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Crimea Germans

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Crimea Germans (German: Krimdeutsche, Ukrainian: Кримські німці, Russian: Крымские немцы) were ethnic German settlers who were invited to settle in the Crimea as part of the Ostsiedlung ("East Settlement").

History

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From 1783 onwards, there was a systematic settlement of Russians, Ukrainians, and Germans to the Crimean Peninsula (in what was then the Crimean Khanate) in order to weaken the Crimean Tatar population.[citation needed]

The first planned settlements of Germans in Crimea were founded over 1805–1810 with the support of Czar Alexander I. The first settlements were:

All of these early colonies were located in the Yayla-mountains of Crimea and were mostly Swabian wine-farmers. However over time only Sudak produced quality wine and the other settlements soon turned to agriculture. The second generation didn't have enough land and soon young men started buying land from the Russian aristocracy and creating new ("daughter") colonies.

German map of Crimea, Meyers Konversations-Lexikon, 1888.

Later Mennonites began to move from Ukraine into Crimea.

Details are vague but during the 19th century a "German hospital" and dispensary arose in the Simferopol suburb of Nowyj gorod (called Neustadt or new city—now this is Kyivskyi District of Simferopol).[1]

Soviet persecution

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Portion of German settled population in Crimea in 1926
In red indicated German national districts in the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic

On 18 October 1921, the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was created as part of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (i.e. part of Russia). In place of the modern Krasnohvardiiske Raion there were two national districts made for Germans, Biyuk-Onlar and Telman. Under the Soviet Union many Volksdeutsche were persecuted by gangs of Russian peasants as landowning Kulaks or class enemy "bourgeoisie". In 1939, two years before their deportation to Central Asia, around 60,000 of the 1.1 million inhabitants of Crimea were German and "they had their own administrative raion in the Crimean Republic.".[2][citation needed]

Nazi invasion, deportation and exile

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In late 1941, following the Axis invasion of the western regions of the USSR, Soviet authorities forcibly removed almost 53,000 native Germans of Crimea eastwards to Siberia and Central Asia on entirely spurious allegations that they were spies for the Third Reich. Consequently, many died in transit, although later they could not be seriously blamed for Nazi crimes in the region.

"Stalin had no doubts about the loyalty of the ethnic German minority. He considered them all potential traitors, and in line with his inherent "Great Russian" chauvinism, had already decided to deport the entire community to internal exile in case of war. Therefore, when Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, a decision was made by Stalin to evacuate all ethnic Germans from the Western Regions of the Soviet Union. The first evacuations, which, in reality, were expulsions, as the inhabitants were never allowed to return to their homes, were decreed by the Supreme Soviet already on June 22. Action to deport every ethnic German from the Crimea began on August 15. Although the decree stated that old people would not have to leave, everyone was expelled—first to Stavropol, and then Rostov in Southern Ukraine, near Crimea; but then all were sent on to forced labor camps and special settlements in Kazakhstan, Central Asia. The deportees were not told where they were going, how long they would stay there and how much food to take; they were given only three or four hours to pack. The result was starvation for many and, due to the confusion, the separation of a large number of families. In all, as many as 60,000 ethnic Germans were expelled from the Crimea at this time."[3]

It is unclear whether any Crimea Germans remained at all during the Nazi occupation—German policy called for the evacuation of all surviving Soviet Volksdeutsche to settlements in Poland.[4] Hitler had claimed that many Germans in Crimea were descended from ancient Goth settlers (the Crimean Goths), and had intended to "reclaim" the peninsula for Germanic speakers.[5] One plan envisaged a special status for Crimea and its hinterland - an ahistoric resurrection of the territory of the ancient Crimean Goths as a purely Germanic Gotengau [de] (Goth region) re-settled by ex-SS Wehrbauer.[6] The Nazi Generalkommissar for Crimea, the Austrian Alfred Frauenfeld, toyed with the idea of resettling ethnic Germans (Volksdeutsche) here from Italian South Tyrol after the war, and he re-labelled several cities of the envisaged Gotengau with spurious German/Gothic names: (Simferopol became Gotenburg and Sevastopol became Theoderichshafen, for example, honoring the Goths and the Gothic king Theodoric).[7]

