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MOLOTSCHNA

  • Molotschna
  • Mennonite settlement in Ukraine

    Molotschna Colony or Molochna Colony was a Russian Mennonite settlement in what is now Zaporizhzhia Oblast in Ukraine. Today, the central village, known

    Molotschna

    Molotschna

  • Black Sea Germans
  • Ethnic group in Ukraine

    Catholics, Lutherans, and Mennonites were all known as farmers (see Molotschna for Mennonite settlements in the Melitopol area); the Empress Catherine

    Black Sea Germans

    Black Sea Germans

    Black_Sea_Germans

  • Plautdietsch
  • Dialect of Low German

    now Ukraine. These two dialects are split between Chortitza Colony and Molotschna. Today, many younger Russian Mennonites in Canada and the United States

    Plautdietsch

    Plautdietsch

  • Russian Mennonites
  • Ethnic group

    larger colony, Molotschna, was founded in 1804. Mennonites lived in the same region as Nogais—semi-nomadic pastoralists—in the Molotschna region of southern

    Russian Mennonites

    Russian Mennonites

    Russian_Mennonites

  • Mennonite Brethren Church
  • Christian evangelical denomination

    influenced by pietistic leaders transplanted those ideas to the large Molotschna colony. The pastor of a neighboring congregation, Eduard Wüst, reinforced

    Mennonite Brethren Church

    Mennonite_Brethren_Church

  • Werdersch
  • Low Prussian dialect

    Werder at that time is very similar to the dialect of Molotschna. The distinctive features of Molotschna-Plautdietsch as opposed to Chortitza-Plautdietsch

    Werdersch

    Werdersch

  • Molochna
  • River in Ukraine

    culture, once based in the southeastern region of Ukraine since 1804 as Molotschna colony which was part of the Russian Empire at that time. In antiquity

    Molochna

    Molochna

    Molochna

  • Disappearance of Clayton Kratz
  • disappearance from the village of Halbstadt in the German Mennonite settlement of Molotschna during the Russian Civil War. Kratz was sent by the then-newly established

    Disappearance of Clayton Kratz

    Disappearance_of_Clayton_Kratz

  • Women Talking (novel)
  • 2018 novel by Miriam Toews

    prison sentence. Women Talking takes place in a Mennonite Colony called Molotschna in the aftermath of similarly traumatic events. Eight men believed to

    Women Talking (novel)

    Women_Talking_(novel)

  • Ingrid Rimland
  • American novelist (1936–2017)

    November 14, 2017. Klassen, Abraham; Krahn, Cornelius (1956). "Halbstadt (Molotschna Mennonite settlement, Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)". Global Anabaptist

    Ingrid Rimland

    Ingrid_Rimland

  • Christian denomination
  • Identifiable Christian body with common characteristics

    contact with Mennonites was the period 1802–1841 when they lived in the Molotschna, where Johann Cornies (q.v.) rendered them considerable assistance. Leo

    Christian denomination

    Christian_denomination

  • Jakob Reimer
  • Concentration camp guard (1918–2005)

    restaurant manager. Born to Russian Mennonite parents in Friedensdorf, Molotschna, Russian Empire (now Khmelnytske [uk], Ukraine), Reimer studied to be

    Jakob Reimer

    Jakob_Reimer

  • Vistulan dialect
  • Dialect of Low Prussian

    west of the Vistula River had a front variant which is closer to the Molotschna-Plautdietsch form. s, z and comparable sounds were quite special near

    Vistulan dialect

    Vistulan_dialect

  • Kleine Gemeinde
  • Mennonite denomination

    Mennonites dissatisfied with the state of the existing church in the Molotschna colony settlement of then south Russia (present-day Ukraine). Their first

    Kleine Gemeinde

    Kleine_Gemeinde

  • Selbstschutz
  • Military unit

    Mennonite men were included in this program and members were drawn from the Molotschna and Chortitza Mennonite colonies with training and armaments provided

