Sarepta

Alternate Names
Sarepta,
Krasnoarmeisk,
Alt Sarepta,
Staraya Sarepta,
Сарепта
Gallery
Church

The original church structure built in Sarepta was for the Moravian Brethren, and most of the early settlers living in Sarepta were part of this congregation.  After Sarepta lost its status as an official Moravian congregation, it became a Lutheran community.

The original church, built in 1780, has been restored and is in use today.

Type of Settlement
History

Sarepta was founded by the Herrnhutt Brethren (the Moravians) from Saxony in Germany. Dietz (pp. 407-414) outlines the special agreements that were negotiated with the Russian government to gain permission for the establishment of the colony. In August 1765, the first group of Moravian colonists arrived in Saratov. From there, they launched their search for an appropriate settlement location. They chose a location 28 versts south of Tsaritsyn where the Sarpa River flows into the Volga. On 23 August 1765, the Moravian brethren began laying out their new settlement. [Koch and Beratz report that Sarepta was founded on 3 September 1765, according to the Gregorian calendar.] In 1769 there were fewer than 60 colonists in Sarepta. An additional 30 colonists arrived that year, followed by another 30 colonists in 1771.

Having been warned by the commandant in Tsaritsyn to evacuate, the colonists in Sarepta escaped the Pugachev attacks in August 1774. Those fleeing the mauraders arrived by both boat and land in Astrakhan on 27 August 1774 where they stayed until the rebels had left Sarepta. The colony was virtually destroyed; the candle factory, hotel, and church had been plundered.

About a century after its founding, the established German Lutheran Church in Russia, with the support of the Russian government, began efforts to take Sarepta under its wing. Many of the Brethren objected to this and left the colony.

In both 1801 and 1803, there were fires that destroyed portions of the colony.

In 1812, the Russian Bible Society established a branch in Sarepta and in 1814 received permission to translate the Bible into the Kalmyk language.

The colonists in Sarepta were responsible for beginning the manufacture of a choice gingham material called sarpinka. Many other Volga German colonies took up the manufacture of sarpinka, and by the end of the nineteenth century, there were hundreds of small factory operations producing this cloth and employing thousands of colonists.

In 1920, Sarepta was renamed to Krasnoarmeisk, and in 1931 was incorporated into the city administration of Volgograd (then Stalingrad).  The area did not suffer much damage during the 1942-43 seige of Stalingrad by the Nazis because it was located away from the center of the city, and consequently many historical buildings remain. There has been an open-air museum in the neighborhood since 1990. It tells the history of Sarepta and the people who lived there.

VOLGA GERMAN FAMILIES

Karl Becker's research reveals that the following families went to Sarepta between 1785 and 1822:

Borell from Balzer
Cattaneo from Norka
Filbert from Beideck
Filbert from Schilling
Holmgrün from Kutter
Huck from Kutter
Keil from Dietel
Knobloch from Dietel
Kölln from Holstein
Liebich from Stahl am Tarlyk
Niedenthal from Kutter
Pauly from Norka
Pfeifer from Hussenbach
Rau from Grimm
Reifschneider from Kutter
Tornau from Bettinger
von Moos from Katharinenstadt
Wuckert from Balzer
Wunderlich from Grimm

Resources

Pleve, I. R., & Internationaler Verband der Deutschen Kultur. (1995). Sarepta. Saratov: Izd-vo Saratovskogo universiteta.

Diedrich, H.-C., Tabakow, Michail Iwanowitsch, & Wissenschaftliche Konferenz "Historische Beziehungen zwischen den Kalmücken an der Unteren Wolga und der Gemeinde Sarepta vom 18. bis zum 20. Jahrhundert im Bereich Geschichte, Wissenschaft, Religion und Kultur" (2001). Dokumentation der Vorträge und Referate : Wissenschaftliche Konferenz "Historische Beziehungen zwischen den Kalmücken an der Unteren Wolga und der Gemeinde Sarepta vom 18. bis zum 20. Jahrhundert im Bereich Geschichte, Wissenschaft, Religion und Kultur" vom 6. bis zum 13. April 2000 in Wolgograd-Alt Sarepta. Wolgograd .

Kuryshev, A. (2013). Sarepta Erfolg-Geschichte die Geschichte der hernhuter Kolonie Sarepta von Ihrer Gründung an bis zur Umwandlung in eine Zentrum der Region Saratow. Volgograd: Izdatel

Surnames with Confirmed Pre-Volga Origins