词条 | Russians of Croatia | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
|group = Russians of Croatia |population = 906 |region1 = Zagreb |pop1 = 250 |ref1 = [1] |region2 = Međimurje |pop2 = 126 |ref2 = [1] |region3 = Primorje-Gorski Kotar |pop3 = 88 |ref3 = [1] |region4 = Split-Dalmatia |pop4 = 85 |ref4 = [1] |region5 = |pop5 = |ref5 = |region6 = |pop6 = |ref6 = |region7 = |pop7 = |ref7 = |region8 = |pop8 = |ref8 = |region9 = |pop9 = |ref9 = |region10 = |pop10 = |ref10 = |languages = Croatian, Russian |religions = Russian Orthodox Church |related = Ukrainians, Rusyns |footnotes = }} Russians of Croatia ({{lang-hr|Rusi u Hrvatskoj}}, {{lang-ru|Русские в Хорватии}}) are one of 22 national minorities of Croatia. According to the 2011 Census, there were 1,279 Croatian citizens in the country, who identified themselves as Russians, most of them living in Zagreb. Statistics
History and legal status{{also|Croatia–Russia relations|Russia–Serbia relations#Inter-war period, Russian emigration|Minority languages of Croatia}}Ethnic Russians in Croatia, who are citizens of Croatia, are expressly cited as one of 22 national minorities recognised by the Constitution of Croatia.[3] According to 2011 Census, there were 1,279 Russians in Croatia. Historically, notable figures include: Margarita Froman, a principal dancer and choreographer of the Croatian National Theatre in Zagreb; generals Alexander Adlerberg, Daniil Dratsenko and Ivan Polyakov, who consecutively headed the Zagreb chapter of the Russian All-Military Union (ROVS); counter admiral Fyodor Vyatkin (Vjatkin) who in 1931 took over as chairman of Zagreb′s chapter of the Union of Russian Officers; generals Nikolai Stremoukhov, Alexander Ozarovsky and Pavel Panchenko-Krivorotenko; archbishop Germogen (Maximov), who became the primate of the Croatian Orthodox Church in 1942. Significant numbers of Russians began to arrive in what is now the territory of Croatia in 1915 and were predominantly prisoners of the First World War jailed by Austria-Hungary on the island Goli Otok. Some of them died shortly thereafter, others returned to Soviet Russia, while the rest of them stayed. In Crikvenica, an Orthodox church of St Nicholas was built in 1923–1924 specifically for Russian worshippers and survives as a building.[4][5] There is also a ″Russian″ chapel in Zagreb′s Mirogoj cemetery, which was consecrated on 4 November 1928.{{sfn|Puškadija-Ribkin|2006|p=182}} Those were erected by White Russian exiles, mainly former Russian Imperial Army officers and intelligentsia, who had fled Russia and moved to what was then the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, as part of a massive Russian exodus that resulted from the Russian revolution in 1917 and the ensuing Civil War. Most of those refugees from the former Russian Empire did not initially intend to stay outside Russia permanently and hoped to return. The government of the Kingdom of SHS in early 1920 established the State Commission for Russian Refugees at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (that category then included all arrivals from the former Russian Empire irrespective of their actual ethnicity).{{sfn|Puškadija-Ribkin|2006|p=30}} But even before that, the government had appointed a special official who was charged with reception and accommodation of arrivals from Russia; the position was given to Sergei Nikolayevich Paleolog, a former senior official in the Russian Ministry of the Interior.{{sfn|Puškadija-Ribkin|2006|p=29–30}} Major Russian communities (″colonies″) were established in Dubrovnik, Split, Crikvenica, Zagreb, and some other towns in the early 1920s, while the majority of those arriving in the Kingdom eventually settled in Serbia. The government of the Kingdom of SHS explained its hospitality afforded to Russian exiles by presenting it as paying back the debt Serbia owed Russia for the latter′s intervention on the side of Serbia at the outbreak of WWI.