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Mixed Marriages in Late Nineteenth to Early Twentieth Century: Comparing Russia and Norway
Author(s) -
Glavatskaya Elena,
Thorvaldsen Gunnar,
Borovik Iulia,
Zabolotnykh Elizaveta
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of family history
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.169
H-Index - 22
eISSN - 1552-5473
pISSN - 0363-1990
DOI - 10.1177/0363199020945215
Subject(s) - census , ethnic group , protestantism , microdata (statistics) , population , refugee , state (computer science) , nationality , sociology , immigration , political science , ethnology , law , demography , algorithm , computer science
This article compares interethnic and interreligious marriages in Russia and Norway during the decades around 1900. State churches dominated religious life in both countries with over 90 percent of the population but both were losing influence during the period we focus on—rapidly in Russia after the 1917 Revolution. The part on Norway employs nominative and aggregate census material which from 1865 asked questions about religious affiliation, while the Russian case study utilizes the database of church microdata being built for Ekaterinburg—a railway hub and an industrial city in the Middle Urals, in Asia—in addition to census aggregates. Our main conclusion is that religion was a stronger regulator of intermarriage than ethnicity. Religious intermarriage was unusual in Ekaterinburg, even if official regulations were softened by the State over time—the exception is during World War I, when there was a deficit of young, Russian men at home and influx of refugees and Austro-Hungarian Prisoners of War (mostly Catholics and Lutherans). The situation was also affected by the 1917 Revolution creating equal rights for all religious denominations. The relatively few religious intermarriages in Norway were mostly between members of different Protestant congregations—nonmembers being the only group who often outmarried. We conclude that representatives of ethnic minorities and new religions seldom outmarry when religion was important for maintaining their identity.

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