It was founded by Volga Germans in 1767 and until 1941 was known as Lauwe; other German names for the settlement were Laube and Schönfeld.
History
It was founded on August 19, 1767 by the colonial agency LeRoy and Pictet and 169 Lutheran immigrants from Germany,[1] following Catherine the Great's manifesto of July 22, 1763, which guaranteed settlers in the Russian Empire free transport and monetary support in reaching their new colonies, free choice of settlement location, freedom of trade, freedom from taxation for thirty years, interest-free loans for ten years, freedom of religion, freedom from conscription in perpetuity, and freedom of return to their homelands, but at their own expense.[2] The settlement was named Lauwe after the first elder of the village. Its original demarcation consisted of 4,455 desiatinas. The first forty-seven settler families came from Bavaria (Nuremberg), Baden, Hesse (Darmstadt and Neu-Isenburg), the Palatinate, the Rhineland, Saxony, and Brandenburg. It was one of the ten colonies established by LeRoy and Pictet south of Saratov on the "meadow" (eastern) side of the Volga and along its eastern tributary, the Terlyk. In later years, it was also known under the German names of Laube and Schönfeld.
The German colonists' special status was nullified under the Russification measures which began as part of Tsar Alexander II's reforms and continued under his successor, Alexander III, and some of the male colonists who had been conscripted were killed in the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1888. Between 1871 and 1914, some of the Volga Germans left Lauwe and emigrated to North and South America.[2]
Post-war hopes for the re-establishment of the Volga German ASSR and return of the deportees were dashed by a February 21, 1992 decree of Boris Yeltsin in Saratov,[citation needed] and Yablonovka is now populated primarily by Russians.
Demographics
The following table shows population development in Lauwe up to 1931.[1]
Arkadij A. German and Igor' R. Pleve. Nemcy Povolž·ja: kratkij istoričeskij očerk: učebnoe posobie. Saratov: knižnoe izdatel'stvo Saratovskogo Univ., 2002. ISBN9785292027799(in Russian)
Karl Stumpp. Die Auswanderung aus Deutschland nach Russland in den Jahren 1763 bis 1862. Self-published: Tübingen, [1972]. OCLC873365. 9th ed. [Stuttgart]: Landsmannschaft der Deutschen aus Russland, 2009. OCLC699646990(in German)
Karl Stumpp, tr. with Joseph S. Height. The Emigration from Germany to Russia in the Years 1763 to 1862. Lincoln, Nebraska: American Historical Society of Germans from Russia, 1973. OCLC866202
Adam Geisinger. From Catherine to Khrushchev: the story of Russia's Germans. Winnipeg: Marian Press, 1974. (London: American Historical Society of Germans from Russia 1993, ISBN0-914222-05-8)
Gottlieb Beratz. The German Colonies on the Lower Volga. Lincoln, Nebraska: American Historical Society of Germans from Russia, 1991. ISBN0-914222-20-1.