Perestroika and post-Soviet era

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Crimean Germans were only allowed to return to the peninsula after Perestroika. The German reunification brought a rebirth of Crimean-German culture and, in 1994, they had a small representation in the Crimean Parliament.[citation needed]

The 1991 RSFSR law On the Rehabilitation of Repressed Peoples addressed rehabilitation of all ethnicities repressed in the Soviet Union. However the law had various deficiencies, including unclear legal status of a number of peoples, such as Crimean Tatars and Crimean Germans moved across the borders of Soviet republics, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.[8] After the annexation of Crimea by Russia, on April 21, 2014 Vladimir Putin signed the decree No 268 "О мерах по реабилитации армянского, болгарского, греческого, крымско-татарского и немецкого народов и государственной поддержке их возрождения и развития". ("On the Measures for the Rehabilitation of Armenian, Bulgarian, Greek, Crimean Tatar and German Peoples and the State Support of Their Revival and Development"),[9] amended by Decree no. 458 of September 12, 2015.[10] The decree addressed the status of the mentioned peoples which resided in Crimean ASSR and were deported from there.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Die deutschen Kolonien in der Krim". Heimutbuch der Landsmannschaft der Deutschen aus Russland (in German). 1960.
  2. ^ Lumans, Valdis O. (1993). Himmler's Auxiliaries: the Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle and the German minorities of Europe, 1939–1945. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. p. 128. ISBN 0-8078-2066-0.
  3. ^ Merten, Ulrich (2015). Voices from the Gulag; the Oppression of the German Minority in the Soviet Union. Lincoln, Nebraska: American Historical Society of Germans from Russia. pp. 158–159. ISBN 978-0-692-60337-6.
  4. ^ Lumans, Valdis O. (1993). Himmler's Auxiliaries: the Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle and the German minorities of Europe, 1939–1945. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. p. 250. ISBN 0-8078-2066-0.
  5. ^ "The German Occupation of the Crimea, 1942–44 - Where the Iron Crosses Grow: The Crimea 1941–44". erenow.org. Retrieved 2024-10-04. A few Volksdeutsche colonies were established to harvest cotton, and Alvensleben began referring to Sevastopol as 'Theodorichhafen' and Simferopol as 'Gotenburg' – names that the Wehrmacht never used. Organization Todt was brought to the Crimea, but instead of refurbishing Soviet fortifications or port facilities, they wasted most of their efforts on ridiculous civil-engineering projects. Frauenfeld and Alvensleben tried to erase traces of the old Crimea and replace it with a new Gothic-inspired creation, but the Third Reich proved more adept at destruction than creation.
  6. ^ Pearson, Paul N. (23 August 2016). Maximinus Thrax: From Common Soldier to Emperor of Rome. Barnsley, Yorkshire: Pen and Sword. ISBN 9781473847040. Retrieved 10 January 2025. As the panzers smashed into southern Ukraine and the Crimea in 1942, Himmler received the führer's support for his grand plan of establishing a pure Germanic colony in the ancient heartland of the Goths (it was to be called Gotengau, land of the Goths). This would be repopulated from the west by an SS farmer-soldier peasantry who, through selective breeding (eugenics) would re-establish the Aryan master race in their primal strength and would forever insulate Europe from Asiatics from the east.
  7. ^ Toynbee, Arnold; Toynbee, Veronica, eds. (1954). "Ukraine, under German Occupation, 1941–44". Hitler's Europe. London: Oxford University Press. pp. 316–337. OCLC 4355796.
  8. ^ Правовые вопросы реабилитации репрессированных народов, in Pravo i Zhizn, 1994, no 4, p. 26.
  9. ^ Внесены изменения в указ о мерах по реабилитации армянского, болгарского, греческого, крымско-татарского и немецкого народов и государственной поддержке их возрождения и развития
  10. ^ Указ Президента Российской Федерации от 12.09.2015 г. № 458

Further reading

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  • Conquest, Robert (1970). The Nation Killers: The Soviet Deportation of Nationalities. London: Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-10575-3.
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