A state of change : an historical archaeology of Doukhobor identity at Kirilovka village site (FcNs-1)

A migration of over seven thousand Russian immigrants belonging to the Christian sect known as the Doukhobors arrived in western Canada beginning in early 1899. Three colonies of at least 61 villages in total were established in the Districts of Saskatchewan and Assiniboia in the Northwest Territori...

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Main Author: Kozakavich, Stacy C.
Other Authors: Kennedy, Margaret, Linnamae, Urve, Meyer, David
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-09182009-132436
id ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/etd-09182009-132436
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spelling ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/etd-09182009-132436 2024-06-02T08:12:20+00:00 A state of change : an historical archaeology of Doukhobor identity at Kirilovka village site (FcNs-1) Kozakavich, Stacy C. Kennedy, Margaret Linnamae, Urve Meyer, David 1998 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-09182009-132436 en_US eng http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-09182009-132436 text Thesis 1998 ftusaskatchewan 2024-05-06T10:46:13Z A migration of over seven thousand Russian immigrants belonging to the Christian sect known as the Doukhobors arrived in western Canada beginning in early 1899. Three colonies of at least 61 villages in total were established in the Districts of Saskatchewan and Assiniboia in the Northwest Territories. Due to internal tensions in the sect and conflicts with the Department of the Interior, most of these villages were abandoned by 1920. Although the Doukhobors in Saskatchewan are an integral part of the province's agricultural and settlement history, no substantial archaeological investigation of village sites took place until the site of Kirilovka (FcNs-I) was excavated in August and September of 1996. Kirilovka village was located along the North Saskatchewan River, west of the community of Langham, and was occupied by 30-35 families at the peak of its population. An archaeological sample representing the locations of four households is investigated in this thesis. Historical characterizations of the Doukhobors in Saskatchewan tend to be uncertain as to whether the Doukhobors were an ethnic group and/or religious sect, and to the degree of internal cohesion and homogeneity at the community level. Combined archaeological and historical investigations here suggest that the Doukhobor identity in Saskatchewan cannot be defined simply in terms of Russian ethnicity, but involves a combination of philosophical, ethnic, economic, and geographical factors. Further, the Doukhobor identity is characterized by the constant change brought about through repeated mass migrations spanning two centuries. One of the material implication of this identity was a tendency to readily adopt certain new technologies and styles into Doukhobor activities. This thesis examines the possible social implication of such material acquisitions. Only further archaeological investigation of Saskatchewan Doukhobor village sites may contribute to or contradict the findings of this research. It is hoped, however, that this thesis provides a necessary ... Thesis Northwest Territories University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK Canada Northwest Territories
institution Open Polar
collection University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK
op_collection_id ftusaskatchewan
language English
description A migration of over seven thousand Russian immigrants belonging to the Christian sect known as the Doukhobors arrived in western Canada beginning in early 1899. Three colonies of at least 61 villages in total were established in the Districts of Saskatchewan and Assiniboia in the Northwest Territories. Due to internal tensions in the sect and conflicts with the Department of the Interior, most of these villages were abandoned by 1920. Although the Doukhobors in Saskatchewan are an integral part of the province's agricultural and settlement history, no substantial archaeological investigation of village sites took place until the site of Kirilovka (FcNs-I) was excavated in August and September of 1996. Kirilovka village was located along the North Saskatchewan River, west of the community of Langham, and was occupied by 30-35 families at the peak of its population. An archaeological sample representing the locations of four households is investigated in this thesis. Historical characterizations of the Doukhobors in Saskatchewan tend to be uncertain as to whether the Doukhobors were an ethnic group and/or religious sect, and to the degree of internal cohesion and homogeneity at the community level. Combined archaeological and historical investigations here suggest that the Doukhobor identity in Saskatchewan cannot be defined simply in terms of Russian ethnicity, but involves a combination of philosophical, ethnic, economic, and geographical factors. Further, the Doukhobor identity is characterized by the constant change brought about through repeated mass migrations spanning two centuries. One of the material implication of this identity was a tendency to readily adopt certain new technologies and styles into Doukhobor activities. This thesis examines the possible social implication of such material acquisitions. Only further archaeological investigation of Saskatchewan Doukhobor village sites may contribute to or contradict the findings of this research. It is hoped, however, that this thesis provides a necessary ...
author2 Kennedy, Margaret
Linnamae, Urve
Meyer, David
format Thesis
author Kozakavich, Stacy C.
spellingShingle Kozakavich, Stacy C.
A state of change : an historical archaeology of Doukhobor identity at Kirilovka village site (FcNs-1)
author_facet Kozakavich, Stacy C.
author_sort Kozakavich, Stacy C.
title A state of change : an historical archaeology of Doukhobor identity at Kirilovka village site (FcNs-1)
title_short A state of change : an historical archaeology of Doukhobor identity at Kirilovka village site (FcNs-1)
title_full A state of change : an historical archaeology of Doukhobor identity at Kirilovka village site (FcNs-1)
title_fullStr A state of change : an historical archaeology of Doukhobor identity at Kirilovka village site (FcNs-1)
title_full_unstemmed A state of change : an historical archaeology of Doukhobor identity at Kirilovka village site (FcNs-1)
title_sort state of change : an historical archaeology of doukhobor identity at kirilovka village site (fcns-1)
publishDate 1998
url http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-09182009-132436
geographic Canada
Northwest Territories
geographic_facet Canada
Northwest Territories
genre Northwest Territories
genre_facet Northwest Territories
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-09182009-132436
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