- Kuban Cossacks
Kuban Cossacks ( _ru. Кубанские кaзаки, "Kubanskiye Kаzaki") are
Cossack s who live in theKuban region ofRussia . Although numerous Cossack groups came to inhabit the WesternNorthern Caucasus most of the Kuban Cossacks are descendants of theBlack Sea Cossack Host , (originally theZaporozhian Cossacks ) and theCaucasus Line Cossack Host . The KubanCossack Host (Кубанское казачье войско) is the administrative and military unit from 1860-1918 and from 1990 since.Formation history of the Kuban Cossack Host
The first Cossacks on the Kuban (1444-1716)
It thought that the term Cossack originated in the Kuban, from the ancient
Circassia n "Kassak" (alternative version "kasog") where it entered the Turkic language and from there was adopted by the latter proto-Cossack groups of the Don and Dnieper.However the first true Cossack groups were formed in the northern Kuban region in the basin of the Khopyor and Medveditsa rivers when groups of runaway migrants from the
Ryazan . The earliest known record of these Cossacks date to 1444. [ Khoperskiye Kazaki [http://www.nevchronograph.ru/history/oboznyi/1] ] As Russia's borders extended, and the adjacentDon Cossack Host to the north became more and more subjected to Russia, the Khoper became a natural haven for runaway migrants from Sloboda andTambov regions. By the end of the 17th century there were seven settlements numbering a total of 2-3 thousand Cossacks each.By the mid-17th century simultaneously absorbing the
Don Cossacks into theTsardom of Russia , the Khopyor group were subjected to the Don Cossack Host, although this was purely administrative as the Khopyor remained not only geographically but religiously detached from the Don. This was because a large number of them wereOld Believers . In 1695 the Khopyor's aided Russia in theAzov Campaigns but in 1708 the Khopyor became a centre for theBulavin Rebellion against Peter I. The failure of which led to a near eradication of the Khopyor Cossacks, where seven thousand people were killed, the surviving two thousand led by Ignat Nekrasov emigrated into theOttoman Empire and from that moment on formed the first knownRussian Diaspora , theNekrasov Cossacks .Afterwards the Khopyor became an almost deserted land. A small number however survived the rebellion, these were mobilised to fight in the Russo-Swedish War (1700-1721) and returned to their now empty homeland only in 1716. After seeking pardon for their kin from the
Voronezh authorities, this small group founded the Novokhopyorskaya fortress which became a small outpost.Black Sea Cossacks
In a different part of Southeastern Europe, on the middle Dnieper lived the
Zaporozhian Cossacks . However by the late 18th century their combat ability was greatly reduced. With their traditional adverseries theCrimean Khanate andPolish-Lithuanian Commonwealth now all but defunct, there was little military use for them for theRussian Empire . In addition the Zaporozhian Sich represented a safe heaven for runaway serfs, where the state authority did not extend, they were often taking parts in rebellions breaking up in Ukraine. The biggest problem for the imperial government, however, was the Cossacks' resistance to colonizaton of lands they considered theirs. [Orest Subtelny "Ukraine a history" [http://books.google.com/books?id=HNIs9O3EmtQC&pg=PA175&dq=destruction+Zaporozhian+Sich&lr=&sig=ACfU3U3xHQYyW54t8kRca9jXLk3V6JrPPg History of Ukraine. Retrieved onJuly 4 , 2008] .] In 1775 after numerous attacks on Serbian colonisers the Russian Empress Catherine the Great had Grigory Potemkin disband the Zaporozhian Host via a bloodless operation carried out by GeneralPyotr Tekeli .The Zaporozhians scattered, some (five thousand men or 30% of the Host) fled to the Ottoman controlled
Danube area. [Taras Chukhlib "Alexander Suvorov in Ukrainian history", Pravda.org.ua [http://knsuvorov.narod.ru/text/ukr.html Retrieved on 21 April] ] Others joined the Imperial Russian ArmyHusar andDragoon regiments, while most turned to local farming and trade.However a decade later, international pressure forced many in Russia to rethink the decision, as the rivalry with the
