Russian_Armenians

Armenians in Russia

Armenians in Russia

Ethnic minority in Russia


Armenians in Russia or Russian Armenians[n 1] (Armenian: Հայերը Ռուսաստանում, romanized: Hayery Rrusastanum; Russian: Армяне в России, romanized: Armyane v Rossii) are one of the country's largest ethnic minorities and the largest Armenian diaspora community outside Armenia. The 2010 Russian census recorded 1,182,388 Armenians in the country. Various figures estimate that the ethnic Armenian population in Russia is actually more than 2 million. Armenians populate various regions, including Moscow, Saint Petersburg, Krasnodar Krai in the North Caucasus and as far as Vladivostok in the East.

Quick Facts Հայերը Ռուսաստանում Армяне в России, Total population ...

History

Early period

There has been an Armenian presence in Russia since the Late Middle Ages, when various merchants and artisans ventured west to the Crimea and the northern Caucasus in order to set up trade ties and conduct commerce.

Russian Empire

Portrait of Russian-Armenian General Valerian Madatov by George Dawe from the Military Gallery, 1820

The relationship between Armenians and Russian imperial authorities was complex, shaped as often by parallel interests as competing objectives.[6] Large Armenian communities resided both in the Caucasus and in Russian cities well before the modern era. After the destruction of the last remaining independent Armenian states in the Middle Ages, the nobility disintegrated, leaving Armenian society composed of a mass of peasants plus a middle class who were either craftsmen or merchants. Such Armenians were to be found in most towns of Transcaucasia; indeed, at the beginning of the 19th century they formed the majority of the population in cities such as Tbilisi. Armenian merchants conducted their trade across the world and many had set up base within Russia. In 1778, Catherine the Great invited Armenian merchants from the Crimea to Russia and they established a settlement at Nor Nakhichevan near Rostov-on-Don.[7] The Russian ruling classes welcomed the Armenians' entrepreneurial skills as a boost to the economy, but they also regarded them with some suspicion. The image of the Armenian as a "wily merchant" was already widespread. Russian nobles derived their income from their estates worked by serfs and, with their aristocratic distaste for engaging in business, they had little understanding or sympathy for the way of life of mercantile Armenians. Due to the Armenian Genocide, over 300,000+ Armenians migrated to the Russian Empire, specifically within Georgia and Armenia.

Nevertheless, middle-class Armenians prospered under Russian rule and they were the first to seize the new opportunities and transform themselves into a prosperous bourgeoisie when capitalism and industrialisation came to Transcaucasia in the later half of the 19th century. The Armenians more easily adapted to the new economic circumstances than their neighbours in Transcaucasia, the Georgians and the Azeris. They became the most powerful element in the municipal life of Tbilisi, the heart of the tsarist administration of the Caucasus as well as its economic center. Armenian entrepreneurs were quick to engage the oil boom which began in Transcaucasia in the 1870s, making investments in the oil fields in Baku in Azerbaijan and the refineries of Batumi on the Black Sea coast. All this meant that the tensions between Armenians, Georgians and Azeris in Russian Transcaucasia were not simply ethnic or religious in nature but also were shaped by social and economic considerations. Nevertheless, despite the stereotype of the typical Armenian as a successful businessman, at the end of the 19th century 80 percent of Russian Armenians were still peasants working the land.[8]

Soviet Union

Many Armenians were deported around the Soviet Union states, Armenians were everywhere. A wave of Armenian's from middle eastern countries specifically, Syria and Lebanon were called to migrate to the Soviet Union for better life.

Present day

Commemoration of the Armenian genocide in Volgograd, 2012

According to the Union of Russian Armenians, there are 2.5 million Armenians living in Russia today. According to the same source, about 850,000 are immigrants from Armenia, 350,000 from Azerbaijan and 250,000 from Georgia, including 100,000 from Abkhazia and 180,000 from Central Asia, mostly Tajikistan and Turkmenistan.[9]

The Russian government is encouraging Armenians to immigrate and settle in Russia and is providing financial and settlement incentives.[10]

Armenians in Russia have one of the highest rates of educational attainment. According to the 2002 census 21.4% of Armenians have higher education, 31.8% have "middle special" education (i.e. vocational education), and 46.1% have secondary education.[11]

Distribution

Distribution of Armenians in Russia, 2010
Protests in Moscow against the extradition and pardon of Ramil Safarov, 2012
More information Rank, Federal subject ...

Moscow

The Armenian Cathedral of Moscow, completed in 2011

The 2010 Russian census put the number of Moscow Armenians at 106,466. Another 63,306 Armenians lived in Moscow region at the time. There are various estimates on the number of Armenians in Moscow: 400,000,[24] 600,000,[25] 1,000,000.[26] Moscow is often regarded as the largest Armenian community outside Armenia.

