I’m working on Verne’s novel A Drama in Livonia. I’m discovering how complex the political and ethnic situation was in the Baltics in 1876. And one thing keeps coming up.
This is going to be an oversimplication, I’m sure, but it goes roughly like this. There are two main indigenous groups in the three Baltic provinces: the Estonians and Latvians. Neither are Slavs.
For six centuries, they were living under German colonial rule. Germans still control the government, the church, the language, and the police.
Peter the Great took Estonia and Livonia from Sweden and later took Courland from the Lithuanian-Poland Confederation. Those are the three Baltic Provinces. The Germans, who sided with Russia in the wars, were allowed to continue in their dominant role. At that point Russians—the Slavic population—began increasing. Saint Petersburg has begun an effort to “Russify” the provinces, basically to switch the minority-in-power from Baltic Germans to Baltic Russians.
OK, that’s the background. Now we have dialogue like this, from someone identified as a Russian Livonian:
"Après tout, notre ville ne compte que quarante-quatre mille Allemands contre vingt-six mille Russes et vingt-quatre mille Lettes… Les Slaves y sont en majorité, et cette majorité sera pour Nicolef.”
[After all, our city has only 44,000 Germans compared to 26,000 Russians and 24,000 Latvians. The Slavs are in the majority, and this majority will support Nicolef.]
Um—no. The Slavs have 26,000, as opposed to 68,000 people in other groups with different agendas. The Latvians are not Slavs, although they will occasionally ally with them for situational and opportunistic reasons.
Or this, from another Russian Livonian:
"Depuis sept cents ans, depuis la conquête, nos paysans, nos ouvriers, ont résisté à la pression des conquérants, et ceux-ci sont restés en dehors du pays!”
[Our peasants and workers have been resisting the pressure of the conquerors for 700 years, and the outsiders are still in power!]
Um—no. Not the Russian Livonian peasants and workers; the Latvian and Estonian peasants and workers, with whom you have little in common. You haven’t been here for 700 years. You are newcomers representing the new conquering empire.
I haven’t finished reading the book yet. I don’t know how Verne works out this tangle, or whether he shares this apparent confusion on the part of his characters. Do they think the Estonians and Latvians are Slavs? Does he? Were they considered as such when he wrote the book? Am I missing something?
Tad