausendorf: 489 inhabitants with 48 houses and one Lutheran prayer house
- Schlangendorf: 474 inhabitants with 46 houses and one Lutheran prayer house
- Friedenheim, founded in 1928.
- Hagendorf
- Hoffenthal
- Neu-Klosterdorf, a daughter colony of Klosterdorf, which was then called in apposition to her offspring, Alt-Klosterdorf. Today this is the village of Kostyrka, not to be confused with the mother village of the same name now subsumed into Zmiivka.
- Neu-Schwedendorf, a daughter colony of Alt-Schwedendorf.
In addition, from 1891 onward, some of the Germans of these villages emigrated from Russia to North America, notably Canada's province of Saskatchewan, where they left descendants.
Dr Karl Stumpp and Dr Adam Giesinger both published materials on the settlement and history of the Swedish District and its villages. The historical part of this overview is drawn primarily from Stumpp's seminal work, The Emigration from Germany to Russia in the Years 1763 to 1862, and Giesinger's .
Glückstal
- Glückstal
- Neudorf
- Bergdorf
- Kassel
Kutschurgan
- Strassburg
- Selz
- Kandel
- Baden
- Mannheim
- Elsass
Liebental
- Liebental
- Kleinliebental
- Josefstal
- Mariental
- Lustdorf
- Alexanderhilf
- Neuburg
- Peterstal
- Franzfeld
- Annental
- Güldendorf
- Freudental
Beresan
Beresan Colony settlements- Landau
- Speyer
- Rohrbach
- Worms
- Sulz
- Karlsruhe
- Rastadt
- München
- Katharinental
- Johannestal
- Waterloo
[Molotschna]
- Alt-Montal
- Alt-Nassau
- Blumental
- Durlach
- Friedrichsfeld
- Grüntal
- Heidelberg
- Hochheim
- Hochstädt
- Hoffental
- Karlsruhe
- Kostheim
- Kronsfeld
- Leiterhausen
- Neu-Montal
- Neu-Nassau
- Prischib
- Reichenfeld
- Rosental
- Tiefenbrunn
- Waldorf
- Wasserau
- Weinau
- Neudorf
Colonies in Ekaterinoslav">Dnipropetrovsk Oblast">Ekaterinoslav
- Billersfeld
- Fischersdorf
- Jamburg
- Josefstal – and Danzig )
- Kronsgarten –
- Mariental/Marienfeld
Planer colonies in [Mariupol]
- Kirschwald
- Tiegenhof
- Rosengart
- Schönbaum
- Kronsdorf
- Grunau
- Rosenberg
- Wickerau
- Reichenberg
- Kampenau
- Mirau
- Kaiserdorf
- Göttland
- Neuhof
- Eichwald
- Tiegenort
- Tiergart
- Ludwigstal
Swabia colonies in [Berdyansk]
- Neu-Hoffnung
- Neu-Hoffnungstal
- Neu-Stuttgart
- Rosenfeld
More colonies
- Alt Danzig
- Colonists district Crimea
- Mennonite colony Molotschna
- Mennonite colony Chortiza
- Daughter colony Kronau
- Ostheim, Daughter settlement of Neu-Hoffnung
- Rosenfeld
Notable people
- Georg Leibbrandt, Nazi functionary
- Vyacheslav Polozov, opera singer
- Pyotr Schmidt, Russian naval officer and 1905 revolutionary
- Athanasius Schneider, Auxiliary Roman Catholic Bishop of Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan, theologian and author
- Karl Stumpp, ethnologist and Nazi functionary in German-occupied Ukraine
- Immanuel Winkler, Pastor in Hoffnungstal, vicar in Kassel and representative of the Black Sea Germans