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People > Founders > ​​​​​​​​​​​Albrecht

Albrecht

​Martin Albrecht was born in Pferdsbach and baptized on 30 November 1748 in the parish church located in Wolf (near Büdingen). Pferdsbach was located just north of Büdingen. The village was abandoned in 1847 and no longer exists.

Martin's parents are Johann Jacob Albrecht and Anna Maria Düdolff (also Diedolf). Johann Jacob was baptized on 23 August 1711 in Wolf, the son of Johann Peter and Dorothea Albrecht. Johann Jacob married Anna Maria, the daughter of Johann Caspar Düdolff, on 21 February 1737 at the parish church. She was baptized on 8 September 1715 in Wolf. Johann Jacob and Anna Maria became parents to nine children, including Martin. 

Martin decided to become a Russian colonist and departed from Pferdsbach in the spring of 1766. He arrived at Kronstadt, Russia on 28 July 1766 aboard the Russian ship “Vologda” commanded by Sergey Bartenyev. Martin was single and a member of the Reformed faith.

Martin married Anna Margaretha Ulrich (born about 1749) during transport to the settlement area on the lower Volga. They arrived in the colony of Norka on 15 August 1767 and are listed as Household 30 in the 1767 Census. This couple had at least seven known children.

The Albrecht family is listed in the 1775 Census as Household 184 and the 1798 Census as Household 194.

Martin died in Norka in 1817.

Anna Margaretha died before 1834 in Norka.

Other documented Norka families from the Wolf parish include Grün, Lapp, Mohr, Trüber and Schwartz.

Heinrich and Anna Maria Albrecht also settled in Norka in 1767. The 1767 Census records them in Household 196 and states that they are from Isenburg. It is currently unknown if Heinrich is related to Martin Albrecht. 

Sources

Research by Maggie Hein and Steve Schreiber. The Volga Germans website (27 July 2022).
​
Parish records of Wolf, Büdingen accessed on Archion.de.

Idt, Andreas and Rauschenbach, Georg. Auswanderung deutsche Kolonisten nach Russland im Jahre 1766 (Second edition). Moscow: 2019.

Pleve, Igor. Lists of Colonists to Russia in 1766: Reports by Ivan Kulberg (Saratov: Saratov State Technical University, 2010): p. 309 (doc. No. 4847).

Pleve, Igor. Einwanderung in das Wolgagebiet, 1764-1767 Band 3 (Göttingen: Nordost-Institute, 2005): p. 236 (Household 30). 
​
Rye, Richard. The 1775 and 1798 Censuses of the German Colony on the Volga, Norka: Also Known as Weigand. American Historical Society of Germans from Russia, 1995. p. 29 (1775) and p. 66 (1798).
Last updated July 27, 2022
Copyright © 2002-2025 Steven H. Schreiber
  • Home
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  • Community
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    • Agriculture
    • Climate
    • Homesites
    • Geographical Description
    • Government
    • Social Structure
    • Health
    • Education
    • A Land of Ethnic Diversity
    • Cottage Industries >
      • Sarpinka
      • Mills
    • Language
    • Population
    • Military Service
    • Crime and Punishment
  • History
    • Timeline
    • Origins of the Colonists
    • Catherine's Manifesto 1763
    • Why go to Russia?
    • Recruitment 1766
    • Planning 1764-1766
    • Marriages Prior To Emigration 1766
    • Voyage to Russia 1766 >
      • Ship Transport 1766
    • Journey 1766-1767
    • Founding of Norka 1767
    • Early Years 1767-1769
    • Norka 1769
    • Pallas Report 1773
    • Pugachev Raid 1774
    • Norka 1775
    • Norka 1798
    • Norka 1811
    • Napoleons Soldiers
    • Norka 1834
    • Daughter Colonies 1850s >
      • Neu-Norka
      • Oberdorf
      • Brunnental
      • Rosenfeld (am Jeruslan)
      • Neu Hussenbach (Gaschon)
    • Privileges Lost 1871-1874
    • Immigration 1875-1924 >
      • To the United States >
        • Colorado
        • Ft Collins Colorado
        • Globeville Colorado
        • Mason City, Iowa
        • Culbertson, Nebraska
        • Lincoln, Nebraska
        • Sutton, Nebraska
        • Burlington, Oklahoma
        • Weatherford, Oklahoma
        • Canby, Oregon
        • Portland, Oregon
      • To Canada >
        • Duffield, Alberta
        • Ponoka, Alberta
        • Spruce Grove, Alberta
        • Stony Plain, Alberta
        • Vegreville, Alberta
        • Arcola, Saskatchewan
      • To Germany
      • To South America
    • Famine 1891-1892
    • Norka 1898
    • War & Turnoil 1904-1906
    • World War 1914-1918
    • Revolution & War 1917-1922
    • Soviet Rule 1918-1941
    • Famine 1921-1924
    • Famine 1932-1933
    • The Great Terror 1936-1938
    • Deportation 1941
    • Repression 1941-1956
    • Cultural Loss 1957-2006
    • A Culture in Peril
    • Recent Times
  • Traditions
    • Food and Drink
    • Clothing
    • Holidays >
      • New Year
      • Fastnacht
      • Lent
      • Easter
      • Ascension Day
      • Pentecost
      • Founder's Day
      • Harvest Festival
      • Jahrmarkt
      • Christmas
      • Anniversaries & Birthdays
    • Crafts
    • Games
    • Folk Medicine
    • Superstitions
    • Nicknames
    • Folk Music
    • Church Music
    • Funerals and Burials
  • Religion
    • Planning and History >
      • Norka Reformed Church 1767-1864
      • 1909 Norka Parish Report
    • Pastors >
      • Johann Heinrich Fuchs
      • Johann Georg Herwig
      • Johann Baptist Cattaneo
      • Lukas Cattaneo
      • Emanuel Grunauer
      • Friedrich Börner
      • Christian Gottlieb Hegele
      • Christoph H Bonwetsch
      • Gottlieb N Bonwetsch
      • Wilhelm Staerkel
      • Woldemar Sibbul
      • David Weigum
      • Friedrich Alexander Wacker
      • Emil Pfeiffer
    • Church Practices >
      • Baptism
      • Confirmation
      • Weddings
      • Communion
      • Prayers
      • Parochial Certificates
    • Church Buildings
    • Church Organs
    • Bell Tower
    • Brethren Movement
  • Resources
    • Family Research
    • Research Resources >
      • Arrival Records 1766
      • Descendant Charts
      • German EWZ Records
      • Soviet Gulag Records
    • Maps
    • Glossary
    • Bibliography
    • Periodicals >
      • Die Welt-Post Letters
      • Sonntagsblatt der Omaha Tribune
    • Related Links