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Russians in Estonia before 1917

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12-13th centuries: villages with Russian population in the West ... Romanticism: interest to history: Russian and Estonian ones, search of the national roots. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Russians in Estonia before 1917


1
Russians in Estonia before 1917
  • Source Rajasalu 2001,
  • p.21-22.

2
  • 12-13th centuries villages with Russian
    population in the West coast of Peipsi lake and
    on the West coast of Narva river.
  • 14-16th centirues communities of Russian traders
    in Narva, Tartu (Dorpat, Jurjev) and Tallinn.
  • Middle of 17th centiry 16 of farm owners in
    Northern Livonia were non-Estonians, among them
    Russians and Seto made 34.
  • By the end of 17th century Russians made 0,5 of
    population of Estonia (about 2000 people). The
    majority of them were Old Believers, lived in
    Eastern Estonia, close to Russian border.

3
  • Gradual increase of the Russian population in
    Tallinn and Narva since 1860-ies in connection
    with the reforms in the Russian Empire and the
    development of industry in Estonia.
  • By 1897
  • In Estonia lived 46026 Russians 4,7 of
    population. Half of them lived in the towns.
  • The largest Russian community lived in Tallinn
    (over 6000 people), the highest share of Russians
    in town population was in Narva (43). On biggest
    factories Russian made 33-50 of workers.

4
Russian Journalism in Estonia in 1830-1880ies
  • Main trends and editions
  • Isakov 1998

5
1832-1833 magazine Raduga
  • Launched by Bürger and Magnitski in Reval.
  • Main ideological trend monarchic, conservative.
  • Criticized all Western civilization, described it
    as a kingdom of total chaos, sensless revolt,
    accused it in being heretical.
  • Romanticism interest to history Russian and
    Estonian ones, search of the national roots.

6
1832-1833 magazine Raduga
  • Connection with Estonia
  • First translation of an Estonian folk song into
    Russian (Tiiu tassane ja helde),
  • Published Estonian poem German and Margareta.
  • Included whole part Ostseiskie zapiski,
    telling the audience about history of Estonia,
    lectures in Dorpat university, Estonian and
    Latvian customs and traditions, cultural life in
    Estonia, providing various statistics, etc.

7
1833-1834 magazine Uchebny Matematichesky
zhurnal
  • Launched in Tartu, published 4 times per year.
  • There were published 6 issues, closed after the
    editor moved away from Tartu.
  • 467 subscribers among teachers from Tartu,
    Tallinn and St.Peterburg schools (quite high
    circulation for a specialized magazine at that
    time).

8
1853-1917 official newspaper Estlandskie
Gubernskie Vedomosti
  • Published in Tallinn 1-3 times per week. It
    considered of official and non-official parts.
  • The official part informed about changes in
    legislation, news from local administration, and
    economic news.
  • The non-official part mainly included ads
    (crimes, public sales).
  • News were published in Russian and German in
    1850-1860-ies mainly in German, since 1869 mainly
    in Russian.
  • The main subscribers were governmental and local
    offices.

9
Vedomosti utilitarian functions
  • Informed local administrators, gentry, traders
    and entrepreneurs about new laws and regulations,
    published official advertisements,
  • Propagated desirable norms of behaviour.
  • Not interested in audience feedback,
  • Did not encourage dialogue between social groups
    and institutions.
  • Society was constructed in these newspapers as
    deeply divided on a class basis, consisting on
    the one side of officials, landlords and burghers
    with German and Russian names and peasants who
    either had Russian names or no names at all on
    the other side.
  • Estonians were semiotically non-existent in the
    texts, no cultural groups were mentioned there.

10
Private Russian newspapers, 1870-ies I
  • 1874-1876 Narvski Gorodskoi Listok weekly.
  • By that time Russians made about 50 of Narva
    population.
  • It had only 60 subscribers and was produced by
    one person retired officer Larionov.
  • Concentrated on the local news (orders of Narva
    municipality, letters, jokes, etc).