{{sfn|Škiljan|2014|p=10}} The first large group of mostly wealthy Russians arrived in Dubrovnik in March 1920 and some of those went further west.{{sfn|Škiljan|2014|p=9}} Russians arriving in Dubrovnik as refugees were sent on to Vojvodina, whereas those who arrived in Bakar (since December 1920) were mostly settled all over Croatia.{{sfn|Škiljan|2014|p=7–8}} Multiple Russian clubs, associations, as well as cultural, educational, political and professional institutions were founded in Zagreb.{{sfn|Puškadija-Ribkin|2006|p=51–96}} The Russian All-Military Union, an organisation set up by Gen Pyotr Wrangel in Karlovci in September 1924[6] that sought to embrace all the veterans of the Imperial Russian Armed Forces the world over, had an office in Zagreb.{{sfn|Puškadija-Ribkin|2006|p=91}} Zagreb′s Russian colony was in 1924 headed up by Stepan Stanislavovich Skovronsky and totaled about 2.000 members.[7] For academic year 1922/1923, the University of Zagreb enrolled 232 students from Russia (10,10 percent of all those enrolled).{{sfn|Škiljan|2014|p=20}} According to the Kingdom′s Ministry of the Interior′s documents, the local population occasionally displayed hostility towards Russian refugees, usually due to the view that Russians were taking away jobs, but also due to the fact that the left-leaning strata of society tended to see all Russian émigrés as "counter revolutionists".{{sfn|Škiljan|2014|p=21}} In 1921, a Russian religious community was founded in Zagreb by admiral Vyatkin who chaired it until his death in 1943.[8] After the German invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941 and the establishment of the Independent State of Croatia (NDH), the number of registered Russians who resided in the territory of the NDH totaled 5.000.{{sfn|Puškadija-Ribkin|2006|p=91}} In August 1941, the NDH government issued a directive that exempted Russians in the NDH from any discrimination or reprisals as long as they were politically loyal; political loyalty was to be certified by Russian colonies′ leadership, namely the Representation of Russian Emigration (Predstavništvo ruske emigracije) in Zagreb.{{sfn|Škiljan|2014|p=23–24}} As early as in July 1941, a campaign was launched to recruit the Russians in the NDH to what would be in September instituted as the Separate Russian Corps (later known in German as Russisches Schutzkorps Serbien).{{sfn|Puškadija-Ribkin|2006|p=69}} The commander of the Corps, with headquarters in Belgrade, was Russian general Boris Shteifon, who died in Zagreb′s Esplanade hotel{{sfn|Vertepov|1963|p=27, 348–349}} in April 1945 while leading his men to Austria. According to a report received by the Main Ustaša Headquarters in early 1942, in the territory of the NDH there were forty Russian colonies with about 5.500 people.{{sfn|Puškadija-Ribkin|2006|p=59}} Since most of the Russians in the NDH were of anti-Communist and anti-Soviet political orientation, a significant number of them had left Zagreb months before the end of WWII and the establishment of the Communist regime in Croatia, the final massive departures occurring in the autumn of 1944 and in early spring of 1945; a considerable number of those who stayed were later in 1945 subjected to reprisals and prosecution.{{sfn|Puškadija-Ribkin|2006|p=96}}{{sfn|Škiljan|2014|p=25}} All Russian clubs and associations were terminated after May 1945.{{sfn|Puškadija-Ribkin|2006|p=95}} Germogen (Maximov), along with three priests of the Croatian Orthodox Church, was court-martialled on 29 June 1945 and executed the next day.{{sfn|Puškadija-Ribkin|2006|p=253}} Some former citizens of the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union left for the USSR,{{sfn|Puškadija-Ribkin|2006|p=39}} a move that was facilitated by the Decree of the Supreme Soviet of 14 June 1946.[9] The situation for the Russians in Yugoslavia became still worse in 1948, following the Cominform Resolution of 28 June 1948 that resulted from the Tito–Stalin Split.