Mennonite settlements of Altai

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Mennonite settlements of Altai arose after the 1906-09-19 act of the Duma and State Council of Imperial Russia, which provided for a resettlement bureau to distribute free land in Altai Krai. During 1907–1908 an area of over 666,000 ha (26,000 mi²) of the Kulunda Steppe was set aside for settlers.

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[edit] Incentives

The resettlers were granted certain privileges such as reduced rail rates (25% of the normal rate) and children up to ten years of age traveled free. A kopeck was levied for the shipping a pood of goods a distance of 100 verst. Settlers were exempt from municipal and state taxes in the first five years (in the subsequent five years only 50% of all taxes were appraised, and then full taxation), exempt from military service in the first three years and provided interest-free credit in the amount of 160 Russian rubles for the purchase of farm machinery, seed and other necessities. As the report of this act and its incentives reached the Russian Mennonite colonies of Crimea, southern Russia and the area of Orenburg, a strong interested arose among the landless and land-poor colonists. The price of land in the mother colonies was already so high that most of the landless farmers could no longer improve their situation. These landless workers were willing to try their luck in distant Siberia.

Jacob Reimer, head of the Sagradovka district in Kherson, informed the Mennonite colonies of Samara and Orenburg about the plans for the settlement of Siberia. Because of this, applications from settlers of these areas were received practically at the same time by the resettlement bureau in Barnaul, which explains why their villages were founded in the immediate neighborhood of one another.

At the end of April 1907 representatives of different Mennonite settlements met in Barnaul and presented a application for around 67,000 ha (165,000 acres) of Kulunda Steppe land to be placed at their disposal. Their request for exclusive use of this land was granted.

[edit] Villages

The resettlement of Mennonites was intensive from 1907-1909 and continued until the outbreak of World War I. Mennonites founded 31 villages in 19 settlements:[1]

Villages Districts Population
Friedensfeld, Orloff, Rosenhof Besymjannyj Log 4170
Ebenfeld, Hochstadt Wysokaja Griva 2717
Landskrone Golenkij 1450
Alexanderfeld Griškovka 1880
Schönwiese Degtjarka 1895
Nikolaidorf, Schönsee Djagilevskij Nr.2 1871
Nikolaipol, Rosenfeld, Schöntal Ivanov Log 4631
Karatal Karatal 1535
Schönau Karlovka Nr.8 1230
Alexanderkron, Halbstadt Kussak 3132
Markovka Markovka 2138
Chortitza Perekrjostnyj 1700
Lichtenfeld Petrovka 1645
Alexeifeld, Protassovo, Reinfeld Protassov Log 3304
Blumenort, Gnadenheim, Kleefeld Redkaja Dubrava 4069
Wiesenfeld Stepnoj 1857
Gnadenfeld, Tiege Stupin Log 3145
Alexandrovskij Skljarovka 1688
Grünfeld Čertjož 2605

The Orlovo district was formed on 1910-01-01 from these villages together with nine villages founded by German Roman Catholic settlers. In the following years the Roman Catholic villagers were incorporated into the Novo–Romanovka district.

By 1916 the Orlovo district consisted of 34 settlements, including those listed above as well as Schumanovka, Berjosovka and Černovka.

The settlers who founded these villages on the Kulunda Steppes originated from Molotschna, Chortitza and their daughter colonies. The number of settlers was around 1200 families, of which about 200 families were from Chortitza. The remaining Mennonite colonies in Crimea, Orenburg and Samara as far as Bashkortostan accounted for only a few percent of the settlers.

The organization for the resettlement of Mennonites in the Kulunda Steppe played an extraordinarily important roll in the settlement of Sagradovka, establishing 17 villages in the first half of the 1870s with settlers from the Molotschna Colony. During 1906–1912, a total of 1847 people from this settlement resettled in Siberia, including 1726 to the Tomsk region.

