User Tools

Site Tools


en:krasna:e-03-04-00

3.4 The perimeters of the colony of Krasna

Location and Size of the Area of Krasna

Formation of the land:

The area assigned to Krasna (Number 7) forms a slightly askance quadrangle. (See Map of the Parcels of the Colony, 1.2) Considering the given value of 6,948 Desjatines (roughly 7,590 hectares) and the given distances to the neighboring colonies, one can assume a length of 10-12 kilometers and a width of 6-7 kilometers.

The Kogälnik flowed through the Krasna region from north to south, just a bit off-center. Antschiokrak Creek, coming from Tarutino, flowed into the Kogälnik just north of the village. Both bodies of water formed individual ponds. The village itself was located pretty much in the center of the area.

After Katzbach separated in 1824/1825, the colony was bordered by the community fields of Katzbach, Ciuleni, Tarutino, Beresina, Klöstitz, Paris, and Alt-Elft. The borders were straight lines.

Image 32: Map of the Krasna region by Eduard Ruscheinsky, Heimatbuch, 20 years after the resettlement, page 26

The land area assigned to the colonists of Krasna in 1814 measured 8,012 Desjatines. After the removal of the property of the Evangelical settlers who went to Katzbach, 6,948 desjatines remained. 1)) See below

The area was originally laid out for 133 farms at 60 desjatines, each. After the 19 Evangelical families left, it left 114 and a statistic of 1825 reports 114 farms. 2)

Land of the colony of Krasna and use of it in 1827.
See 4.6 for Russian measures and conversions

Desjatines Faden
Usable Land 3):
Village 48 1580
Meadows 2244 1560
Vineyards 127
Fields and pasture 4267 2104
Totals of usable Land 6688 444
Unusable Land
Kogälnik and Antschiokrak
With ponds
68 1800
Roads 50 750
Ditches 17 1750
Totals for unusable Land 136 1900
Church property
Pastoral land4) 400
Home/garden of the priest 3
Meadows 120
Total church property 123 400
All in all 6948 344

Newer documents refer to 6,910.2 Desjatines

  • A document dated May 29, 1885 5) records how much land the former colony of Krasna had on July 1, 1871 (The date colonial land converted to private property.).

The settlement has 6,641.3 desjatines of cultivated land and 268.9 desjatines of uncultivated land for a total 6,910.2 desjatines.

  • A document about Krasna, dated January 27, 1913 6)) reports:

The ancestors of the current German colonists came from Germany to Russia in 1816, swore their citizenship oath and founded the village of Krasna, commemorative of an event from 1812 (Victory over Napoleon at Krasnoje). At the time of the settlement the community was presented with a total of 6,910 desjatines of land.

The land area did not change by 1940, as additional documents show:

  • Keller states in 1912 7) The community land of the colony of Krasna amounts to 6,910.2 desjatines and contains 114 farmsteads.
  • In 1940 the land area belonging to the community of Krasna (Krasna area) amounted to 7,532 hectares. 8) This equals almost exactly 6,910.2 desjatines (with a conversion factor of 1.09)

Usage of the community land

The region was used for farm, bastane, vineyard, forest, pasture, hayfields, cabbage fields, and fruit and vegetable gardens. The community of Krasna divided its land at foundation into three categories, as did all other colonies:

  1. Farmhouse
    Each farmer (host) received a building lot of roughly one desjatine within the village to use as a lot for his house, yard and garden as permanent property.
  2. Farmland and Meadows
    Each family was given equal shares of field and meadow for their own use.
  3. Community pasture
    A portion of the land was designated as a common livestock grazing area (the farmers had to set aside a portion of their land for this). These were located all around the village. Each farm had the right to graze a certain number of horses, cattle, young livestock and small farm animals. From about 1875 on more and more smaller and larger pieces were parcelled off the pastureland and converted to farmland.

Eduard Ruscheinsky 9) Currently (ca 1935-1040) the land is distributed as follows: Farm land 5,670.69 hectares, grazing pastures 1,363.44 hectares, paths and farmyards 357,980 hectares.

Division of the Land into Farm Field Parcels/Areas

The land area outside of the village (farming fields and haying sections, not the livestock pasture) was divided into farm field parcels/areas

Field areas were often named by either their location or shape, sometimes with a clue of distinctive landmarks or land formations, for instance the following names and descriptions point at Krasna: Tarwan Hole, Tarwan Mountain, Judetal (Jew Valley), Judeberg (Jew Mountain) Netjetal (Netje Valley), Stojan, Eichwald (oak forest) Heuschlag (haying fields) Kesselloch (Kettle Hole), Antschiokrak Valley, Mittelberg (Middle Mountain), etc. It is not documented if these were all Krasna fields and if there were any others.

Field parcels/areas were usually long and narrow, for instance up to several kilometers in length. Within those, a farmer received a “ticket or lot” (called this because earlier these areas were raffled off). Sometimes there were several of them but not next to each other. The land area of the individual farmer was located all over the region of the village in strips of 1-2 desjatines per field. It was possible for the land of a settler to be located in 12-15 places. Although the colonists thus received a fair share of the land of the areas, varying from excellent production to mediocre yield, they accepted this arrangement, even though it meant long travel times and a lot of loss in productive time. The distance to the farthest parcel could be 8-10 kilometers. 10)

Formation of the land

The land area was undulating and had several side valleys. According to an old Austrian military chart of about 1910, the western mountain was 147 meters high, the eastern one 129. The bottom of the valley of the Kogälnik was about 3 kilometers wide and the difference in height between mountain and valley was roughly 70 meters.

