German-Russians
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German-Russians
Summary
German-Russians is an ethnic group[1]. German-Russians draws 2,712 Wikipedia views per month (ethnic_group category, ranking #509 of 4,529).[2]
Key Facts
- Russian was German-Russians's native language[3].
- German was German-Russians's native language[4].
- Plautdietsch was German-Russians's native language[5].
- Swabian was German-Russians's native language[6].
- German-Russians's religion is recorded as Protestantism[7].
- German-Russians's religion is recorded as Catholicism[8].
- German-Russians's religion is recorded as Eastern Orthodoxy[9].
- German-Russians's religion is recorded as Lutheranism[10].
- German-Russians's instance of is recorded as ethnic group[11].
- German-Russians is a type of German diaspora[12].
- German-Russians is part of Russians[13].
- German-Russians's Commons category is recorded as German minority in Russia[14].
- German-Russians comprises Volga Germans[15].
- German-Russians comprises Crimea Germans[16].
- German-Russians comprises Baltic Germans[17].
- German-Russians comprises Q4363971[18].
- German-Russians's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Russian and Soviet-German people[19].
- German-Russians has a population of {'amount': '+394138'}[20].
- German-Russians's described by source is recorded as Dresdner Hefte[21].
- German-Russians's history of topic is recorded as history of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union[22].
Body
Definition and Type
German-Russians's instance of is recorded as ethnic group[11]. German-Russians is a type of German diaspora[12].
Use and Application
Components include Volga Germans[15], an ethnic community[23], in Russia[24]; Crimea Germans[16], a group of humans[25]; Baltic Germans[17], an ethnic group[26], in Latvia[27]; and Q4363971[18]. German-Russians is part of Russians[13].
Why It Matters
German-Russians draws 2,712 Wikipedia views per month (ethnic_group category, ranking #509 of 4,529).[2] German-Russians has Wikipedia articles in 17 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] German-Russians is known by 23 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]