Russians in Taiwan

Russians in Taiwan form a small community. As of April 2013, statistics of Taiwan's National Immigration Agency (NIA) showed 363 Russians holding valid Alien Resident Certificates.[1] Informal estimates claim that their population may be as large as one thousand people.[2]

Russians in Taiwan
Total population
363 (April 2013)[1]
Regions with significant populations
Taipei142[1]
New Taipei City66[1]
Taichung37[1]
Languages
Religion
Russian Orthodox
Related ethnic groups
Russian diaspora

History

Some Russians from Shanghai and Xinjiang fled the establishment of the People's Republic of China and resettled in Taiwan in 1949.[3] One cultural institution among the Russian community in Taiwan that survives from those days is the Astoria Confectionery and Cafe near Taipei Railway Station, the first Russian-style eatery on the whole island. Founded in 1949 by five Russian émigrés from Shanghai, it continues operating today with an early local business partner as the sole owner.[4]

In recent years, the Representative Office for the Moscow-Taipei Coordination Commission on Economic and Cultural Cooperation has been active in promoting academic and professional exchanges between the two countries.[2] According to NIA statistics, 174 Russian students studied at institutions in Taiwan, and 20 were employed as instructors; 21 were housewives, 28 were children under 15 years of age, and the remaining 120 engaged in other types of work. Unlike in other European communities, men are relatively scarce, with a sex ratio of 1.36 women for every man.[1]

gollark: No, but just quoting bits of a video isn't exactly very helpful.
gollark: Well, it's definitely not a good *summary*.
gollark: That doesn't seem particularly sensical, which I suppose you might expect for anything randomly pulled out of a long video.
gollark: You *really* like saying "boomer papers", don't you.
gollark: It's "not real" in the sense that numbers and differential equations and perfectly accurate triangles and such do not exist in reality, but do allow you to make really good models of it.

See also

  • Republic of China–Russia relations

References

  1. 外僑居留人數統計表 (in Chinese), Republic of China: National Immigration Agency, April 2013, retrieved 2013-05-31
  2. Hsu, Jenny (16 June 2009), "Community Compass: Russian–Taiwanese ties celebrated at Russian National Day party", Taipei Times, retrieved 2013-06-19
  3. Sveshnikova, Maria; Ilachinski, Katherine (17 March 2011), "Metropolitan Hilarion: Orthodox China suffers from a lack of Priests", Orthodox.cn, retrieved 2013-06-19
  4. Yueh, Jean (2010-09-16), "Astoria, a corner of Taipei's history", Taipei Times, retrieved 2013-06-24
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