Ottoman Empire meant a new war was immanent. A further issue was when in 1778 the Turkish Sultan offered the exiled Zaporozhians to build a newDanubian Sich . In a bold move, Potemkin suggested to Cathrine II to re-create the Zaporozhian Cossacks, and offered the former commandersAntin Holovaty ,Zakhary Chepiha andSydir Bily to round the former Cossacks into a "Host of the loyal Zaporozhians" in 1787. [V.Golubtsky "Black Sea Cossack Host" from the Large Soviet Encyclopedia [http://www.cultinfo.ru/fulltext/1/001/008/122/012.htm Retrieved on22 April 2007] .]The new host played a crucial role in the
Russo-Turkish War (1787–1792) , and for their loyalty and service the Russian Empress rewarded them with eternal use of theKuban then inhabited by Nogay remains, and in the cause of theCaucasus War a crucial progress in further pushing the Russian line intoCircassia . Renamed theBlack Sea Cossack Host , a total of 25 thousand men made the migration in 1792-93.On the Russian frontier (1777-1860)
Over the next half a century the small outpost of Novokhopyorskaya grew, battling the
Nogay andCircassian raids in progress. TheRusso-Turkish War (1768-1774) changed all this, and the Khopyor Cossacks took part in the campaign, and in 1870 then numbering four settlements requested to form a regiment. Owing to their service in the war on6 October 1774 Catherine the Great issued a manifesto granting their request.The end of the war and the
Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca brought Russia's frontiers south from theKuban River 's entry into theAzov Sea along its right bank and right to the bend of theTerek River . This created a 500verst undefended border and in summer of 1777, the Khopyor regiment in addition to the remnants of theVolga Cossacks and aVladimir Dragoon regiment were re-settled into the Northern Caucausus to build theAzov -Mozdok defence line. This marked the start of theCaucasus War .The Khopyor regiment was responsible for the western flank of the line, they founded the fortress of
Stavropol (22 October 1777 ) and threestanitsas : Moskovskaya, Donskaya and Severnaya with 140 Cossack families in each. In 1779 the Khopyor regiment was given its own district. The conditions were desperate as the Circassians would mount almost daily raids onto the Russian positions. In 1804 the Khopyor regiment pushed westwards deeper into theKabarda territory, moving to the bend of theKuban River and founding six new stanitsas (the so-called new-Kuban line: Barsukovskaya, Nivinnomysskaya, Belomechetskaya, Batalpashinskaya (modernCherkessk ), Bekeshevskaya and Suvorovskaya. The next expansion took place in 1828 when the Khopyor Cossacks completed in the conquest ofKarachay , and were part of the first Russian expedition to reach the summit ofElbrus in 1829. [cite web|url=http://www.nevchronograph.ru/publications/7|title=К 300-летию Хоперского полка — основателя и защитника нашего города — Публикации - [Невинномысскiй хронографЪ ]However overall the Russian progress on the Caucasus was desperate, and to ease administration in 1832 military reform united ten regiments from the mouth of the
Terek River all the way to the Khopyor in the western Kabarda forming theCaucasus Line Cossack Host . The Khopyor regiment is also given several peasant settlements raising its manpower to 12 thousand. With the further advance to theLaba River the Khopyor district is split into two regiments, and they form the Laba line: Spokoynaya, Ispravnaya, Podgornaya, Udobnaya, Peredovaya, Storozhevaya.Zaporozhets za Kubanyu
Initially some of the traditions from Zaporozhia persisted in the Black Sea Cossacks, such as the formal election of the host government, but in many cases, the traditional organisation were replaced by new ones. Instead of a central Sich, they formed defence line from the inlet of Kuban River into the Black Sea to the inlet of the
