The Pallasian canton ( German: Kanton Pallasowka ) is an administrative-territorial unit of the Volga Germans Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic that existed in 1922-1941. Administrative Center - p. Pallasovka .
| Canton | |
| Pallas canton | |
|---|---|
| him. Kanton pallasowka | |
| A country | |
| Included in | ASSR of the Volga Germans |
| Adm. Centre | Pallasovka (Ney-Galka) |
| History and Geography | |
| Date of formation | 1922-1941 |
| Square | 2.1 thousand km² |
| Population | |
| Population | 18437 [1] people ( 1939 ) |
| Nationalities | Germans, Ukrainians, Russians, Kazakhs, Tatars, etc. |
| official languages | Russian , German |
The Pallasov canton was formed on June 22, 1922 as part of the Volga Germans Labor Commune through transformation from the Torgun District .
In 1935, the Gmelinsky canton was separated from the Pallasov canton .
On September 7, 1941, as a result of the liquidation of the Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, the Pallasovsky Canton was transferred to the Stalingrad Region and transformed into the Pallasovsky District .
Content
Administrative division
As of April 1, 1940, the canton was divided into 7 village councils:
| Village councils as of 1940 [2] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| N p / p | Village Council | Administrative center | |
| one | Alt Weimar | Alt Weimar village | |
| 2 | Bursinsky | Bursa village | |
| 3 | Neim Weimar | Nei Weimar village | |
| four | Savinsky | Savinka village | |
| five | village farm number 13 | central farmstead number 13 | |
| 6 | Francreich | village Frankreich | |
| 7 | Strasbourg | village of Strasbourg | |
Population
Population Dynamics [3]
| 1922 | 1926 | 1931 | 1935 | 1939 | 1941 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 27811 | 30378 | 35873 | 14892 | 18437 | 18400 |
- National composition
| Nationality | 1926 [3] [4] | 1931 [3] | 1939 [5] | 1941 [3] |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Germans | 18776 (61.8%) [6] | 22046 (61.5%) | 9592 (52.0%) | 10,183 (55.3%) |
| Ukrainians | 8015 (26.4%) | - | 4047 (22.0%) | - |
| Russians | 2299 (7.6%) | - | 3197 (17.3%) | - |
| Kazakhs | - | - | 884 (4.8%) | - |
| Tatars | - | - | 436 (2.4%) | - |
| 1939 - showing nations with more than 300 people | ||||
Notes
- ↑ Demoscope Weekly - Application. Statistics Handbook
- ↑ GESCHICHTE DER WOLGADEUTSCHEN = Lexikon: Administrative-territorial transformations in the Nempovolzhye
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 http://wolgadeutsche.net/diesendorf/Ortslexikon.pdf
- ↑ GESCHICHTE DER WOLGADEUTSCHEN = Results of the 1926 All-Union Population Census for the Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. Pallas canton
- ↑ Demoscope Weekly - Application. Censuses of the Russian Empire, USSR, 15 new independent states
- ↑ According to the preliminary results of the 1926 census - 18669