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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Koryo-saramKoryo-saram - Wikipedia

    Following the end of the Russo-Japanese War in 1907, Russia enacted an anti-Korean law at the behest of Japan, under which the land of Korean farmers was confiscated and Korean labourers were laid off. However, Korean migration to Russia continued to grow; 1914 figures showed 64,309 Koreans (among whom 20,109 were Russian citizens).

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  3. The deportation of Koreans in the Soviet Union (Russian: Депортация корейцев в СССР; Korean: 고려인의 강제 이주) was the forced transfer of nearly 172,000 Soviet Koreans (Koryo-saram) from the Russian Far East to unpopulated areas of the Kazakh SSR and the Uzbek SSR in 1937 by the NKVD on the orders of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and Chairman of the Council of ...

    • Several estimates, 1) 16,500, 2) 28,200, 3) 40,000, 4) 50,000, (10%–25% mortality rate)
    • NKVD
  4. Jul 13, 2015 · The almost complete and irreversible demise of the Korean language in the Korean community in the USSR is an interesting tale. When Koreans arrived in the Russian Far East between 1860 and 1920 ...

  5. In the late 1940s, roughly 9,000 North Korean migrant workers were recruited by the Soviet government to work in state-owned fisheries on Sakhalin. [8] Between 1946 and 1949, one researcher estimated that 50,000 North Koreans went to the Kamchatka Peninsula. Several thousand Kamchatka Koreans refused repatriation orders, which created a ...

  6. Apr 24, 2017 · The Russian authorities in 19th century Vladivostok had a positive impression of Korean migrants. Governors of the Russian Far East regarded Koreans, who started migrating to Russia from the 1860s ...

  7. Oct 10, 2023 · In the early 1860s, fewer than 100 Koreans – mostly farmers from the northeastern province of Hamkyung, which is now part of North Korea – made their way to Russia in search of land and better ...

  8. Koryo-saram. Koryo-saram ( Russian: Корё сарам; Koryo-mar: 고려사람), the name ethnic Koreans in the Post-Soviet states use to refer to themselves. Approximately 500,000 ethnic Koreans reside in the former USSR, primarily in the newly independent states of Central Asia. Large Korean communities in southern Russia (around Volgograd ...

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