Bolshaya Laba River , and colonised the land north of this line withstanitsa s. To administer the land, the city ofYekaterinodar (literally Cathrine's gift) was built. At the same time, however, the Black Sea Cossacks also sent men to many major campaigns of the Russian Empire's demand, such as the suppression of the PolishKościuszko Uprising in 1794, the ill-fatedPersian Expedition of 1796 where nearly half of the Cossacks died from hunger and disease, and sent the 9thplastun (infantry) and 1st joint cavalry regiments as well as the firstLeib Guard s (elite)sotnia to aid the Russian Army in the Patriotic War of 1812. Further participations of the new host was in theRusso-Persian War (1826-1828) where they were to victoriously storm the last remaining Ottoman bastion of the northern Black Sea Coast, the fortress ofAnapa , which fell onJune 12 ,1828 . In the course of theCrimean War , the Cossacks foiled any attempts of allied landing on theTaman Peninsula , whilst the 2nd and 5th plastun battalions took part in the heroic Defence of Sevastopol.At the same time, for the land they left behind the
Buh Cossacks were able to provide a strong buffer from theDanubian Sich . However after theRusso-Turkish War (1828–1829) under the patronage ofNicholas I most of the Danube Cossacks officially turned themselves over and under amnesty were resettled between theMariupol andBerdyansk forming theAzov Cossack Host .Expansion
As the years went by, the Black Sea Cossacks continued its systematic penetrations into the mountainous regions of the Northern Caucasus. Taking an active part in the finale of the Russian conquest of the Northern Caucasus, they settled the regions each time these were conquered. To aid them, a total of 70 thousand additional ex-Zaporozhians from the Bug, Yekaterinoslav, and finally the
Azov Cossack Host migrated there in the mid 19th century. All three of the former were necessary to be removed to vacate space for the colonisation ofNew Russia , and with the increasing weakness of the Ottoman Empire as well as the formation of independent buffer states in the Balkans, the need for further Cossack presence had ended. They made the migration to the Kuban in 1860 and merged with theCaucasus Line Cossack Host .Apogee of the Kuban Host
The new Host grew to be one of the most prominent in the Russian Empire as well as one of the largest, second only to the Don Host. The Kuban Cossacks continued to make an active part in the Russian affairs of the 19th century starting from the finale of the
Russian-Circassian War which ceased shortly after the hosts' formation. A small group took part in the 1873 conquest that brought theKhanate of Khiva under Russian control. Their biggest military affair was theRusso-Turkish War (1877–1878) , on both the Balkan and the Caucasus fronts. The latter in particular was a strong contribution as the Kuban Cossacks made 90% of the Russian cavalry. Famous achievements in the numerous Battles of Shipka, the defence of Bayazet and finally in decisive and victoriousBattle of Kars where the Cossacks were the first to enter. Three Kuban Cossack regiments took part in the storming ofGeok-Tepe in Turkmenistan in 1881. During theRusso-Japanese War (1904-1905), the host mobilised six cavalry regiments, five plastun battalions and one battery to the distant region of Russia.The Cossacks also carried out the second strategical objective, the colonisation of the Kuban land. In total, the host owned more than six million tithes, of which 5.7 million belonged to the stanitsas, with the remaining in the reserve or in private hands of Cossack officers and officials. Upon reaching the age of 17, a Cossack would be given between 16 to 30 tithes for cultivation and personal use. With the natural growth of the population, the average land that a Cossack owned decreased from 23 tithes in 1860s to 7.6 in 1917. Such arrangements, however ensured that the colonisation and the cultivation would be very rational.