11
Prerequisites for further development of the
Russian press in Estonia
  • Economic and political reforms of the 1860-ies
    gave a new impetus for industrial development in
    the Empire
  • Factories appeared in Estonia, targeting the
    Russian market and owned by Russian
    entrepreneurs.Agricultural production also became
    more Russian-oriented.
  • Gradually the number of educated Russian
    administrators and entrepreneurs in Estonia
    increased, started to form a thin layer of local
    Russian bourgeoisie.
  • Its informational needs became more diverse.
  • Thus, in the 1870s, the first private newspapers
    appeared in Narva and Reval,

12
Private Russian newspapers, 1870-ies II
  • 1877 Listok objavleni dlja goroda Revelja i ego
    okrestnostei.
  • Daily newspaper, contained only advertisments.
  • Alltogether there were published 119 issues.
  • Edited by Vasili Kerr.
  • In 1878 it transformed into Listok Objavleni,
    which looked like regular daily newspaper on 2-4
    pages.
  • Contained mainly local news for the local Russian
    community.

13
Private Russian newspapers, 1870-ies III
  • 1888-1900 magazine Gymnasia. Zhurnal pedagogiki
    I filologii I
  • Issued in Tallinn by the director of one of
    Tallinn Russian High schools (gymnasiums)
    G.Janchevetski till 1900.
  • Monthly, since 1897 issued 6 times per year
  • It had many subscribers among local teachers as
    well as in St.Peterburg.
  • Partly subsidized by the Ministry of Education,
    ceased due to long illness of its editor.

14
Private Russian newspapers, 1870-ies IV
  • Magazine Gymnasia. Zhurnal pedagogiki I
    filologii II
  • Included articles on methods of teaching,
    supplementary materials on humanitarian subjects
    (Russian, Greek, Latin languages), articles about
    development of pedagogics in Russia and abroad,
    information about newly published books.
  • The authors of the magazine were mainly talented
    Russian teachers from various provincial towns of
    the Empire (Novocherkassk, Simpheropol, Tver,
    Vladivostok, Hortitsa, Kazan, Voronezh, Kiev,
    Jelizavetgrad), less from St.Petrersburg. Here we
    may see that the majority of the authors came
    from regions with dominating non-Russian
    population.

15
Private Russian newspapers, 1870-ies V
  • 1890-1892 newspaper Revelski Gorodskoi Listok
    I
  • The initiative of launching belonged to Governor
    of Estland Duke S.Shahovskoi.
  • Formally Jakob Kõrv performed as an editor.
    Actually and since October 1890 also formally the
    editor was Michail Ljashenko1.
  • Altogether there were published 214 issues of the
    newspaper.

16
Private Russian newspapers, 1870-ies VI
  • Revelski Gorodskoi Listok II
  • Typical local newspaper with official and local
    news. The information was focusing on the local
    Russian-speaking community, provided readers with
    information about life in orther parts of Russia,
    published poems and short stories of various
    Russian authors, made reviews of the local
    Estonian press and articles about history of
    Estonia and traditions of Estonians.

17
Private Russian newspapers, 1870-ies VII
  • Revelski Gorodskoi Listok III
  • The newspaper has become a big supporter of
    Russification and Ortodoxy it not only
    propagated Russian culture and religion, but also
    critisized local Germans and separatist
    tendencies among Estonians. According to the
    general standards of Russian journalism of this
    period,, this newspaper was weak1 .
  • 1 ?????? ?????????????? ?????????? ???????????
    ????????????? ?????? ?? ?????? ???????,
    ???????????? ?? ????, ?? ??????? ??????.

18
Private Russian newspapers, 1870-ies VIII
  • In 1891 Revelski Gorodskoi Listok was
    transformed and named Kolyvan.
  • Here appeared more local information from all
    over Estonia Rakvere, Paldiski, Tartu, Lihula,
    Paide, newspaper had also correspondents in Riga
    and St.Petersburg.
  • The reviews of the Estonian press also took an
    important place there.
  • Still the anti-German trend in the newspaper
    content has become even stronger, also such
    Estonian cultural societies as Vanemuine and
    Estonia were often accused in being not loyal
    to tsarist regime.

19
Private Russian newspapers, 1870-ies IX
  • Kolyvan
  • The newspaper has got state donation of 10000
    Roubles, but it was mainly stolen by editors,
    there were very few subscribers, so that this
    newspaper ceased in 1892.

20
Private Russian newspapers, 1870-ies X
  • 1893-1917 Newspaper Revelskie Izvestia.
  • Also initially inspired by S.Shahovskoi.
  • Editor in chief Varvara Janchevetskaja, wife of
    G.Janchevetski, director of the Russian High
    School and editor in chief of the magazin
    Gymnasia.
  • A normal daily newspaper, providing Estonian
    daily news, also presenting news from other
    regions of Russia (re-prints from other local
    newspapers), from St.Petersburg, from abroad in a
    column Abroad (?? ????????). It also
    published lot of ads, anecdotes, translated
    articles from Estonian newspapers, published
    articles about the history of Estonia, health
    care issues.

