- In the
Russian Empire,
inorodtsy (Russian: иноро́дцы) (singular:
inorodets (Russian: инородец),
literally meaning "of
different descent/nation", "of alien...
-
Siberia and
Central Asia were
officially registered as a
category called inorodtsy ('non-Slavic', lit. 'people of
another origin'). A
majority of the po****tion...
- 212,000 in Russian-controlled Poland. This made them one of the
largest inorodtsy (non-Slavic)
minorities in the
Russian Empire. On 26
August 1827 the edict...
- muni****l councils,
insurance for
industrial workers, the eman****tion of
Inorodtsy and the
abolition of censorship. The
crucial demand—that for a representative...
-
sprang up. In 19th century,
legally the Jews were a
subcategory of the
inorodtsy category,
special ethnicity-based
category of non-Slavic po****tion that...
- (center Irkutsk) were
created instead. The
Siberian people belonged to the
inorodtsy class and
their nomadic status was
confirmed by a
special system of self-government...
- the
inorodtsy category, as well as one case
where an ethnically-Russian
group of Old
Believers living in the
Altai Mountains were
defined as
inorodtsy from...
-
Russia who ****imilated to the
triune Russian identity were not
considered inorodtsy (ethnically alien)
within the
predominantly Great Russian locales of the...
- in the form of
taxes as well as
young men to be
trained as soldiers.
inorodtsy (инородцы) estate, that
included non-Russian and non-Orthodox
native peoples...
-
recorded by
Vladimir Dahl in 1881 in the
meaning "foreigners, aliens,
inorodtsy". and the term had a
negative connotation, akin to
similar terms in other...