Saint Catherine's Armenian Church, Saint Petersburg

Saint Petersburg

In 1708 the first Armenians came to St. Petersburg, and in 1710 in the city already existed "Armenian offices". In 1730, under the leadership of the priest Ivan Sheristanova organized the first parish of the Armenian Apostolic Church. Throughout the 20th century Armenian population of St. Petersburg has been steadily increasing. The number of Armenians in St. Petersburg increased from 1,759 in 1926 to 19,164[16] in 2002.

According to Soviet 1989 census 47% Armenians speak Armenian as native language, 52% speak Russian as native language. At the same time almost all fluent in Russian language. About half of the Armenians have higher education and, consequently, higher social status.[27]

According to the head of Saint Petersburg's Armenian community Karen Mkrtchyan, currently about 100,000 Armenians are living in the region of Saint Petersburg. There are 2 Armenian churches, a Sunday school, "Havatamk" Armenian monthly and a printing house.[28]

Krasnodar

The Krasnodar Krai is one of the biggest communities of the Armenian diaspora.[29] According to the Russian 2002 census, there were 274,566 Armenians. 211,397 of them spoke Armenian as their native language and 6,948 had Armenian citizenship.

According to estimates some 500,000,[30][31] 700,000[32] or 1,000,000[33] Armenians resided in Krasnodar.

They are chiefly concentrated in Greater Sochi (80,045[34]–125,000)[35] the city of Krasnodar (28,022[n 2]–70,000),[37] the city of Armavir (18,262[36]–50,000)[38] Tuapse (18,194)[n 3], Novorossiysk (12,092[36]–40,000)[39] Apsheron (10,659),[36] and Anapa (8,201).[36]

Rostov-on-Don

Historically, the Don region was home to the largest Armenian community on the territory of the modern Russian Federation. Armenians were resettled from Crimean Khanate in 1779 by orders of Catherine the Great and founded several settlements around the territory of modern Rostov-on-Don. The largest of them, Nakhichevan-on-Don, was merged into the Rostov city in 1928. Armenians still constitute the majority (60%) of population in Myasnikovsky District. In 2010, Rostov-on-Don had the third largest Armenian population of all Russian cities (after Moscow and Sochi, Krasnodar Krai).

Notable Russian Armenians

RT and Sputnik Editor-in-Chief Margarita Simonyan

Arts and entertainment

King of Russian pop Philipp Kirkorov

Politics and military

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov
Marshal of the Soviet Union Ivan Bagramyan

Scientists

Nuclear physicist Yuri Oganessian

Sports

First vice-president of Russian Football Union Nikita Simonyan

Miscellaneous

World chess champion Garry Kasparov

See also


References

Notes
  1. Note that this article is about the Armenians living within Russia's current borders. Through large parts of the 19th and almost the entire 20th century, part of the Armenian homeland (known as Russian Armenia or Eastern Armenia) was under Russian and later Soviet rule. For Armenians in countries that have been part of Russia in the past, see Armenians in Azerbaijan, Armenians in Georgia, Armenians in Ukraine, Armenians in Belarus, Armenians in Moldova, Armenians in the Baltic states, Armenians in Central Asia and Armenians in Poland.
  2. 21,390 in the city itself and 6,632 in the municipality[36]
  3. 5,335 in the city itself and 12,859 in the district[36]
References
  1. "Փորձագետ. ՌԴ-ում բնակվող 2.5 մլն հայերի մասին տեղեկությունը հավաստի չէ" (in Armenian). PanARMENIAN.Net. 2 June 2017. Archived from the original on 19 August 2019. Իմ գնահատականով Ռուսաստանում 1 մլն 700 հազարից մինչև 1 մլն 800 հազար հայ է բնակվում:
  2. "Interview with Rossiya TV channel". kremlin.ru. President of Russia. 7 October 2020. Archived from the original on 7 October 2020. Suffice it to say that some 2 million Azerbaijanis and over 2 million Armenians live in Russia, as far as we know.
  3. Riegg, Stephen (2020). Russia's Entangled Embrace: The Tsarist Empire and the Armenians, 1801-1914. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. ISBN 9781501750113.
  4. Suny. Armenian People, p. 110
  5. See Suny Chapter 2 "Images of Armenians in the Russian Empire" in Looking Toward Ararat: Armenia in Modern History. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1993 ISBN 0-253-20773-8
  6. В России проживает более 2,5 млн армян (in Russian). РИА "Новости". December 16, 2002. Retrieved July 21, 2012.
  7. Տերտերյանը "վերադարձավ" Հայրավանք // Havatamk, #8, 2015, p. 6, by Samvel Danielyan
  8. Schreck, Carl (5 May 2006). "Sochi's Armenian Diaspora Weeps". The Moscow Times. Archived from the original on 30 May 2014. With 125,000 ethnic Armenians in Sochi, out of a total of 400,000 people...
  9. Коновалова, Евгения (February 12, 2007). Армяне на Кубани: мигранты или местные жители? (in Russian). ЮГА.ру. Retrieved July 19, 2012.
  10. "People speak Armenian in Armavir". A1plus. January 25, 2011. Retrieved July 19, 2012.
  11. (in Russian) Армянское культурное общество «Луйс»

Bibliography

Further reading


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