21
Russification in Estonia since 1870-ies
  • 1874 obligatory teaching of Russian language at
    schools,
  • 1885 Russian language becomes language of
    documents in Estlandia and Liflandia, in 1886
    -all over the Empire.
  • 1887 all schools primary and high, private and
    public are transferred into Russian.
  • Since 1905 teaching in national languages was
    allowed again.
  • Strengthening of propaganda of Ortodox Church.

22
1893-1917 Revelskie Izvestia II
  • Till 1896 it wrote about Russian-Estonian
    relationships from the point of view of
    Russification, but after the Governor Shahovskoi
    was replaced, the newspaper stopped touching this
    topic.
  • It was first newspaper in Estonia, which
    presented the life of the local Russian
    community, life of Estonians and life in the
    entire Russia in a balanced and informative
    manner.

23
1893-1917 Revelskie Izvestia III
  • Literary column also consisted of poems and
    stories, provided by the authors from Russia and
    by local Russians (weakest literary production).
  • It also included translations of stories of such
    well-know European writers as Mopassan, Zolja,
    M.Twain, Kipling, B.Gart,Jerom K.Jerom, etc. Here
    published his first stories writer Vassili
    Janchevetski (who later called himself V.Jan).
  • The newspaper also published first unfinished
    translation from Kalevipoeg into Russian,
    translations from Estonian poets L.Koidula,
    Jansenn, A.Haava, Kuhlbars, etc.

24
Regional newspapers I
  • Tartu
  • 1891-1892 Derptski Listok in Tartu, edited by
    Ado Grenshtein and Ivan Jurkatam (Juhan Tamm). It
    was a newspaper in Russian for Estonians,
    supplement to the Estonian newspaper Olevik.
  • 1893 transformed into Pribaltiiski listok.
  • Treated all national groups living in Estonia
    with equal respect. It also dared to criticize
    Russian officials, what other Russian newspapers
    considered unacceptable. So in 1894 the newspaper
    was accused in anonymous complaint for being a
    loudspeaker for aliens' claims (???????
    ???????????? ?????????????). At the same year
    there took place strenghtening of censure, since
    1896 the newspaper is published in Riga.

25
Regional newspapers II
  • 1890-ies 3-language ads newspapers in Narva.
  • 1892-1893 Pernovski Listok Objavleni (Pärnu),
  • 1895 Gapsalski Listok Objavleni (Haapsalu),
  • 1898 Lifljandski Listok Objavleni (Tartu),
  • 1897 Narvski listok (Narva, town newspaper, 2
    times per week).

26
Non-Estonians by 1917
  • In Estonia lived 90-100 thousand of Russians
  • In Tallinn lived over 40 thousand of Russians.
  • In 1918 before the German occupation about 30-40
    thousand of Russians left from Estonia. Mainly
    they were former industrial workers.

27
Non-Estonians in 1918-1940
  • Before 1940 non-Estonians accounted for 12 of
    the population of Estonia.
  • Two thirds of these (91 thousand) were Russians
    of two definite groups 73 thousand peasants who
    had lived in Estonia since 1915, and 18 thousand
    political emigrants. The majority of them
    belonged to the poorest part of Estonian
    population. Russians were disassociated, mainly
    passive and estranged from politics. (Isakov
    1996, 7-9, 52-55)

28
Russian-language press in ER in 1918-1940 I
  • At this period the Russian-language editions
    circulation was quite low, the largest of them
    reached a maximum of 5000 copies (Tsassovskaja
    2001).
  • The majority of these newspapers survived less
    than a year (Isakov 1996).
  • This press mostly informed the Russian population
    about the expectations of the state and gave the
    floor to different opinions within the Russian
    community, but did not provide two-way
    communication between the Russian minority and
    Estonian state (Jakobson 2002).

29
Russian-language press in ER in 1918-1940 II
  • The change of the circumstances and the Russians
    status in Estonia transformed the
    Russian-language press into a typical minority
    media.
  • It has lost its regulative force, but did not
    become an effective public forum on an
    all-Estonian scale and in the socialization of
    the Russian minority, as it did not provide
    two-way communication between the Russian
    minority and the Estonian state.
  • The Russian-language press helped to preserve
    Russians ethnocultural identity.
  • Its predominant function was the transmission of
    culture, its informational and entertaining
    functions were reduced.
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