The military purpose of the Kuban was echoed in its administration pattern. Rather than a traditional Imperial
Guberniya (governorate) withuyezd s (districts), the territory was administered by theKuban Oblast which was split into otdels (regions, which in 1888 counted seven). Each otdel would have its ownsotnia s which in turn would be split intostanitsa s andkhutor s. TheAtaman (commander) for each region was not only responsible for the military preparation of the Cossacks, but for the local administration duties. Local Stanitsa and Khutor atamans were elected, but approved by the atamans of the otdel. These, in turn, were appointed by the supreme ataman of the host, who was in turn appointed directly by the Russian Emperor. Prior to 1870, this system of legislature in the Oblast remained a robust military one and all legal decisions were carried out by the stanitsa ataman and two elected judges. Afterwards, however, the system was bureaucratised and the judicial functions became independent of the stanitsas.The more liberal policy of the Kuban was directly mirrored in the living standards of the people. One of the central features of this was
education . Indeed, the first schools were known to have existed since the migration of the Black Sea Cossacks, and by 1860, the host had one male high school and 30 elementary schools. In 1863, the firstperiodical Кубанские войсковые ведомсти - "Kubanskiye voiskovye vedomsti" began printing, and two years later the host'slibrary was opened in Yekaterinodar. In all, by 1870, the number of schools in rural stanitsas increased to 170. Compared with the rest of the Russian Empire, by the start of the 20th century the Oblast had a very high literacy rate of 50% and each year up to 30 students from Cossack families (again a rate unmatched by any other rural province) were sent to study in the higher education establishments of Russia.!--However frictions with the Tsarist administration was also widespread. During the reign of Alexander II the pro-liberal reforms effectively split the Caucasus lines by creating an independent
Stavropol Oblast , which was settled by rural peasants seeking to colonise the new lands, which were forcibly confiscated fromt he Cossacks. These migrations led to a large Armenian and Ukrainian minorities to form. Such that by 1888, the non-Cossack share of Kuban Oblast was 48%. Other administrative reforms, prevented the Cossacks from colonising regions of the Kuban such as its Black Sea Coast, where a separateBlack Sea Governorate existed. Nonetheless, it was a Kuban Cossack, that used his body as a human shield to protect the Emperor in 1881 assassination, wounded mortally by the blast, it was the Tsar's own insistence to leave the carriage and thank the dying Cossack that allowed the terrorists to through the second bomb which ultimately took the Emperor's life as well.With the rise of Alexander II,-->
Russian Revolution and Civil War
During the Russian Revolution and the resulting Civil War, the Cossacks found themselves conflicted in their loyalties. In October 1917, simultaneously the
Kuban Soviet Republic and theKuban Rada were formed, both of whom proclaimed their rights to rule the Kuban, and shortly afterwards the Rada declared aKuban National Republic but was soon dispersed by Bolshevik forces. Although most of the Cossacks initially sided with the Rada, many joined the Bolsheviks as well, who promised them autonomy.In March 1918, after Kornilov's successful offensive, the Kuban Rada placed itself under his authority. However, after his death in June 1918 a federative union was signed with the Ukrainian government of Hetman
Pavlo Skoropadsky , after which many Cossacks left to return home or defected to the Bolsheviks. In addition to that, there was an internal struggle among the Kuban cossacks between loyalty towards the Russian Volunteer Army ofDenikin and Ukrainian nationalist forces.On
November 6 ,1919 , Denikin's forces surrounded the Rada, and with the help of the Ataman A. Filimonov arrested ten of its members, including theUkrainophile , P. Kurgansky, who was the premier of the Rada, and publicly hanged one of them for treason. Many Cossacks joined Denikin and fought in the ranks of the Volunteer Army. In December 1919, after Denikin's defeat and as it became clear that the Bolsheviks would overrun the Kuban, some of the pro-Ukrainian groups attempted to restore the Rada and to break away from the Volunteer Army and fight the Bolsheviks in alliance with Ukraine;cite book| author=Kubijovic, V.. | title=Ukraine: A Concise Encyclopedia| location= Toronto | publisher= University of Toronto Press | year = 1963 | pages = 790-793] however, by early 1920 theRed Army took most of Kuban, and both the Rada and Denikin were evicted.Early Soviet Times