    Selbstschutz

    Selbstschutz

    Selbstschutz

  • List of people who disappeared mysteriously (1910–1970)
  • April. His ultimate fate is unknown. c. September 1920 Clayton Kratz 23 Molotschna, Ukraine The Mennonite relief worker from the U.S. state of Pennsylvania

    List of people who disappeared mysteriously (1910–1970)

    List_of_people_who_disappeared_mysteriously_(1910–1970)

  • Nehrungisch
  • Dialect of Low Prussian

    Grigorjewka, Petrowka, Wassiljewka and Jelenowka, mixed Chortzitza and Molotschna background), Zentral (with the village of Zentral) and Sadowaja (with

    Nehrungisch

    Nehrungisch

  • Hutterites
  • Communal ethnoreligious branch of Anabaptists

    petitioned to move to better lands. In 1842 they were allowed to relocate to Molotschna, a Mennonite colony, where they founded the village Hutterthal. When they

    Hutterites

    Hutterites

    Hutterites

  • Rosenort, Manitoba
  • Plautdietsch-speaking families of Mennonites of Dutch descent, who came from the Molotschna colony in the Russian Empire, whose descendants continue to have a significant

    Rosenort, Manitoba

    Rosenort,_Manitoba

  • Eichenfeld massacre
  • 1919 civilian attack by Ukrainian anarchists

    Poland to Ukraine, where they established the colonies of Chortitza and Molotschna, under the protection of the Russian Empire. In 1868, the Chortitza Colony

    Eichenfeld massacre

    Eichenfeld_massacre

  • Johann Cornies
  • German Mennonite settler in Russia (1789–1848)

    (1794-1850s), and Heinrich Cornies (1806-?). In 1804, his family moved to Molotschna, a Mennonite settlement in what is now Ukraine, but then was part of the

    Johann Cornies

    Johann_Cornies

  • Khanate of Khiva
  • 1511–1920 state in Central Asia

    The German-speaking Mennonites had come from the Volga region and the Molotschna colony under the leadership of Claas Epp Jr. The Mennonites played an

    Khanate of Khiva

    Khanate of Khiva

    Khanate_of_Khiva

  • Mennonite settlements of Altai
  • settlers who founded these villages on the Kulunda Steppes originated from Molotschna, Chortitza and their daughter colonies. The number of settlers was around

    Mennonite settlements of Altai

    Mennonite_settlements_of_Altai

  • Neu Samara
  • Plautdietsch language, culture and ancestry in 1891-92 who came from the Molotschna mother colony on the Sea of Azov in Russian Empire. Initially twelve villages

    Neu Samara

    Neu_Samara

  • Orikhiv
  • City in Zaporizhzhia Oblast, Ukraine

    Selbstschutz – eventually leading to the capitulation in Gnadenfeld, Molotschna (today Bohdanivka). Orikhiv attained city status in 1938. In 1972 it was

    Orikhiv

    Orikhiv

    Orikhiv

  • Warkentin House
  • Historic house in Kansas, United States

    remaining. Bernhard Warkentin was born in the village of Altonau of the Molotschna Mennonite settlement in Ukraine on June 18, 1847. In 1872, he arrived

    Warkentin House

    Warkentin House

    Warkentin_House

  • Mennonites in Belize
  • southern Russia between 1789 and the early 1800s, settling the Chortitza and Molotschna Mennonite colonies. During the years in Russia they became an ethnoreligious

    Mennonites in Belize

    Mennonites in Belize

    Mennonites_in_Belize

  • Chortitza Colony
  • Mennonite settlement in the Russian Empire

    they over-wintered in Chortitza Colony before moving on to form the Molotschna settlement. The money spent by the new group during their stay in turn

    Chortitza Colony

    Chortitza Colony

    Chortitza_Colony

  • Tsarev Brod
  • Village in Bulgaria

    Albanians and Armenians. The Germans had come from what are today Ukraine (Molotschna/Halbstadt, Stepove/Karlsruhe), Romania (Valilej, Ianova/Margitfalva, Voiteg/Wojteg)

