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The Russian Mennonites (German: Russlandmennoniten [lit. "Russia Mennonites", i.e., Mennonites of or from the Russian Empire], occasionally Ukrainian... |
Mennonites are a group of Anabaptist Christian communities tracing their roots to the epoch of the Reformation. The name Mennonites is derived from the... |
lived in community and fled to Prussia, Russia, North America, and Latin America. Groups like the Russian Mennonites developed a sense of ethnicity, which... |
Russian Mennonite zwieback, called Tweebak in Plautdietsch, is a yeast bread roll formed from two pieces of dough that are pulled apart when eaten. Placing... |
Zwieback (section Russian Mennonite Zwieback) army during the Thirty Years' War. The Mennonites brought Zwieback to the Russian Empire; before the Russian Revolution, when many emigrated to the west... |
least 30,000 Mexican Mennonites emigrated to Canada. The ancestors of the vast majority of Mexican Mennonites settled in the Russian Empire in the late... |
Old Order Mennonites (Pennsylvania German: Fuhremennischte) form a branch of the Mennonite tradition. Old Order are those Mennonite groups of Swiss German... |
culture, such as language, dress, and Mennonite food. The most prominent ethnic Mennonite groups are Russian Mennonites (German: Russland-Mennoniten), who... |
Plautdietsch (redirect from Mennonite Low German) occurred in Argentina in 1877 coming from Russia. Plautdietsch is spoken by about 400,000 Russian Mennonites, most notably in the Latin American countries... |
Plautdietsch-speaking Russian Mennonites in 1860. During the 1850s, some Mennonites were influenced by Radical Pietism, which found its way into the Mennonite colonies... |
The name Old Colony Mennonites (German: Altkolonier-Mennoniten) is used to describe that part of the Russian Mennonite movement that is descended from... |
Molotschna Mennonite colonies. During the years in Russia they became an ethnoreligious group. In the years after 1873, some 11,000 of them left the Russian Empire... |
German Paraguayans (section Russian Mennonites) to avoid Stalin's collectivization programs. Russian Mennonites are different from another German-Russian group, the Volga Germans, through religion, ethnicity... |
relief work in Ukraine. 1925–1930: inactive 1930–1937: colonization of Russian Mennonite and Bruderhof refugees in Paraguay and Brazil. 1939–present: relief... |
Pierogi (category Mennonite cuisine) northern Prussia, the Russian Empire, and the Americas, the Russian Mennonites developed a unique ethnicity and cuisine. In Russian Mennonite cuisine the pierogi... |
The Church of God in Christ, Mennonite, also called Holdeman Mennonite, is a Christian Church of Anabaptist heritage. Its formation started in 1859 under... |
Ethnic Mennonites contribute heavily to the agricultural and dairy output of Paraguay. In the 1780s, Catherine the Great of Russia invited Mennonites from... |
The Mennonites in Bolivia are among the most traditional and conservative of all Mennonite denominations in Spaniard America. They are mostly Russian Mennonites... |
Dawn Mills, Ontario (category Russian Mennonite diaspora in Canada) Dawn Mills is a small, unincorporated community in southwestern Ontario, Canada, part of the municipality of Chatham-Kent. It is in the north-central portion... |
Molotschna (category 1804 establishments in the Russian Empire) Molotschna Colony or Molochna Colony was a Russian Mennonite settlement in what is now Zaporizhzhia Oblast in Ukraine. Today, the central village, known... |