After the Soviet victory, many Kuban cossacks fled the country to avoid persecution by the Bolsheviks. A notable eviction point was the Greek island of
Lemnos where 18 thousand Kuban Cossacks landed, many of whom died of starvation and disease. For the many who were left behind, their fate would prove no better. Soon after the Red Army's victory, the Kuban Cossack Host was officially dissolved. With their past loyalty to the Russian Emperor and the White Army, the new Soviet Government viewed all Cossacks as a threat to its still fragile power. An anti-Cossack campaign began immediately and the Kuban Cossack families would endure deliberate segregation as the Bolsheviks gave much of theForecaucasus territory to the new autonomous provinces of local minorities, and encouraged the settlement of the pre-mountainsteppe s by the latter, sometimes forcefully evicting the Cossacks from their native homes. Collectivization of the fertile steppe also began. Most of the Cossacks became local peasants and worked in the new conditions. During theSoviet famine of 1932-1934 , many of the Cossacks' descendants died of starvation.World War II
Collaborators in Wehrmacht and Waffen SS
The first collaborators were formed from Soviet Cossack POWs and deserters after the consequences of the Red Army's early defeats in the course of
Operation Barbarossa . After the horrors ofCollectivization andDecossackization , in summer of 1942, many of the Germans reachingKuban were greeted as liberators.cite web|url=http://axis101.bizland.com/CossackShields02.htm|title=Samuel J. Newland "The Cossack Volunteers"] cite web|url=http://www.google.ca/books?id=J8ideJ9KDh0C&pg=PA5&dq=volunteer+Pannwitz+cossacks&sig=WTbrWiv-OrhnS9AD1H-Yvs3RzXM |title="Cossacks in the German Army, 1941-1945"|accessdate=2007-09-20] [ [http://www.combatmagazine.ws/S3/BAKISSUE/CMBT03N1/STALIN.HTM Stalin's Enemies] "Combat Magazine" ISSN 1542-1546 Volume 03 Number 01 Winter] Many Soviet Kuban Cossacks chose to switch to the German side either when in POW camps or on active service in the Soviet Army. For example, Major Kononov deserted onAugust 22 ,1941 with an entire regiment and was instrumental in organizing Cossack volunteers in theWehrmacht . Some Cossack emigres, such asAndrei Shkuro andPyotr Krasnov chose to collaborate with the Germans as well and stood at the helm of two Cossack divisions on German service. However, most volunteers came after the Germans reached the Cossack homelands in summer of 1942. The Cossack National Movement of Liberation was set up in hope of mobilizing opposition to the Soviet regime with an intent to rebuild an independent Cossack state.Lt. Gen Wladyslaw Anders and Antonio Munoz [http://www.feldgrau.com/rvol.html Russian Volunteers in the German Wehrmacht in WWII] ]While there were several smaller Cossack detachments in the Wehrmacht since 1941, the
1st Cossack Division made up of Don, Terek and Kuban Cossacks was formed in 1943. This division was further augmented by the 2nd Cossack Cavalry Division formed in December 1944. Both divisions participated in hostilities against Tito's partisans in Yugoslavia. In February 1945, both Cossack Divisions were transferred into theWaffen-SS and formed theXVth SS Cossack Cavalry Corps . At the end of the war, the Cossack collaborators retreated to Italy and surrendered to the British army, but, under theYalta agreement , were forcibly repatriated with the rest of the collaborators to the Soviet authorities and some executed. [Gabby de Jong, Yalta Agreement [http://home.hetnet.nl/~gabby-pat/repatriation%20generals.htm Retrieved] ] (seeBetrayal of the Cossacks )Red Army Cossacks
Despite the defections that were taking place, the majority of the Cossacks, remained loyal to the Red Army. cite book|last=Shambarov|first=Valery|title=Kazachestvo Istoriya Volnoy Rusi|publisher=Algorithm Expo, Moscow|year=2007|isbn=987-5-699-20121-1] In the earliest battles, particularly the encirlclement of Belostok Cossack units such as the 94th Beloglisnky, 152nd Rostovsky and 48th Belorechensky regiments fought to their death.
