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Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for Fugitive peasants 11 found (16 total)
alternate case: fugitive peasants
Prokopy Yelizarov
(338 words)
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Yelizarov searched the Stroganovs' and monasteries' estates for fugitive peasants , and settled them at the Kungurka River, "so that they would live
Bulavin Rebellion
(1,163 words)
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bounty hunters under Yuri Dolgorukov to scout the Cossack regions for fugitive peasants . Despite the fact that the Cossacks harbored some resentment towards
Belarusian resistance movement
(1,616 words)
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Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth under the pretext of the returning of fugitive peasants . By mid-18th century their presence in the lands of modern Belarus
Khartsyzk
(516 words)
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was the name used by Turks and Tatars in the sixteenth century for fugitive peasants and Zaporizhzhia Cossacks who settled near the southern borders of
Ivan Bolotnikov
(828 words)
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Putivl garrison, and according to Avrich, augmented that force with "fugitive peasants , impoverished townsmen, Cossacks, slaves, brigands, and drifters of
Berdsk
(1,148 words)
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continued into the 18th century. The Siberian colonists included fugitive peasants escaping Peter the Great's oppression, Old Believers, and hunters
U ilysh
(221 words)
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Марийское книжное изд-во, 1971. p. 161, 206 Seppo Lallukka (2003). From Fugitive Peasants to Diaspora: The Eastern Mari in Tsarist and Federal Russia. Academia
Chistopolsky District
(3,021 words)
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"Chistoe Pole" comes from the fact that the settlement was founded by fugitive peasants , but soon it was burned down. The revived village was named after
History of Belarus
(7,641 words)
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armies raided the Commonwealth under the pretext of the returning of fugitive peasants . By the mid-18th century their presence in the lands of modern Belarus
Cossacks
(19,632 words)
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diverted necessary food and military shipments to the Cossacks as fugitive peasants swelled the population of the Cossack host. The influx of refugees
History of Siberia
(9,245 words)
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Siberia were hunters, and those who had escaped from Central Russia: fugitive peasants in search for life free of serfdom, fugitive convicts, and Old Believers