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                                                                                                  Peasants
                                               
                      
                                                                              
           
    
    
    
        
    
                                   
    
            
                            
                
                   
                                                                                              Peasants
                                                  
                                                                  
                          
                     
                                                                                                                                    
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                                                                       PEASANTS, a social group forming a part of the St. Petersburg population. Until 1917, the peasant class was one of the social classes that made its members dependent on their place of inhabitancy and work. In 1869, there were 207,000 peasants in St. Petersburg (142,800 men and approximately 64,200 women)- or 31% of the population. In 1897 there were 745,900 (451,400 men and over 29,400 women) - 59% of the population. In 1910 there were over 1.3 million peasants, making up 69% of the population. The predominance of men is explained by the fact that men came to St. Petersburg for seasonal work (see seasonal workers), leaving their families behind in the villages. Peasants worked freelance, doing general work in factories or on building sites. Among the peasants living in St. Petersburg were mostly Russians (mainly from the upper Volga region and north west Russia). In 1869 they made up 95% of the peasant population, in 1897 – 87.3%, Belarusians – 4.4%, Poles- 2.4%, Estonians - 1%, Latvians and Lithuanians – 1.1%, Finns in St. Petersburg Province - 0.8%, Tartars – 0.6%. In the 1930s in light of industrial development, the inflow of immigrants from the villages to Leningrad increased (about 50% of these remained in the city permanently and, depending on their profession in the census, as workers or servants). In 1959 peasants (or "collective farmers and affiliated handicraftsmen") made up little more than 1% of Leningrad's population, in 1979 - 0.4%. Reference: Юхнева Н. В. Этнический состав и этносоциальная структура населения Петербурга, вторая половина XIX - нач. XX в.: Стат. анализ. Л., 1984. С. 38-39, 142-163. A. Y. Chistyakov.
                                                                      
                          
                      
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                                    Юхнева Н. В. Этнический состав и этносоциальная структура населения Петербурга, вторая половина XIX - нач. XX в.: Стат. анализ. Л., 1984
                                                                
                          
                      
                                                                
                    The subject Index 
                                            
                                                  
          Otkhodniki
       
   
                              
                                                  
          Labourers
       
   
                              
                                                  
          Servants
       
   
                              
                                                  
          Russians
       
   
                              
                                                  
          Belarusians
       
   
                              
                                                  
          Poles
       
   
                              
                                                  
          Estonians
       
   
                              
                                                  
          Latvians
       
   
                              
                                                   
                                                  
          Finns
       
   
                              
                                                  
          Tartars
       
   
                              
                                            
                          
                     
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     
                
  
                     
    
    
    
        
        
                                      
                
                
        
    
    
    
                        
    
                      
      
        
    
    
        
    
        
    
            
    
    
                    
        
                                                               
                                                                                                
                            
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                                                        Belarusians 
                                                                           
                         
                        BELARUSIANS, an ethnic community within the St. Petersburg population. Belarusian is related to the Slavonic group of Indo-European languages. Most religious members of the community belong to the Russian Orthodox Church while some are Catholic
                                             
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                                                        Otkhodniki 
                                                                           
                         
                        OTKHODNIKI, seasonal workers (mainly peasants), who came to St. Petersburg in search of work. Otkhodniki appeared in the city at the beginning of the 18th century and took part in the city's construction
                                             
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                                                        Poles 
                                                                           
                         
                        POLES, an ethnic community forming a part of the St. Petersburg population. The Polish language is related to the Slavic group of Indo-European languages. Their faith is Catholic. The Polish community in St
                                             
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                                                        Population (entry) 
                                                                           
                         
                        POPULATION of St. Petersburg is the second largest in the Russian Federation after Moscow. From the 18th to the start of the 20th centuries the population continually grew: in 1725 - 40,000 people, in 1750 - 74,000; in 1800 - 220,000; in 1818 - 386
                                             
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                                                        Revised Censuses 
                                                                           
                         
                        REVISED CENSUSES, a census of the taxpayers of Russia (including St. Petersburg) in the 18th to the 1st half of the 19th centuries. The revisions counted the number of peasants, townspeople, but did not include women or non tax-payers
                                             
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                                                        Servants 
                                                                           
                         
                        SERVANTS, professional social group forming a part of the St. Petersburg population, consisted mainly of peasants who came to the capital in search for work (see Otkhodniki), the smaller part was comprised of petty bourgeoisie
                                             
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                                                        Veps 
                                                                           
                         
                        VEPS, an ethnic community in Leningrad Region (Boxitogorsky, Lodeinopolsky, Podporozhsky districts), South Karelia and Western Vologodskaya Region. The Veps language belongs to the Finno-Ugric group of the Uralic language family
                                             
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