[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Censuses in Russian Poland?
Paul Rakow
rakow at ifh.de
Mon Mar 27 11:00:20 PST 2006
> Subject: [Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Censuses in Russian Poland?
The Russian census of 1897 was taken when punched cards were
cutting-edge technology, and the Russian census people went wild
cross tabulating all sorts of statistical data, (the number of
men/women in each province whose first language was not Russian and
who are employed in the textile industry, and similar stuff).
The Russian Central Statistical Committee produced 89 volumes
of analysis between 1899 and 1905, useful for historians or
sociologists, but not so useful for genealogy. It seems that most of
the returns were destroyed after they were analysed, but a few percent
survive in provincial archives. I haven't heard of anyone actually
finding an ancestor in this census (but I'd love to be proved wrong!)
Paul Rakow
rakow at ifh.de
Worth Anderson <worth_a at yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> None of the sources I've seen on research in Russian
> Poland reference censuses. However, Richard Pipes'
> book, "Russia under the Old Regime," cites data from
> an 1897 census. Has anyone used that, or know of
> other censuses covering Russian Poland?
>
> Worth S. Anderson
>
More information about the Ger-Poland-Volhynia
mailing list