In the opening phase of the war, during the German advance towards Moscow, Cossacks became extensively used for the raids behind enemy lines. The most famous of these took place during the
Battle of Smolensk under the command ofLev Dovator , whose 3rd Cavalry Corps consisted of the 50th and 53rd Cavalry divisions from the Kuban and Terek Cossacks, which were mobilised from the Northern Caucasus. The raid, which in ten days covered 300 km and destroyed the hinterlands of the IXth German Army, before successfully breaking out. [cite journal|last = Kochetov V.N.| journal = Preobrazheniye|title= "General Dovator"|volume = 7|year= 2005] Whilst units under the command of GeneralPavel Belov , the 2nd Cavalry Corps made from Don, Kuban and Stavropol Cossacks spearheaded the counter-attack onto the right flank of the VIth German Army delaying its advance towards Moscow.The high professionalism that the Cossacks under Dovator and Belov (both generals would later be granted the title
Hero of the Soviet Union and their units raised to a Guards (elite) status) ensured that many new units would be formed. In the end, if the Germans during the whole war only managed to form two Cossack Corps, the Red Army in 1942 already had 17. Many of the newly formed units were filled with ethnically Cossack volunteers. The Kuban Cossacks were allocated to the 10th, 12th and 13th Corps. However, the most famous Kuban Cossack unit would be the 17th Cossack Corps under the command of generalNikolay Kirichenko .During the opening phase of the
Battle of Stalingrad , when the Germans overran the Kuban, the majority of the Cossack population, long before the Germans began their agitation with Krasnov and Shkuro, became involved in Partisan activity. [ Kuban Today, Vol.7 "В годы суровых испытаний" about partisan movement on the Kuban by V. Turov,6 May 1998 ] [Fire of war.ru — Anthology of various historians of the Partisan Activity in the Krasnodar Kray [http://fire-of-war.ru/podpolie/p868.htm Retrieved 15 Oct, 2007] ] Raids onto the German positions from the Caucasus mountains became commonplace. After the German defeat atStalingrad , the 4th Guards Kuban Cossack Corps, strengthened by tanks and artillery, broke through the German lines and liberatedMineralnye Vody , andStavropol .For the latter part of the war, although the Cossacks did prove especially useful in reconnaissance and rear guards, the war did show that the age of horse cavalry had come to an end. The famous IVth Guards Kuban Cossack Regiment which took part in heavy fighting in the course of the liberation of Southern Ukraine and Romania was allowed to proudly march on theRed Square in the famousVictory parade of 1945.Modern Kuban Cossacks
Following the war, the Cossack regiments, along with remaining cavalry were disbanded and removed from Armed Forces as they were thought to be obsolete. Most of the cossack descendants living in the rural territories nevertheless kept their traditions alive even though postwar
USSR refused to officially recognise their existence.Starting in the late 1980s, there were renewed efforts to revive Cossack traditions which went to great lengths; in 1990, the Host was once again recognised by the Supreme
Ataman of the All-Great Don Host (Всевеликое Войско Донское). With the help of the governor of Krasnodar KrayAlexander Tkachev , the host has become an integral part of the Kuban life, there are joint combat training operations with theRussian Army , policing of the rural areas with theMilitsiya , preparation of local youth for the draft service. Not only is their aid in military, during the floods in 2004 of the Taman Peninsula they provided men and equipment for relief missions. Today, the host numbers 25 thousand men and has its own distinct forces: a whole regiment of the 7th 'Cherkassy' Guards Air-Assault Division (the 108th "Kuban Cossack' Guards Airborne Regiment) in the RussianVDV ; 205th Motorised Rifle Brigade, within theNorth Caucasus Military District in theRussian Ground Forces , in addition to border guards.The Cossacks have actively participated in some of the more abrupt political developments following the dissolution of the Soviet Union:
South Ossetia ,Crimea ,Kosovo ,Transnistria andAbkhazia . The latter conflict was in particular special for the Kuban Cossacks, initially a number of Cossacks fled from the decossakation repressions of the 1920s and assimilated with theAbkhaz people . Before theGeorgian-Abkhaz Conflict there was a strong movement of creating and Abkhaz-Kuban Host among the descendants. When the civil war broke out, 1500 Kuban Cossack volunteers from Russia came to aid the Abkhaz side. One of the notable groups was the 1stsotnia under the command of Ataman Nikolay Pusko which reportedly completely destroyed a Ukrainian mercenary group and then went on to be the first to enter Sukhumi in 1993. [cite web|url=http://www.newizv.ru/news/2004-02-11/4562/|title="Кубанские казаки берут Сухуми"11 February 2004 |accessdate=2007-04-25] Since then, a detachment of Kuban Cossacks continue to inhabit Abkhazia, and their presence continues to influence theGeorgian-Russian relations .Recently, the Kuban Cossack Host, after years of negotiations was able to have its Host regalias, including battle banners and many old documents, which originally were evacuated from Russia in 1920, and were preserved in
