Kamyshi [Kamyschi in German] was founded in 1906 by Volga German colonists from Dönhof. The first homes were built of earth bricks.
Land surveyors gave the new village the name of Kamyshi (which means "reeds" in Russian) because it was located along the shore of a lake overgrown with reeds.
By the summer of 1908, 120 Volga German families lived in Kamyshi. During WWII, most adults were taken to Kirov by the Workers' Army to work in the logging industry.
A Becking family from Neu-Bauer were deported to Kamyshi in 1941.
In 1996, 15 families (55 people) left Kamyshi for Germany; in the first six months of 1997, an additional 17 families (58 people) moved to Germany.
Today, Kamyshi is located in the German National [Cultural] District with its administrative center in Halbstadt.
Population:
Year
|
Households
|
Population
|
||
---|---|---|---|---|
Total
|
Male
|
Female
|
||
1908 | 120 |
|
|
|
1911 | 497 |
|
|
|
1926 | 578 |
|
|
|
1980 | 575 | |||
1991 | 691 | |||
2000 | 679 | |||
2010 | 610 |
The first settlers from the Volga German colony of Dönhof were Lutheran.
The following Volga German families settled in and around Kamyshi:
Bauer from Dönhof
Becking from Neu-Bauer
Gomer from Dönhof
Jacobi from Dönhof
Lai from Dönhof
Lohrengel from Dönhof
Roth
Rutz from Dönhof
Schwartzkopf from Dönhof
Seibel
Steinbrecher from Dönhof
Wiedemann from Neu-Bauer
- Lauk, Emma & Mina Wiens. Familienchronik von Neu-Bauer, 1858-1941: Von Gründung bis Deportation (Schweinfurt / Bankenburg, 2023): 80-81, 134-137.
- Kamyshi (Altai Krai) (Russian Wikipedia)