Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dspace.ncfu.ru/handle/20.500.12258/19498
Title: Russians in the North Caucasus in the 19th century: colonization-resettlement and sociocultural processes
Other Titles: Русские на Северном Кавказе в XIX в.: колонизационно-переселенческие и социокультурные процессы
Authors: Erokhin, A. M.
Ерохин, А. М.
Avdeev, E. А.
Авдеев, Е. А.
Vorobiev, S. M.
Воробьев, С. М.
Keywords: Colonization and resettlement processes;Sociocultural processes;Russification;Russians;Russian Empire;North Caucasus;Education;Cossacks
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: International Network Center for Fundamental and Applied Research
Citation: Erokhin, A. M., Avdeev, E. A., Vorobev, S. M. Russians in the North Caucasus in the 19th century: colonization-resettlement and sociocultural processes // Bylye Gody. - 2022. - Том 17. - Выпуск 1. - Стр.: 412 - 421. - DOI10.13187/BG.2022.1.412
Series/Report no.: Bylye Gody
Abstract: The article reviews the Russian peasant and military-Cossack colonization of the North Caucasus in the 19th century, its importance for the region. The authors focused greater attention on various aspects of the sociocultural interaction between Russian settlers and Caucasian mountain peoples. The methodology is based on a combination of historical and anthropological studies, analysis of ethnomigration, colonization - resettlement and sociocultural processes, frontier theory. Active Russian colonization changed the sociocultural and ethnic landscape of the North Caucasus, contributed to the development of agriculture, industry and urban growth. Institutional and sociocultural exchange, the accession of the cultures of the Caucasian mountain peoples to the sociocultural matrix of the Russian state were being intensified. A unique frontier culture of the Caucasian borderlands was being formed. The natural sociocultural integration that took place between the Cossacks, Russian settlers and the Caucasian mountain peoples in the 19th century did not become a priority of state policy at that time. The majority of the mountain population remained outside the influence of Russian culture, was not included in the modernization and urbanization processes. This became a socio-cultural factor in the preservation of conflict in the region in the 20th century.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12258/19498
Appears in Collections:Статьи, проиндексированные в SCOPUS, WOS

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