Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic


The Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was an autonomous republic established in Soviet Russia. Its capital was the Volga River port of Engels.

History

The republic was created following the Russian Revolution, by October 29 Decree of the Soviet government, Volga German Workers' Commune, giving Soviet Germans a special status among the non-Russians in the USSR. It was upgraded to the status of Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic on February 20, 1924, by the Declaration of the All-Union Central Executive Committee and the Council of People's Commissars of the Russian SFSR. It became the first national autonomous unit in the Soviet Union after the Donetsk-Krivoy Rog Soviet Republic. It occupied the area of compact settlement of the large Volga German minority in Russia, which numbered almost 1.8 million by 1897. The republic was declared on January 6, 1924.
At the moment of declaration of autonomy, an amnesty was announced. However, it eventually was applied to a small number of people. According to the policy of korenizatsiya, carried out in the 1920s in the Soviet Union, usage of the German language was promoted in official documents and Germans were encouraged to occupy management positions. According to the 1939 census, there were 366,685 Germans in the autonomy.
By January 1, 1941, the Volga Germans Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic included the city of Engels and 22 cantons: Baltsersky, Gmelinsky, Gnadenflyursky, Dobrinsky, Zelmansky, Zolotovsky, Ilovatsky, Kamensky, Krasnoyarsky, Krasnokutsky, Kukkussky, Lizandergeysky, Marientalsky, Marxshtadtsky, Pallasovsky, Staro-Poltavsky, Ternovsky, Untervaldsky, Fedorovsky, Franksky, Ekgeimsky and Erlenbakhsky.
The German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941 marked the end of the Volga German ASSR. On August 28, 1941, Joseph Stalin issued a formal Decree of Banishment abolishing the ASSR and, fearing they could act as German spies, exiling all Volga Germans to the Kazakh SSR and Siberia. Many were interned in labor camps merely due to their heritage. The Republic was formally extinguished on September 7, 1941.
Following the death of Stalin in 1953, the situation for Volga Germans improved dramatically. In 1964, a second decree was issued, openly admitting the government's guilt in pressing charges against innocent people and urging Soviet citizens to give the Volga Germans every assistance in their "economic and cultural expansion". With the existence of a socialist German state in East Germany now a reality of the post-war world, the Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was never reestablished. The land area is now mostly part of Saratov Oblast, except for a small area in northern Volgograd Oblast.
Beginning in the early 1980s and accelerating after the fall of the Soviet Union, many Volga Germans have emigrated to Germany by taking advantage of the German law of return, a policy which grants citizenship to all those who can prove to be a refugee or expellee of German ethnic origin or as the spouse or descendant of such a person.

Population

The following table shows population of the ethnic groups of the Volga German ASSR:
1926 census1939 census
Germans379,630 366,685
Russians116,561 156,027
Ukrainians68,561 58,248
Kazakhs1,353 8,988
Tatars2,225 4,074
Mordvins1,429 3,048
Belarusians159 1,636
Chinese5 1,284
Jews152 1,216
Poles216 756
Estonians753 521
Others710 3,869
Total571,754606,352

Leaders

Head of State

;Central Executive Committee Chairmen
  1. 1918-1919 Ernst Reuter
  2. 1919-1920 Adam Reichert
  3. 1920 Alexander Dotz
  4. 1920-1921 Vasiliy Pakun
  5. 1921-1922 Alexander Moor
  6. 1922-1924 Wilhelm Kurz
  7. 1924-1930 Johannes Schwab
  8. 1930-1934 Andrew Gleim
  9. 1934-1935 Heinrich Fuchs
  10. 1935-1936 Adam Welsch
  11. 1936-1937 Heinrich Lüft
  12. 1937-1938 David Rosenberger
;Supreme Council Chairman
  1. 1938-1941 Konrad Hoffmann

    Head of Government

;Sovnarkom of the Republic
Created on January 12, 1924 by the declaration at the first session of the Central Executive Committee of the Republic
  1. 1924-1929 Wilhelm Kurz
  2. 1929-1930 Andrew Gleim
  3. 1930-1935 Heinrich Fuchs
  4. 1935-1936 Adam Welsch
  5. 1936-1937 Heinrich Lüft
  6. 1937-1938 Wladimir Dalinger
  7. 1938-1941 Alexander Heckman