New Jersey afterWorld War I , be returned to Russia. One of the most prized documents was the original deed signed by Catherine the Great that confirmed the granting of the Kuban Lands to the Black Sea Cossack for "eternal use". These were delivered in April 2007. [Krestyanskiye Vedomsti: After 90 years, the Cossacks returned the Tsarina's order home, by Tatiana Kovaleva, 29.04.2007 [http://www.agronews.ru/newsshow.php?NId=35991&Page=%7BPage%7D] Retrieved 15.Oct.2007] A special museum exposition is being set up to have them displayed to the general public.Culture
Because of the unique migration pattern that the original
Zaporozhian Cossacks undertook, the Kuban Cossack identity has produced one of the most distinct cultures not only amongst other Cossacks but throughout the whole Russian identity. The proximity to theCaucasus mountains and the Circassian people influenced the dress and uniform of the Cossacks — the distinctiveCherkesska overcoat and theBeshment scarf, local dance such as theLezginka too came into the Kuban Cossack lifestyle. At the same time, the Cossacks continued much of their Zaporozhian legacy, including a Kuban Bandura movement and theKuban Cossack Choir which became one of the most famous in the world for their performance of Cossack and other folk songs and dances, performed in both the Russian and Ukrainian languages. [ History of the Kuban Cossack Choir, from [http://www.kkx.ru/about/history/ official website] ]National Identity
Like in other border regions, the national identity of the Kuban Cossacks has changed with time. In the 1897 census, 47.3% of the Kuban population (including extensive 19th century non-Cossack migrants from both Ukraine and Russia) referred to their native language as Little Russian (the official term for the
Ukrainian language ) while 42.6% referred to their native language as Great Russian. [Demoscope.ru, 1897 census results for the [http://demoscope.ru/weekly/ssp/rus_lan_97.php Kuban Oblast] ] Most cultural production in Kuban from the 1890-1910 period, such as plays, stories, etc., were written in the Little Russian/Ukrainian language, and one of the first political parties in Kuban was the Ukrainian Revolutionary Party. Briefly during the Russian Civil War, the Kuban Cossack Rada declared Ukrainian to be the official language of the Kuban Cossacks, before its suppression by Russian White leader General Denikin. [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m3955/is_n8_v49/ai_20545809/pg_1] .After the Bolshevik Victory in the
Russian Civil War , Kuban was viewed as one of the most hostile regions to the young Communist state. In his 1923 speech devoted to the national and ethnic issues in the party and state affairs,Stalin identified several obstacles in implementing the national programme of the party. Those were the "dominant-nation chauvinism", "economic and cultural inequality" of the nationalities and the "survivals of nationalism among a number of nations which have borne the heavy yoke of national oppression". [ "National Factors in Party and State Affairs – Theses for the Twelfth Congress of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks), Approved by the Central Committee of the Party". [http://www.marx2mao.com/Stalin/NF23.html Retrieved] ] For the Kuban, this was met with a unique approach. The victim/minority became the non-Cossack peasants [Terry Martin, The Affirmative Action Empire: Nations and Nationalism in the Soviet Union, Cornell University Press, 2001, ISBN 0801486777 [http://books.google.com/books?id=rdlSX2hsb1kC&pg=PA285&dq=Kuban+Ukrainization&sig=ofCO8WNGkjcYyUbzNy5ucTwwKVU] ] who, like their counterparts inNew Russia , were mixed population group, with slight Ukrainian majority. To prevent "dominant-nation chauvinism" a systematic policy ofUkrainization was introduced. According to the 1926 census, there were already nearly a million Ukrainians registered in the Kuban Okrug alone (or 62% of the total population) [ Kuban Okrug from the 1926 census [http://demoscope.ru/weekly/ssp/rus_nac_26.php?reg=862 demoscope.ru] ]In addition to that, a total of 700 schools with Ukrainian teaching were opened, and the Kuban Pedagogical Institute had its own Ukrainian department. Numerous Ukrainian-language newspapers such as "Chornomorets" and "Kubanska Zoria" were published. Historian A.L. Pawliczko even claims there was an attempt to have a referendum on the joining of Kuban to the Ukrainian SSR. [ Ukraine and Ukrainians Throughout the World, edited by A.L. Pawliczko, University of Toronto Press, 1994. ISBN 0-8020-0595-0] Although no record of this taking place exists.
