| For centuries the lands lying along the northern shores 
      of the Black Sea were settled by alternating layers of Greeks, Persians, 
      Romans, Goths, Huns, Mongols, Turks, and Tatars. Finally, under the 
      treaties of Kuchuk_Kainarji (1774) and Jassy (1792) Empress Catharine II 
      expelled the Ottoman Turks and annexed the Crimea, bringing an end to the 
      Tatar Khanate. This new Russian territory along the Black Sea from the 
      Dneister River in the west to beyond the Crimea in the east became the new 
      imperial province named Novorossia (New Russia). This vast new colonial 
      territory presented opportunities which some Europeans likened to the 
      American frontier. In the late 18th century Catharine II had issued a 
      manifesto inviting prosperous German farmers to settle along the Volga 
      River, not only to develop and improve agriculture in the area but also to 
      provide a buffer zone against invading Asiatic tribes. The success of this 
      venture encouraged the adoption of similar policies in Novorossia where 
      agricultural colonization was encouraged at the beginning of the 19th 
      century. Immigrant settlers from Germany, Greece, Switzerland and France, 
      were invited to join Armenians, Tatars, Polish exiles, Cossacks and 
      Russian peasants in colonizing the province. The city of Odessa was 
      founded in 1794 and became the seat of government for the Due de 
      Richelieu, the Governor General of Novorossia. And as the German colonies 
      were gathering strength in Bessarabia and southern Russia, Czar Alexander 
      I enacted a plan which would answer another problem: by the resettlement 
      of the Jewish population from the Pale of Settlement, the economic and 
      political conditions of Jews would be improved. Jews had lived in the 
      Black Sea areas for centuries; the most famous sect, the Karaim, arrived 
      in the Crimea in the 12th century. The Enactment of December 9, 1804, 
      defined five classes of Jews: petit bourgeoisie, artisans, tradesmen, 
      manufacturers, and agriculturalists. To encourage agricultural 
      colonization in Novorossia, they were allowed to buy or rent lands for 
      cultivation in Kherson and Yelizavetgrad. The Jewish colonists were to be 
      exempt from taxes for 10 years, after which they would be taxed the same 
      as other groups. eliminating the standard double_tax for Jews in other 
      parts of the Empire The government would aid those who could not afford lo 
      bu\ orrent land by allotting them government land. In 1806 the first 
      colonists from Vitebsk and Mogilev established the first agricultural 
      colonies in Kherson. A more detailed account of the Jewish agricultural 
      colonies can be found in The Jewish Encyclopedia, edited by Isidore 
      Singer. Volume I, pp. 252_256.There were three periods during which Jewish 
      agricultural colonization was officially encouraged, then discontinued, 
      with the final era being the one which promoted the settlement of Siberia. 
      The following list, compiled by Vlad Soshnikov in the regional archive of 
      Dnepropetrovsk, is a partial sampling of the records available concerning 
      this program.   |