Kurgans

Kurgans were cone shaped formations, containing hill graves from ancient times. According to some tests, they were established circa 400 BC, sometimes even earlier.

Image 33: Kurgans looked like this, from a photo taken in the area of Sarata

At the turn of the century, one found human and horse bones in digs for instance around Alt-Elft. There were also clay pots and pitchers, knives and rings. The vernacular referred to these hill graves as “cannon hills,” since it was believed that these hills were places for cannons in earlier wars. Kurgans around Krasna were at the Judeberg, Antschiokrak Valley and the Mittelberg.

Soil composition

The land was very productive especially in the valley of the Kogälnik. On the slopes of the hills there were some areas containing saltpeter, where the harvest was poorer, especially in years with little rainfall. These areas stemmed from salt veins coming from the Black Sea. Dölker finds: 11) According to its soil composition, Bessarabia belongs to the south Russian Black Soil Area. The layers vary from 30 centimeters to a thickness of 1.5 meters and the land is considered some of the best yielding soils available.

Good farmland was a superior trademark of Krasna. The community report of 1848 states: In the valley the black soil reaches 2 feet, followed by saltpeter soil. On the slopes the soil is 2 feet deep, but mixed with sand. It yields good crops of winter wheat, rye, oats, barley, hirsute, corn, legumes and potatoes.

The Krasna area had no quarries like some of the neighboring colonies.
See 3.6, Building and Heating Materials

The Flora and Fauna around Krasna

Fauna and flora around Krasna were abundant, although trees were scarce. There were acacia and robinia trees, fruit, lilac and elder trees. Forests as such were nonexistent, just small groves planted by the colonists. According to a regional map of 1940, there were two small forests, called the upper and the lower forest, but it is not clear when they were established. There were productive vineyards on the Krasna land; they were located especially on slopes of both sides of the river and on the Heuschlager Mountain.

The fields produced mostly winter wheat, barley, corn, oats and rye. For personal use, potatoes were planted and beets and pumpkins for livestock feed.
See 4.1, Agriculture in Krasna

Erwin Heer describes the avian world, but also other sorts of animals and plants as found in 1940. 12)) There is more literature about Bessarabia’s flora and fauna in the literature list for Bessarabia. Mention should be made of the white stork, which used to be common in early Bessarabia. It found much food on the Kogälnik River, but in later years, the number of stork nests dwindled.

1)
There is a discrepancy in these figures in various sources. It is based on the various concepts of what to count (Just the usable or the unusable land, as well? With or without the church holdings? With or without the land used for public buildings?
2)
Rempel, Hans: Deutsche Bauernleistung am Schwarzen Meer Bevölkerung und Wirtschaft 1825 (The achievements of German farmers at the Black Sea, population and commerce) location/publisher: Leipzig, Hirzel 1942, table 22
3)
Colonist law states: “When land is given to the colonists only the usable land is counted, such areas as rivers, lakes, swamps, moors, chalk salt and sandy soil and other soils unsuited for farming or meadowland are not counted but shall be given to the village for common property.”
4)
Probably the building lot for the church
5)
State Archive of Odessa Region, Odessa; Fond, etc., not identified
6)
Description of the German colonies of the Ackerman District (See text 9, Documents, Reports, Facts
7)
Keller, Konrad, The colony of Krasna (Gouvernement Bessarabia), Publication: Neuer Haus- und Landwirtschafts – Kalender für deutsche Ansiedler im Südlichen Rußland (New Home and Farm Calendar for German settlers of South Russia, leap year 1912, 44th year, Odessa
8)
Eduard Ruscheinsky: (publication) Die katholische Diasporagemeinde Krasna/Bessarabien. Vor dem herannahenden Gewitter des Zweiten Weltkrieges (1939-1940), (The Catholic Diaspora Community of Krasna, Bessarabia. Before the advancing thunderstorm called World War II (1939-1940), published in: Heimatbuch der Bessarabiendeutschen 1960, page 7
9)
Ruscheinsky, Eduard: Chronik der Gemeinde Krasna (Chronicle of the Community of Krasna,) published in Bauernkalender (Farm Calendar), Jahrbuch der Deutschen in Bessarabien (Yearbook of the Germans in Bessarabia), Cultural and Press Office of the German Peoples’ Council for Bessarabia 1939, pages 164-172
10)
The chronicle of Katzbach states: Unfortunately a farmer’s land is not located in just 3 or 4 places, many have 30-40 lots and have to spend a lot of unproductive time with stopping and starting and travelling. Some lots are also of great length, which is also a disadvantage.
11)
Dölker, Johannes, 125 Jahre Landwirtschaft in Bessarabien (125 years of agriculture in Bessarabia) self published 1974, page 4
12)
Erwin Heer: Der Budschak in Landschaften (Landscapes of the Budschak) published in: Heimatkalender der Bessarabiendeutschen 1987 (Homeland Calendar of the Bessarabian Germans, 1987), page 139
en/krasna/e-03-04-00.txt · Last modified: 2019/05/22 10:06 by Otto Riehl Herausgeber