    Tsarev Brod

    Tsarev Brod

    Tsarev_Brod

  • Petershahen
  • Village in Zaporizhzhia Oblast, Ukraine

    German Mennonites in 1805 under the name Petershagen within the region of Molotschna. In 1945, it was renamed to Kutuzivka. Its church, built in 1892, was

    Petershahen

    Petershahen

    Petershahen

  • Doukhobors
  • Ethnoreligious group of Russian origins

    contact with Mennonites was the period 1802–41 when they lived in the Molotschna, where Johann Cornies (q.v.) rendered them considerable assistance. Doukhobor

    Doukhobors

    Doukhobors

    Doukhobors

  • Mennonite Central Committee
  • North American charitable organization

    for draftees classified as conscientious objectors. The Mennonites of Molotschna sent a committee to North America in the summer of 1920 to alert American

    Mennonite Central Committee

    Mennonite_Central_Committee

  • Alexanderwohl Mennonite Church
  • Church migrated in 1820-21 under the leadership of Peter Wedel to the Molotschna Mennonite colony in South Russia. In Russia they would be granted exemption

    Alexanderwohl Mennonite Church

    Alexanderwohl Mennonite Church

    Alexanderwohl_Mennonite_Church

  • Klaas Reimer
  • immigration to south Russia, settling in the newly opened Mennonite colony, Molotschna, in the spring of 1805. Here, Reimer was frequently in conflict with the

    Klaas Reimer

    Klaas_Reimer

  • Steinbach, Manitoba
  • City in Manitoba, Canada

    They left the Borosenko colony (a newly-formed offshoot of the larger Molotschna (or Milk River) colony) in Ukraine and arrived in Canada late in the summer

    Steinbach, Manitoba

    Steinbach, Manitoba

    Steinbach,_Manitoba

  • Simeon Pravda
  • Ukrainian warlord

    and moved into the house of the Warkentin family, who had since fled to Molotschna, turning the village into their headquarters. Although their first weeks

    Simeon Pravda

    Simeon_Pravda

  • February 1924
  • Month of 1924

    Canada in 1954; in Halbstadt, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union (present-day Molotschna, Ukraine) (d. 2021) Died: Lionel Monckton, 62, English composer for stage

    February 1924

    February 1924

    February_1924

  • Evangelical Mennonite Conference
  • Canadian Anabaptist denomination

    traces its roots back to 1812, when the Kleine Gemeinde was founded in the Molotschna settlement of southern Russia (now Ukraine) by a group of Plautdietsch-speaking

    Evangelical Mennonite Conference

    Evangelical_Mennonite_Conference

  • Templers (Radical Pietist sect)
  • Radical Pietistic sect of Christianity

    Templers also spread to the German Mennonites from the Russian settlement of Molotschna where Johann Lange, former student from Württemberg, formed the Tempelhof

    Templers (Radical Pietist sect)

    Templers (Radical Pietist sect)

    Templers_(Radical_Pietist_sect)

  • U.S. Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches
  • discipline, prayer and Bible study, met in the village of Elisabeththal, Molotschna and formed the Mennonite Brethren Church. Mennonite Brethren were among

    U.S. Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches

    U.S._Conference_of_Mennonite_Brethren_Churches

  • Protestantism in Russia
  • contact with Mennonites was the period 1802–41 when they lived in the Molotschna, where Johann Cornies (q.v.) rendered them considerable assistance. Curtis

    Protestantism in Russia

    Protestantism in Russia

    Protestantism_in_Russia

  • Katharina Schellenberg
  • American Mennonite medical missionary

    Russia, today village Mostove, Tokmak Raion in Ukraine; it was part of the Molotschna Mennonite colony. Her parents were Abraham and Katharina Lohrenz Schellenberg

