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People > Founders > ​​​​​​​​​​​Popp

Popp

​Johann Heinrich Popp (son of Conrad Popp) was born 14 February and baptized 18 February 1714 in Rohrbach, a few miles northwest of Büdingen. Johann Heinrich Popp and Anna Elisabetha Grasmück married in Rohrbach on 19 April 1736. Anna Elisabetha Grasmück (daughter of Johannes and Anna Elisabetha Grasmück) was born 28 October and baptized 2 November 1716 in Rohrbach. Among Johann Heinrich Popp and Anna Elisabetha's children born in Rohrbach were: Eva, baptized 12 August 1740; Johann Conrad, baptized 22 April 1742; Johann Georg, baptized 17 April 1744; Anna Elisabeth, baptized 9 July 1748; Johann Heinrich, baptized 5 Oct 1750; Anna Barbara, baptized 22 April 1753; Johanna Elisabetha, baptized 27 August 1755, and Johannes, baptized 16 February 1757.

The Lübeck marriages report that Johann Conrad Popp and Philippine Willman married in the Reformed Church in Lübeck on 31 May 1766.  The Büdingen marriages report that Johann Georg Bopp from Rohrbach and Rosina Stickel from Schönberg in Württemberg married on 26 June 1766.
  
The Heinrich Popp family and the Conrad Popp couple arrived in Russia on 4 July 1766, along with the related Grasmück and Meisinger families. Widow Anna Elisabetha Popp and her four younger children settled in Balzer and are reported there on the First Settlers List in Household #61. Eva, now married to Johannes Meisinger, is reported in Balzer Household #62. Conrad appears to have died prior to settlement in Messer, and his widow married Jacob Ochsenhirt.  

Georg Popp and Rosina Stickel arrived in Russia on 14 September 1766. They settled in Norka, and are recorded there on the 1767 Census in Household #202 with their son Johannes. Their household also includes the orphan Anna Dorothea Messer, daughter of Johannes Messer.  

The 1775 Census of Norka reports that Georg Popp had 3 children, including a son Israel who is age 5 in 1775.  

The Movement Tables in the 1798 Census state that Johannes Bopp moved from Balzer to Straub in 1790. These tables also report that Israel Popp and his wife Katharina Kaufmann moved to Kautz in 1789.  

Sources

Bonner, Wayne and Burbank, Roger. The Volga Germans website (11 Sep 2022). Used with permission.
​
Rohrbach (Büdingen) parish records (including Aulen-Diebach, Büches, and Stockheim), FHL Film #1201847.

Büdingen parish records on Archion.de

Mai, Brent Alan and Dona Reeves-Marquardt. German Migration to the Russian Volga (1764-1767) (Lincoln, NE: American Historical Society of Germans from Russia, 2003): pp. 97 and 167.

Pleve, Igor. Lists of Colonists to Russia in 1766: Reports by Ivan Kulberg (Saratov: Saratov State Technical University, 2010) pp. 132 and 408.

Pleve, Igor. Einwanderung in das Wolgagebiet, 1764-1767 Band 1 (Göttingen: Göttinger Arbeitskreis, 1999): p. 89

Pleve, Igor. Einwanderung in das Wolgagebiet, 1764-1767 Band 3 (Göttingen: Nordost-Institute, 2005): p. 284

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.

Mai, Brent Alan. 1798 Census of the German Colonies along the Volga: Economy, Population, and Agriculture (Lincoln, NE: American Historical Society of Germans from Russia, 1999): Volume 2, pp. 1065 and 1129
Last updated September 22, 2022
Copyright © 2002-2023 Steven H. Schreiber
  • Home
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  • People
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    • Notable Norkans
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    • Photo Gallery
  • Community
    • Village Life
    • Entertainment
    • 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
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        • 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
    • Prayers
    • Baptism
    • Confirmation
    • Communion
    • Weddings
    • Funerals and Burials
  • Religion
    • Planning and History >
      • Norka Reformed Church 1767-1864
      • 1909 Norka Parish Report
    • Pastors >
      • Johann Heinrich Fuchs
      • Johann Georg Herwig
      • Johannes Baptista 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 >
      • 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
    • Related Links