Cossack Americans: Difference between revisions
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[[Category:American Cossacks| ]] |
[[Category:American Cossacks| ]] |
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[[Category:Cossack diaspora]] |
[[Category:Cossack diaspora]] |
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[[Category:Eastern |
[[Category:Eastern European diaspora in the United States]] |
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[[Category:Russian-American history]] |
[[Category:Russian-American history]] |
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[[Category:Ukrainian-American history]] |
[[Category:Ukrainian-American history]] |
Revision as of 20:24, 28 December 2023
Total population | |
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325[1] | |
Languages | |
American English, Russian, Ukrainian | |
Religion | |
Christianity, Islam |
Lists of Americans |
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By US state |
By ethnicity |
Cossacks in the United States or Cossack Americans are American citizens of Cossack descent. A number of them self-identify as Cossacks in the US censuses.[1] A number of people culturally identify themselves as Cossacks.[2]
Notable people
References
- ^ a b "Table 1. First, Second, and Total Responses to the Ancestry Question by Detailed Ancestry Code: 2000". U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved 2013-06-20.
- ^ *Cossack Congress in America
- About CCA: "The Cossack Congress in America is an organization uniting Cossack Voiskos, organizations, and communities of ethnic Cossacks living in the North American Continent."
- "The Ukrainian Free Cossacks movement in the USA and Canada in 1960 – 1993"
- From the abstract: "After the end of the Second World War, the Ukrainian Free Cossacks movement continued to operate mainly among the Ukrainian Diaspora outside the USSR and the socialist countries. The Ukrainian Free Cossacks was a typical paramilitary non government organization. North America was the new center of the Ukrainian Free Cossacks in the early 1960s. "