{{sfn|Puškadija-Ribkin|2006|p=96}} Some Russians, who already had Yugoslavian citizenship, were stripped of it, especially in the summer and autumn of 1948; some were deported to the USSR as exposed Soviet spies.{{sfn|Škiljan|2014|p=25}} After 1948, Russians′ social and cultural life in Zagreb in any form virtually ceased.{{sfn|Puškadija-Ribkin|2006|p=40, 96}} In the 1960s and 1970s, the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia developed economic ties with the Soviet Union, which caused immigration of Soviets to Croatia, usually Soviet women through marriage.[10] During the period of dissolution of Yugoslavia, Croatia′media created a negative perception of those residents of Croatia who were Orthodox Christians; teaching of the Russian language in schools was largely abandoned.{{sfn|Škiljan|2014|p=26}} Nevertheless, the number of Russians in Croatia nearly doubled in the period between 1991 and 2011.{{sfn|Škiljan|2014|p=5}} Notes and citations1. ^1 2 3 {{cite web|url=http://www.dzs.hr/Eng/censuses/Census2001/Popis/E01_02_02/E01_02_02.html |title=Population by ethnicity, by towns/municipalities, census 2001 |publisher=Central Bureau of Statistics |accessdate=10 September 2012}} 2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.vojska.net/eng/armed-forces/croatia/about/population/ |title=Population of Croatia 1931-2001 |publisher=Vojska.net |accessdate=10 September 2012}} 3. ^Constitution of Croatia:Historical Foundations 4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.rivieracrikvenica.com/croatia/kulturno_povijesna_bastina |title=Kulturno-povijesna baština | crikvenica |publisher=Rivieracrikvenica.com |date= |accessdate=2016-05-01}} 5. ^Радован М. Пилиповић. [https://uvidok.rcub.bg.ac.rs/bitstream/handle/123456789/2207/Doktorat.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y СРПСКА ПРАВОСЛАВНА ЦРКВА, РУСКА ПРАВОСЛАВНА ЗАГРАНИЧНА ЦРКВА, МОСКОВСКА ПАТРИЈАРШИЈА (1920-1940) – УЗАЈАМНЕ ВЕЗЕ, УТИЦАЈИ И ОДНОСИ] // ″2. 6. Парохије Руске православне заграничне цркве и њихов духовни живот″, Belgrade, 2017, pp. 212–213. 6. ^″Главни војни циљ барона Врангела″. // Politika, 7 December 2017, p. 21. 7. ^Сковронский Степан Станиславович (1870-1938) 8. ^″Однос српске и руске цркве: Из тајних архива УДБЕ: РУСКА ЕМИГРАЦИЈА У ЈУГОСЛАВИЈИ 1918–1941.″ (part 36) // Politika, 10 January 2018. 9. ^Указ Президиума ВС СССР от 14.06.1946 "О восстановлении в гражданстве СССР подданных бывшей Российской империи, а также лиц, утративших советское гражданство, проживающих на территории Югославии" 10. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.zajednicarusa.hr/ |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2015-07-24 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140403145014/http://www.zajednicarusa.hr/ |archivedate=2014-04-03 |df= }} References
| last = Puškadija-Ribkin | first = Tatjana | title = Emigranti iz Rusije u znanstvenom i kulturnom životu Zagreba | language = Croatian | url = | year = 2006 | publisher = Prosvjeta | location = Zagreb | isbn = 953-7130-36-3 | ref = harv
| last = Vertepov | first = Dmitriĭ Petrovich | year = 1963 | title = Русский Корпус на Балканах во время II Великой Войны 1941–1945 г.г. |trans-title=Russian Corps in the Balkans at the Time of the Second Great War | language = Russian | publisher = Nashi vesti | location = New York | oclc = 976722812 | url = http://militera.lib.ru/memo/0/pdf/russian/sb_russki-korpus-na-balkanah1963.pdf | ref = harv
| last = Škiljan | first = Filip | year = 2014 | title = Rusi u Hrvatskoj |trans-title=Russians in Croatia | language = Croatian | publisher = Savez Rusa u Republici Hrvatskoj | location = Zagreb | isbn = 9789535832706 | url = | ref = harv
4 : Ethnic groups in Croatia|Russian diaspora by country|Russian diaspora in Europe|Croatian people of Russian descent |
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