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  1. The Shanghai Russians, a sizable part of the Russian diaspora, flourished in Shanghai, China between the World Wars. By 1937 an estimated up to 25,000 Russians lived in the city; they formed the largest European group there by far. [1] Most of them had come from the Russian Far East, where, with the support of the Japanese, the Whites had ...

  2. Russians who reside in Lithuania live mainly in urban areas. In Vilnius they make up 13% of the population, and 28% in Klaipėda. Kaunas has just 4.4% ethnic Russians. The town of Visaginas was built for workers at the Ignalina Nuclear Power Plant and therefore has an ethnic Russian majority (56%).

  3. Post-war migration. After Latvians, the Russians are the largest ethnic group in today's Latvia. In 1989 this national group made up 34.0% of the population of Latvia, its total number 905,500 [1]. In comparison with the demographic situation of the pre-war period, the number of Russians had increased 4.5 times.

  4. In Estonia, the population of ethnic Russians is estimated at 306,801, most of whom live in the capital city Tallinn and other urban areas of Harju and Ida-Viru counties. While a small settlement of Russian Old Believers on the coast of Lake Peipus has an over 300-year long history, the large majority of the ethnic Russian population in the ...

  5. help. " The Prayer of Russians " (Russian: Молитва русских, tr. Molitva russkikh, IPA: [mɐˈlʲitvə ˈruskʲɪx]) is a song that was used as the national anthem of Imperial Russia from 1816 to 1833. After defeating the First French Empire, Tsar Alexander I of Russia recommended a national anthem for Russia.

  6. The Russian Wikipedia ( Russian: Русская Википедия, romanized : Russkaya Vikipediya) is the Russian-language edition of Wikipedia. As of May 2024, it has 1,978,611 articles. It was started on 11 May 2001. [1] In October 2015, it became the sixth-largest Wikipedia by the number of articles. It has the sixth-largest number of ...

  7. Ficha en FilmAffinity. [ editar datos en Wikidata] ¡Que vienen los rusos!, también llamada Que vienen los rusos, que vienen los rusos ( The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming en inglés ), es una película de comedia bélica estadounidense de 1966, basada en la novela juvenil The Off-Islanders, de Nathaniel Benchley y adaptada a la ...