Moldovans in Russia

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The Moldovan minority in Russia consists of two major parts: Russian citizens and labor migrants (gastarbeiters).

According to the 2002 Russian Census there were 172,196 Moldovans[1] among the legal residents of Russia.[nb 1]

According to the 2010 Russian Census there were 156,400 Moldovans.[2][3]

The head of the diapora is Alexandr Kalinin the leader of the Party of Regions of Moldova.[4] In Russia, he heads the Congress of Moldovan Diasporas (Конгресс Молдавских Диаспор) established in 2009.

According to the 2014 estimate of the Russian Federal Migration Service, there were over 550,000 nationals of Moldova in Russia, with estimated 228,000 illegal residents. In 2013, about 33,500 work permits were issued to Moldovan citizens.[4]

At the end of 2018 Presidents of Russia and Moldova declared a migration law amnesty for Moldovan citizens who would return to Moldova between January 1 and 23, 2019. Alexandr Kalinin commented that this move looked like an attempt to boost the election performance of the then Moldovan President Igor Dodon.[5]

Notable Moldavians and Moldovans in Russia[]

Historical[]

  • Nikolai Spathari (1636-1708) Russian diplomat from Moldavia
  • Dimitrie Cantemir (1673 - 1723), Moldavian and Russian politician and scientist
  • Antiochus Kantemir (1708-1744), son of Dimitrie, Russia's ambassador to Great Britain and France
  • Maria Cantemir (1700-1754), daughter of Dimitire, Princess of Moldavia, a lady in waiting and salonist, and a mistress of Peter the Great, the Emperor of Russia
  • Russian noble family line of Muravyov-Apostols originated as a result of grafting of the ending line of the  [ru] of Moldavian origin to the  [ru] [6]
  •  [ru] (1737-1814), Russian hisrorian and publisher
  • Russian Noble Prize winner Élie Metchnikoff was a descendant of a Moldavian nobleman (a grandson of Nikolai Spathari) who came to Russia with exiled Dimitrie Kantemir[7]
  • Nikolay Gredeskul (1865-1941), Russian liberal politician
  • Nikolay Florea (1912-1941), Soviet anstronomer

Modern era[]

  • Ion Druță (born 1928), writer, holds Russian and Moldovan citizenship
  • Emil Loteanu (1936-2003), film director; holds Russian, Moldovan and Romanian citizenships
  • Eugen Doga (born 1937), composer; holds Russian and Moldovan citizenships
  • Andrey Gaydulyan (born 1984), actor; holds Russian and Moldovan citizenships

See also[]

  • Romanians in Russia

Notes[]

  1. ^ The Russian Census (2002) included legal residents: citizens, legal permanent residents, legal immigration status seekers, and authorized workers and students, as well as some categories of non-residents.

References[]

  1. ^ Perepis.ru (in Russian)
  2. ^ 2010 Russian census summary tables
  3. ^ [1]
  4. ^ a b "A $10,000 fine for illegal immigrants in Russia", January 9, 2014, moldova.org
  5. ^ Конгресс молдавских диаспор раскритиковал амнистию Додона. Смогут ли молдавские мигранты вернуться в Россию?
  6. ^ Wikisource-logo.svg "Апостолы, род" . Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary (in Russian). 1906.
  7. ^ Olga Metchnikoff, Vie d'Elie Metchnikoff, Hachette, Paris, 1920
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