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In early 20th century there were close to 50,000 ethnic Germans living in Belarus.<ref name="niemcy">Этналогія Беларусі: традыцыйная культура насельніцтва ў гістарычнай перспектыве. Вучэб.-метад. дапам. [The Ethnology of Belarus: traditional culture of the population in a historical perspective], by T. Navahrodzki and others. Minsk, 2009, {{ISBN|978-985-518-121-8}}; p. 310-311</ref> [[Minsk]] was home to a 2,000-member community of Germans with a Lutheran church and a German-populated area around it.<ref name=minsk/>
In early 20th century there were close to 50,000 ethnic Germans living in Belarus.<ref name="niemcy">Этналогія Беларусі: традыцыйная культура насельніцтва ў гістарычнай перспектыве. Вучэб.-метад. дапам. [The Ethnology of Belarus: traditional culture of the population in a historical perspective], by T. Navahrodzki and others. Minsk, 2009, {{ISBN|978-985-518-121-8}}; p. 310-311</ref> [[Minsk]] was home to a 2,000-member community of Germans with a Lutheran church and a German-populated area around it.<ref name=minsk/>


Germans faced deportations after the beginning of the [[First World War]] and during the [[Soviet repressions in Belarus]]. After [[World War II]], the historical German communities in Belarus disappeared. A minor number of ethnic Germans from [[Kazakhstan]] and [[Russia]] migrated to Belarus during the Soviet occupation after the Second World War. A small German expat community emerged after Belarus regained independence in 1991.
Germans faced deportations after the beginning of the [[First World War]] and during the [[Soviet repressions in Belarus]]. After [[World War II]], the historical German communities in Belarus disappeared. A minor number of ethnic Germans from [[Kazakhstan]] and [[Russia]] migrated to Belarus during World War. A small German expat community emerged after Belarus in 1991.


According to a census conducted in 2009, 2,474 ethnic Germans lived in Belarus.<ref name="STAT"/> There are Lutheran church buildings in [[Grodno]] and [[Polotsk]]. A sign commemorating the German community of Minsk was opened in May 2019.<ref name=minsk>[https://www.svaboda.org/a/29940593.html У Менску паставілі памятны знак нямецкай слабадзе] [A memorial sign for the German community was placed in Minsk] - [[Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty]], 14 May 2019</ref>
According to a census conducted in 2009, 2,474 ethnic Germans lived in Belarus.<ref name="STAT"/> There are Lutheran church buildings in [[Grodno]] and [[Polotsk]]. A sign commemorating the German community of Minsk was opened in May 2019.<ref name=minsk>[https://www.svaboda.org/a/29940593.html У Менску паставілі памятны знак нямецкай слабадзе] [A memorial sign for the German community was placed in Minsk] - [[Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty]], 14 May 2019</ref>

Revision as of 05:26, 9 September 2024

Belarusian Germans
Belarusdeutsche
Germany Belarus
Total population
2,474[1]
Regions with significant populations
Minsk, Grodno, Polotsk
Languages
German · Belarusian
Religion
Lutheran · Roman Catholic

Belarusian Germans[a] formed a notable ethnic minority on the lands of modern Belarus before World War I.

History

The first German merchants and missionaries, including Bruno of Querfurt, arrived in what is now Belarus in the late 10th and early 11th century. The medieval Duchy of Polotsk had active trade contacts with the Hanseatic League and the city of Polotsk had a notable German community.

Significant numbers of Germans settled in what is now Belarus during the times of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and after the annexation of the lands by the Russian Empire.

In early 20th century there were close to 50,000 ethnic Germans living in Belarus.[2] Minsk was home to a 2,000-member community of Germans with a Lutheran church and a German-populated area around it.[3]

Germans faced deportations after the beginning of the First World War and during the Soviet repressions in Belarus. After World War II, the historical German communities in Belarus disappeared. A minor number of ethnic Germans from Kazakhstan and Russia migrated to Belarus during World War. A small German expat community emerged after Belarus in 1991.

According to a census conducted in 2009, 2,474 ethnic Germans lived in Belarus.[1] There are Lutheran church buildings in Grodno and Polotsk. A sign commemorating the German community of Minsk was opened in May 2019.[3]

Notable Belarusian Germans

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Belarusian: Белару́скія не́мцы
    Russian: Белору́сские не́мцы
    German: Weißrusslanddeutsche or Belarusdeutsche

References

  1. ^ a b Перепись населения — 2009. Население по национальности и родному языку(in Russian)
  2. ^ Этналогія Беларусі: традыцыйная культура насельніцтва ў гістарычнай перспектыве. Вучэб.-метад. дапам. [The Ethnology of Belarus: traditional culture of the population in a historical perspective], by T. Navahrodzki and others. Minsk, 2009, ISBN 978-985-518-121-8; p. 310-311
  3. ^ a b У Менску паставілі памятны знак нямецкай слабадзе [A memorial sign for the German community was placed in Minsk] - Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 14 May 2019
  4. ^ Памяці Барыса Гюнтэра [In memoriam Barys Hiunter] - Radio Svaboda, 22 August 2014
  5. ^ ГЮНТЭР БАРЫС ДАВЫДАВІЧ [Hiunter, Barys Davydavic], Virtual Museum of Political Repressions in Belarus
  6. ^ ЮЛІЯНА ВІТАН-ДУБЕЙКАЎСКАЯ [Julijana Vitan-Dubiejkauskaja] - Official website of the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic. Quote: “Паходзіла зь сям’і віленскіх немцаў-купцоў” [“came from a family of German merchants from Wilno”]
  7. ^ З Богам да Беларусі [With God to Belarus], by A. Stankievich, Vilnius, 2008, p. 510, quote: “На запыты вернікаў пра магчымасьць увядзеньня беларускай мовы ў касьцёле адказваў, што «ня толькі можна, але й трэба».” [“answering to requests by the faithful about the possibility to introduce the Belarusian language in the church, he said “it’s not only possible, it’s necessary””]
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