Grey Ukraine (also Grey Klyn; Ukrainian: Сірий Клин, romanizedSiryi Klyn, also Сіра Україна – "Grey Ukraine"; Russian: Серый Клин, romanizedSeryy Klin) is an unofficial name for a region in Southern Siberia and Northern Kazakhstan, where mass settlement of Ukrainians took place from the middle of the 18th to the beginning of the 20th century. Around 1917–1920 there was a movement for Ukrainian autonomy in the region.

History

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Location of Grey Ukraine
 
Number and share of Ukrainians in the population of the regions of the RSFSR (1926 census)

The Ukrainian settlement of Siryi Klyn (literally: the "grey wedge")[1] developed around the city of Omsk in western Siberia.[2] M. Bondarenko, an emigrant from Poltava province, wrote before World War I: "The city of Omsk looks like a typical Moscovite city, but the bazaar and markets speak Ukrainian".[3] Altogether, before 1914, 1,604,873 emigrants from Ukraine settled in the area.[citation needed]

Historical Grey Ukraine exists roughly within the present-day northern Kazakhstan and southern Siberia.[4][5][1] It is not contiguous with other territories inhabited by Ukrainian diaspora, in a similar situation of territorial isolation as with Green Ukraine.[6]

Most of the Ukrainian migrations to Siberia happened between the mid-18th century and early 20th century. After conquering it in the early 18th century, the Russian Empire decided to resettle the region by handing 40% of newly created settlements there to Ukrainian settlers and 30% to Russian and Belarusian settlers.[7][3] By 1897, Ukrainians made up 7.5% of the population in Akmolinsk Oblast, which contained Omsk and surrounding regions.[8] Although the Russian Empire had tolerated expressions of Ukrainian identity, and the Soviet Union had initially adopted a Ukrainization policy in the region, by the end of 1932 the Ukrainization policy was reversed and the Ukrainian identity strongly declined.[7] Migration to the region continued throughout the Soviet period, and Nikita Khrushchev's virgin lands campaign during the 1950s encouraged further migration from across the Soviet Union.[2]

Demographics

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In the Russian census of 1897, 51,103 people identified themselves as Little Russians (Ukrainians) in Akmolinsk (Omsk) Oblast, making up 7.5% of the population and forming the third-largest ethnic group after Kazakhs (62.6%) and Russians (25.5%).[8] According to the 2010 Russian census, 77,884 people (2.7%) of the Omsk Oblast identified themselves as Ukrainians, making Ukrainians the third-largest ethnic group there, after Russians and Kazakhs.[9]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Andrew Wilson (15 October 2015). The Ukrainians: Unexpected Nation, Fourth Edition. Yale University Press. p. 117. ISBN 978-0-300-21965-4.
  2. ^ a b Andrew Wilson (1997). Ukrainian Nationalism in the 1990s: A Minority Faith. Cambridge University Press. p. 180. ISBN 978-0-521-57457-0.
  3. ^ a b Sergiychuk, V. "Сірий Клин - неофіційна сторінка української громади Омська" [The beginnings of Ukrainian settlements in the Grey Wedge]. www.siryj-klyn.narod.ru. Retrieved 2022-03-28.
  4. ^ United States. Congress. House. Select Committee on Communist Aggression (1954). Baltic States investigation. U.S. Govt. Print. Off. p. 918.
  5. ^ The Ukrainian Quarterly. Ukrainian Congress Committee of America. 1951. p. 56.
  6. ^ Bohdan S. Wynar (2000). Independent Ukraine: A Bibliographic Guide to English-language Publications, 1989-1999. Ukrainian Academic Press. p. 101. ISBN 978-1-56308-670-0.
  7. ^ a b Serhiichuk, Volodymyr (2022-03-24). "How Russians appropriate stranger's names, another's history, another's land". National Museum of the Holodomor-Genocide. Retrieved 2022-03-27.
  8. ^ a b "Демоскоп Weekly - Приложение. Справочник статистических показателей". www.demoscope.ru. Retrieved 2022-03-28.
  9. ^ Всероссийская перепись населения 2002 года: Приморский край [Russian Population Census 2002: Primorsky Krai] (in Russian). Demoscope.ru. 2002. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
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