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Total population | |
---|---|
141,122 (census 2021)[1] 144,000 (estimate 2024)[2] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Vilnius,Visaginas,Klaipėda | |
Languages | |
Russian,Lithuanian | |
Religion | |
Eastern Orthodox Church (51.5%),Catholic Church (11.9%),Old Believers (11.8%).[3] | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Belarusians,Ukrainians |
Russians in Lithuania (Russian:Русские в Литве,romanized: Russkiye v Litve,Lithuanian:Lietuvos rusai) number about 144,000 people, according to the Lithuanian estimates of 2024, or 5.0% of the total population ofLithuania.[4]
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First early settlements ofRuthenians inLithuania proper date back to late medieval ages when the first proto-Russian merchants and craftsmen began to permanently reside in several Lithuanian towns.[citation needed] In the late 17th century they were joined by many RussianOld Believers who settled in eastern Lithuania, escaping religious persecution inRussia.[citation needed]
The second, larger, influx of Russians followed the annexation of Lithuania by theRussian Empire during thePartitions of Poland in the late 18th century. Under Russian rule, power in the region remained primarily in the hands of theLithuanian nobility, but some administrative jobs were gradually taken over by Russians, who also settled in cities such asVilnius andKaunas. Also after theuprising of 1863 in Poland some estates had been confiscated from the local nobility and given to Russian officials. Many of the Russians who migrated to Lithuania were soldiers, sailors, and merchants.
Most[citation needed] of the present-day Russians in Lithuania are migrants from the Soviet era and their descendants. Following the terms of the 1939Molotov–Ribbentrop pact, theSoviet Union occupied and annexed Lithuania,Latvia, andEstonia in 1940. After Germany attacked the Soviet Union in 1941, the three countries quickly fell under German control. Many Russians, especially Communist party members who had arrived in the area with the initial annexation, retreated to Russia; those who fell into German hands were treated harshly, many were murdered.
As the war drew to a close, the Soviet Union resumed its occupation of the Baltic states in 1944–1945. Western democracies did not recognize theSoviet occupation.
Immediately after the war,Joseph Stalin carried out a majorresettlement campaign in the three Baltic Soviet republics. The Russians, along with a smaller number of other Soviet ethnic groups, who migrated to the Baltic were mostly factory workers who settled in major urban areas, as well as military personnel stationed in the region in significant numbers due to the border location of the Baltic States within the Soviet Union. Many[specify] military retirees chose to stay in the region, which featured higher living standards compared to most of Russia.
After Stalin's death in 1953, the government of theLithuanian SSR, led by the "communist nationalist"Antanas Sniečkus, objected to the resettlement policies and managed to slow down the influx of Russians by letting Lithuanians fill some of the higher party positions.[citation needed] The flow of immigrants did not stop entirely, and there were further waves of Russian workers who came to work on major construction projects, such as power plants.
At the last Soviet census in 1989, 9.4 percent of Lithuania's population were ethnic Russians, with a few more percent comprising other Soviet nationalities.[5]
Russians who reside in Lithuania live mainly in urban areas. In Vilnius they make up 13% of the population, and 28% inKlaipėda. Kaunas has just 4.4% ethnic Russians. The town ofVisaginas was built for workers at theIgnalina Nuclear Power Plant and therefore has an ethnic Russian majority (56%).
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As of 2011 according to census[6]
Top 10 municipalities with Russian diaspora:
Top 10 cities with Russian diaspora:
Top 10 cities by number of Russians:
Famous modern Lithuanian Russians include:
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