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The '''Rusluie''' were a community of Dutch origin living in St. Petersburg, Russia. They originally came from the city of [[Vriezenveen]].<ref>{{nl icon}} Wijngaarden, van - Xiounina, J., ''From assimilation to segregation: The Dutch Colony in Saint-Petersburg, 1856-1917 (Van assimilatie tot segregatie: De Nederlandse kolonie in Sint-Petersburg, 1856-1917)'' (Groningen 2007). ISBN 978-90-77089-06-4. See also: http://irs.ub.rug.nl/ppn/303294035</ref>
The '''Rusluie''' were a community of Dutch origin living in St. Petersburg, Russia. They originally came from the city of [[Vriezenveen]].<ref>{{nl icon}} Jelena S. Van Wijngaarden-Xiounina, ''From assimilation to segregation: The Dutch Colony in Saint-Petersburg, 1856-1917 ([http://irs.ub.rug.nl/ppn/303294035 Van assimilatie tot segregatie: De Nederlandse kolonie in Sint-Petersburg, 1856-1917 (Groningen 2007)]''. ISBN 978-90-77089-06-4</ref>


One of the most famous members of the community was [[Vasily Berkov]], a shipbuilder and translator of European literature on shipbuilding into Russian.
One of the most famous members of the community was [[Vasily Berkov]], a shipbuilder and translator of European literature on shipbuilding into Russian.

Revision as of 05:59, 26 July 2013

The Rusluie were a community of Dutch origin living in St. Petersburg, Russia. They originally came from the city of Vriezenveen.[1]

One of the most famous members of the community was Vasily Berkov, a shipbuilder and translator of European literature on shipbuilding into Russian.

Notes

  1. ^ Template:Nl icon Jelena S. Van Wijngaarden-Xiounina, From assimilation to segregation: The Dutch Colony in Saint-Petersburg, 1856-1917 (Van assimilatie tot segregatie: De Nederlandse kolonie in Sint-Petersburg, 1856-1917 (Groningen 2007). ISBN 978-90-77089-06-4