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The Ingrians ( Finnish: inkeriläiset, inkerinsuomalaiset; Russian: Ингерманландцы, romanized : Ingermanlandtsy ), sometimes called Ingrian Finns, are the Finnish population of Ingria (now the central part of Leningrad Oblast in Russia), descending from Lutheran Finnish immigrants introduced into the area in the 17th century, when ...
- Category:People of Ingrian Finnish Descent
Language links are at the top of the page across from the...
- Izhorian
Ingrian and Votic villages at the beginning of the 21st...
- Category:People of Ingrian Finnish Descent
The genocide of the Ingrian Finns (Finnish: Inkeriläisten kansanmurha) was a series of events triggered by the Russian Revolution in the 20th century, in which the Soviet Union deported, imprisoned and killed Ingrians and destroyed their culture.
- 1920s–1930s
- Ingrian Finns
A hot dog [1] [2] is a dish consisting of a grilled, steamed, or boiled sausage served in the slit of a partially sliced bun. [3] . The term hot dog can refer to the sausage itself. The sausage used is a wiener ( Vienna sausage) or a frankfurter ( Frankfurter Würstchen, also just called frank ).
- Frankfurter, frank, wiener, weenie, tube steak, sausage, banger, coney
- Hot
- Sausage made from pork, beef, chicken, turkey or combinations thereof and a bun
- Multiple
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Ingrians were persecuted in the Soviet Union, especially from the 1920s to the 1950s. Mass depor- tations, executions and prison camps, as well as the prohibition of the Finnish language and the Lutheran religion emptied the villages of nearly 140,000 Ingrian Finns and destroyed their culture.
The Ingrians, sometimes called Ingrian Finns, are the Finnish population of Ingria, descending from Lutheran Finnish immigrants introduced into the area in the 17th century, when Finland and Ingria were both parts of the Swedish Empire. In the forced deportations before and after World War II, and during the genocide of Ingrian Finns, most of them were relocated to other parts of the Soviet ...
Jul 26, 2021 · In 1901, New York Journal cartoonist Tad Dorgan supposedly penned a drawing of a dachshund in a bun with the caption "hot dog!" (owing to his inability to spell the breed's name) after seeing it served at a New York Giants game. Scholars may not see much truth in the Dorgan origin story these days, but the myth may have played a role in ...
Sep 27, 2019 · What's in a Name? Sports cartoonist T. A. "Tad" Dorgan, who caricatured German figures as dachshunds in the early 1900s, generally earns credit for popularizing the term hot dog because he could not spell dachshund. His talking sausage cartoons denigrated the cheap wieners sold at Coney Island, crassly suggesting they contained dog meat.