However, in the early 1930s, the Ukrainization programme was largely ended, and by the late 1930s the majority of Kuban Ukrainians chose to identify themselves as Russians [cite book|last=Kaiser|first=Robert|title=The Geography of Nationalism in Russia and the USSR|publisher=Princeton University Press, New Jersey|year=1994|isbn=0-691-03254-8] Thus by the 1939 census, Russians in the Kuban were a majority of 2754027 or 86% [ Krasnodar kray, 1939 census results, available at [http://demoscope.ru/weekly/ssp/rus_nac_39.php?reg=3 demoscope.ru] ] The 2nd edition of the
Great Soviet Encyclopedia explicitly named the Kuban Cossacks as Russians.The modern Kuban dialect (
balachka ), like other Russian and Ukrainian dialects [http://www.101languages.net/ukrainian/dialects.html] , is substantially different from the contemporary literary Russian and Ukrainian languages [ Literaturnaya Rossiya, Flag of Kuban, Vol. 27 06.07.2001 by N. Litvinov [http://www.litrossia.ru/archive/47/reading_room/1095.php Retrieved15 October 2007] .] Some regions have extensive influence of Northern Caucasus words and accents. Russian grammar is used throughout.Like many other Cossacks, some refuse to accept themselves as part of the standard ethnic Russian people, and claim to be a separate subgroup on par with sub-ethnicities such as the
Pomors . In the 2002 Russian census [cite web|url=http://195.133.159.86/ct/html/TOM_04_03_3.htm|title=Russian census 2002|accessdate=2007-04-22] the Cossacks were allowed to a have distinct nationality as a separate Russian sub-ethnical group. The Kuban Cossacks living inKrasnodar Kray ,Adygea ,Karachayevo-Cherkessia and some regions ofStavropol Krai andKabardino-Balkaria counted 25,000 men. However, the strict governance of the census meant that only Cossacks who are in active service were treated as such, and at the same time 300,000 families [ИА REGNUM for Rustrana.ru,21 October 2005 [http://www.rustrana.ru/article.php?nid=13911&sq=19,27&crypt= Retrieved on23 April 2007] ] are registered by the Kuban Cossack Host. Some Kuban Cossacks not politically affiliated with the Kuban Cossack Host, such as the director of theKuban Cossack Choir Viktor Zakharchenko, have maintained at various times a pro-Ukrainian orientation. [The politics of identity in a Russian borderland province: the Kuban neo-Cossack movement, 1989-1996, by Georgi M. Derluguian and Serge Cipko; Europe-Asia Studies; December 1997 [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m3955/is_n8_v49/ai_20545809/pg_1 URL] ] Although the latter person, has since changed his position and wishes a unification of Ukraine and Russia. [ Official website of the Kuban Cossack Chorus, [http://www.kkx.ru/about/ Retrieved15 October 2007] ]ee also
*
Cossacks
**Zaporozhian Cossacks
**Black Sea Cossacks
**Danubian Sich
**Azov Cossack Host
**Caucasus Line Cossack Host
*Kuban Cossack Culture
**Balachka
**Kuban Cossack Choir
**Kuban bandurists
*Felix Sumarokov-Elston Notes and citations
External links
* [http://admkrai.kuban.ru/kazachestvo/ Official section about Cossackdom on the Krasnodar Kray administration] ru icon
* [http://kubankazak.ru/ Unofficial website] ru icon
* [http://www.travel-images.com/russia18.html Images from Krasnodar Kray, Russia.]
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