    Katharina Schellenberg

    Katharina_Schellenberg

  • B. B. Janz
  • Mennonite church minister

    emigrating from the Soviet Union to Canada. Janz was born in Konteniusfeld, Molotschna, Russian Empire, in current-day Ukraine. He was baptized into the Mennonite

    B. B. Janz

    B._B._Janz

  • Anabaptist settlers
  • supposedly "empty lands" were inhabited by Tatars. Mennonites of the Molotschna colony arrived in 1803 and lived in close proximity to the Nogais, as

    Anabaptist settlers

    Anabaptist settlers

    Anabaptist_settlers

  • List of alternative names for European rivers
  • Молочна (Ukrainian), Molochnaya - Молочная (Russian), Molotchna (French), Molotschna (German), Tokmachka - Токмачка (Ukrainian; upper part) Mondego Mondego

    List of alternative names for European rivers

    List_of_alternative_names_for_European_rivers

  • Molochansk
  • City in Zaporizhzhia Oblast, Ukraine

    Molochansk Mädchenschule (Girls' School), presently the Mennonite Centre Molotschna Чисельність наявного населення України на 1 січня 2022 [Number of Present

    Molochansk

    Molochansk

    Molochansk

  • Prikumskoe
  • Russian village

    autumn of 1866, Johannes Dreher, Abram Dück and Friedrich Tietz from the Molotschna came to the Caucasus in search of a suitable place for settlement. In

    Prikumskoe

    Prikumskoe

  • Orbelyanovka
  • Place in Stavropol Krai, Russia

    autumn of 1866, Johannes Dreher, Abram Dück and Friedrich Tietz from the Molotschna came to the Caucasus in search of a suitable place for settlement. In

    Orbelyanovka

    Orbelyanovka

  • Threshing stone
  • Roman era, but eventually it became the method of threshing grain by the Molotschna Mennonite farmers in Ukraine from about 1840 to 1900. The threshing stone

    Threshing stone

    Threshing stone

    Threshing_stone

  • Blahodatne, Beryslav Raion, Kherson Oblast
  • Village in Kherson Oblast, Ukraine

    55. The village was founded in 1877. It was originally named after the Molotschna colony of Gnadenfeld. Many people came from the Mennonite congregations

    Blahodatne, Beryslav Raion, Kherson Oblast

    Blahodatne,_Beryslav_Raion,_Kherson_Oblast

  • Protestantism in Ukraine
  • Aspect of religious life in Ukraine

    Among the earliest settlements were Chortitza on the Dnieper River and Molotschna (now Molochansk), founded in 1803. In 1802, some Mennonite communities

    Protestantism in Ukraine

    Protestantism in Ukraine

    Protestantism_in_Ukraine

  • Ed Bickert
  • Canadian jazz guitarist (1932–2019)

    Mennonites. His parents were Harry Bickert, a Russian Mennonite immigrant from Molotschna colony, and Helen Dyck of Plum Coulee, Manitoba. Bickert's parents were

    Ed Bickert

    Ed Bickert

    Ed_Bickert

  • Gnadenau, Kansas
  • Ghost town in Marion County, Kansas

    of Mennonite Brethren Churches Threshing Stone and Winter Wheat Burdei Molotschna "Gnadenau, Kansas", Geographic Names Information System, United States

    Gnadenau, Kansas

    Gnadenau, Kansas

    Gnadenau,_Kansas

  • Am Trakt Colony
  • Place in Samara Governorate

    families left Prussia in the fall of 1853 and first spent some time in the Molotschna Colony until the delegates had located the land for the settlement. In

    Am Trakt Colony

    Am_Trakt_Colony

  • Canadian Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches
  • Anabaptist denomination

    Brethren Churches (CCMBC) "trace[s] [its] history to several villages in the Molotschna colony in Ukraine." The Canadian conference incorporated and adopted its

