Books and Monographs
BESSARABIA: German Colonists on the Black Sea - by Ute Schmidt, trans. by James T. Gessele, 2011.
In 1813 Czar Alexander I invited German settlers to make their home on the Black Sea as colonists.
Within five to six generations, these immigrants, most of them coming from Prussia and Southwestern
Germany, established a prosperous, organized community. They lived among Moldovans, Russians,
Ukrainians, Bulgarians, Jews and other groups in peaceful neighborhoods as a small minority in a
colorful variety of ethnic and religious communities. In 1918 the region came under Romanian rule.
The resettlement of the Germans in autumn 1940 signified the end of a full 125-year settlement
history. The book describes the origin and form of settlement of the Germans in Bessarabia, their
local autonomy and their rural culture steeped in Protestant ethics as well as the coexistence with
other nationalities. The author closes with observations about today's Bessarabia that in part belongs
to the Republic of Moldova and to Ukraine. Hard cover - 432 pages.