[edit] Farming methods

The settlers brought crop rotation to the Kulunda Steppe. In the first two years the field was planted with their main crop, wheat, and the third year with oats or rarely with barley. The fourth year the field laid fallow, allowing cattle to graze on it during the summer. In fall it was worked with a one-share plow. The cycle was complete and the earth renewed for the next planting of wheat.

Later multi-bottom plows, disks, iron harrows, drills, horse-drawn mowers and binders appeared. Horse powered threshing machines were rare. Only the vegetable garden was fertilized, because manure was gathered for fuel; there was no nearby source of coal and wood, making them expensive.

Although the settlers were hardworking, it was extraordinarily difficult for them to build up a good and profitable farm. At that time, city dwellers formed no more than 10 percent of that region's total population. In Siberia in 1909 the average grain yield was 820 kg/ha (12 bushels/acre), totaling around 4.9 million metric tons (180 million bushels) of grain. The region needed less than half this amount for its own needs. The extra grain had to be sold.

[edit] Transport

The high cost of transporting Siberian grain to the European post of Russia made marketing unprofitable, because grain prices in Siberia were very low. A farmer rarely brought a crop to Kamen-na-Obi or Pavlodar, because the low price hardly covered the cost of transport. The cost of transport to Kamen-na-Obi was often more than the going rate for wheat. The settlers needed industrial products, such as farm equipment, but almost all had to be brought from the other side of the Urals and were very expensive because of the transport costs.

[edit] Russification

By 1914 all of the German settlements and municipalities had to be renamed with Russian names. Typically the Russian names were formed from the name of district in which the respective villages were found: Alexanderkron - Kussak, Alexanderfeld - Griškovka, Gnadenheim - Redkaja Dubrava, Grünfeld - Čertjož, Hochstadt - Wyssokaja Griva, Lichtenfeld - Petrovka, Landskrone - Golenkij, Nikolaidorf - Djagilevka, Tiege - Uglovoje, Wiesenfeld - Stepnoj.

Some of the villages were named by translating of the German name into Russian: Ebenfeld - Rovnopol, Reinfeld - Čistoje, Rosenwald - Lesnoje, Halbstadt -Polgorod, Schönsee - Sineosjornoje, Alexeifeld - Polevoje.

Some villages received names that had no direct relationship to the region or their German name: Blumenort - Podsnežnoje, Friedensfeld -Lugovoje, Gnadenfeld - Mirnoje, Nikolaipol - Nikolskoje, Rosenhof - Dvorskoje, Schönau -Jasnoje, Schöntal - Krasnyj Dol, Kleefeld - Krasnoje.

The Orlovo was restructured into the Znamenskij district in 1924 and ceased to exist as an administrative entity.

[edit] Economic survey

In 1916 an inspection commission for settler affairs examined the settlement in Tomsk. The summary provided a view of the economic condition of the Orlovo district:[2]

35 Villages 18,156 ha Wheat
1051 Farms 1260 ha Barley
3083 Men 2082 ha Oats
3576 Women 27 ha Millet
6659 Total 16 ha Sunflowers
5942 Horses 158 ha Potatoes
2239 Cows 3 ha Linseed
40 Breeding bulls 13 ha Pasture
4514 Registered cattle 9 ha Other
338 Sheep
4778 Swine

152 Plows 112 Drills
350 Planters 29 Grass mowers
57 Rakes 463 Mowers
89 Mowers 208 Threshing machines
143 Binders 5 Windmills
4 Presses (e.g. for peanut oil)

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ GATO, f.239, op. 1, d. 43A, l. 15.
  2. ^ Altajsko – Tomskaja čast Sibiri po dannym s/ch perepisi 1916 goda. Tomsk, 1927.

[edit] Further reading

  • Aziatskaja Rossija, Tom 1, S. – Petersburg, 1914.
  • Očerki Altajskogo kraja. Barnaul, 1925.
  • Fast, Gerhard: In den Steppen Sibiriens. Rosthern, 1952.
  • Sbornik statističeskich svedenij ob ékonomičeskom položenii pereselencev v Tomskoj gubernii. Vypusk 1, Tomsk, 1913.
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