    Canadian Conference of Mennonite Brethren Churches

    Canadian_Conference_of_Mennonite_Brethren_Churches

  • Sängerfest
  • Germanic musical competitions

    On 30 May 1893, a sängerfest of seven choirs was held in Rückenau in Molotschna, Ukraine. On Sunday, 29 May 1894, the all-day Russische Saengervereinigung

    Sängerfest

    Sängerfest

    Sängerfest

  • 1804 in Russia
  • September - Siege of Erivan (1804) Imperial Kazan University established Molotschna founded; largest Russian Mennonite colony Moscow Armenian Cemetery founded

    1804 in Russia

    1804_in_Russia

  • William Neufeld
  • American javelin thrower

    field athlete who competed in the 1924 Summer Olympics. He was born in Molotschna and died in Riverside, California. In 1924 he finished fifth in the javelin

    William Neufeld

    William_Neufeld

  • Goessel, Kansas
  • City in Marion County, Kansas

    moved to North America. In 1874 a large number of Mennonites from the Molotschna Colony emigrated en masse to the United States aboard the ships Teutonia

    Goessel, Kansas

    Goessel, Kansas

    Goessel,_Kansas

  • Mountain Lake, Minnesota
  • City in Minnesota, United States

    good character.” The majority of these Mennonite families came from the Molotschna Colony, located near the present-day city of Melitopol, Ukraine. However

    Mountain Lake, Minnesota

    Mountain Lake, Minnesota

    Mountain_Lake,_Minnesota

  • Kleefeld, Manitoba
  • Local urban district in Manitoba, Canada

    likely influenced by his choice of the ancestral Reimer family village in Molotschna, Russia, also named Kleefeld. The community of Gruenfeld originally existed

    Kleefeld, Manitoba

    Kleefeld,_Manitoba

  • Forestry service (Russia)
  • Alternative to military service for Mennonites (1881–1918)

    of units. From German Forsteidienst Smith, p. 291. See Chortitza and Molotschna, the two largest colonies. Braun. Smith, p. 311. Braun, Abraham, Th. Block

    Forestry service (Russia)

    Forestry_service_(Russia)

  • Halbstadt
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    in German), a town in the Hradec Králové Region of the Czech Republic Molotschna (Halbstadt formerly in German), a Russian Mennonite settlement in Zaporizhia

    Halbstadt

    Halbstadt

  • William Seeger
  • American soldier and politician (1810 – 1888)

    in Minnesota from the Chortitza Colony in the Russian Empire and the Molotschna Colony in modern-day Ukraine who ended up settling in Mountain Lake, Minnesota

    William Seeger

    William Seeger

    William_Seeger

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Online names & meanings

  • Meshwa | மேஷ்வா 
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Meshwa | மேஷ்வா 

    A name of river

  • Aijaz | عیجاز
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Aijaz | عیجاز

    Favor

  • Rahela
  • Girl/Female

    Indian

    Rahela

    One who shows the way

  • Whittlesey
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Whittlesey

    English : habitational name from Whittlesey, a place in Cambridgeshire, named from an unattested Old English personal name (Wittel) + Old English ēg ‘island’.

  • Agar
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Agar

    English : from a Middle English personal name, either Egar (see Edgar) or Algar (see Alger).Jewish (Sephardic) : variant of Hagar.

  • Jov
  • Boy/Male

    Hebrew Russian

    Jov

    Supplanter.

  • Kalpajit
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Kalpajit

    The one who has won Kalpana i.e. imagination

  • YISHMERAY
  • Male

    Hebrew

    YISHMERAY

    (יִשְׁמְרַי) Hebrew name YISHMERAY means "whom Jehovah keeps." In the bible, this is the name of a Benjamite. The English form is Ishmerai.

  • Ahd
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic, Indian, Kannada, Muslim

    Ahd

    Knowledge; Smart; Science; Metal

  • Viralmani
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian, Marathi

    Viralmani

    Priceless Jewel

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