The sedentary Gypsies in Polish Kingdom in XIX century. Statistical description Cover Image

Cyganie osiadli w Królestwie Polskim. Próba opisu statystycznego
The sedentary Gypsies in Polish Kingdom in XIX century. Statistical description

Author(s): Alicja Gontarek
Subject(s): History, Sociology
Published by: Muzeum Okręgowe w Tarnowie
Keywords: Roma and Sinti; history; Gypsy; Poland; Polish Kingdom; sedentary Roma; sedentary Gypsies

Summary/Abstract: The article deals with the issue Romani people settled in the Kingdom of Polandbased on the first census that was conducted in the Russian empire in 1897. Its analysis allowed to determine the number of settled Romani groups (1061 people),which represented the rural settlement. As far as the population was concerned, the largest settlements were created in the two adjacent governorates – Lublin Governorate and Warsaw Governorate. This group, barely reaching one thousand people, was mostly concentrated on the East bank of the Vistula River. This river, as it turn out, a demarcation line for the Romani colonists, with some exceptions. The further to the West, the numbers of the settlers were lower, and the other way around – the further to the East, the higher the number of the settled Romani people. It is difficult to define occupational, social and religious structure due to lack of relevant data and primarily its fragmentation.The article deals with the issue Romani people settled in the Kingdom of Poland based on the first census that was conducted in the Russian empire in 1897. Its analysis allowed to determine the number of settled Romani groups (1061 people),which represented the rural settlement. As far as the population was concerned, the largest settlements were created in the two adjacent governorates – Lublin Governorate and Warsaw Governorate. This group, barely reaching one thousand people, was mostly concentrated on the East bank of the Vistula River. This river, as it turn out, a demarcation line for the Romani colonists, with some exceptions. The further to the West, the numbers of the settlers were lower, and the other way around – the further to the East, the higher the number of the settled Romani people. It is difficult to define occupational, social and religious structure due to lack of relevant data and primarily its fragmentation.

  • Issue Year: 9/2016
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 211-236
  • Page Count: 26
  • Language: English, Polish, Romany
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