Yes, the Russian empire was comprised of a multi-ethnic population.
Yes. It was comprised of Russians, Ukrainians, Finish, Latvian, Estonian, Lithuanian, Polish, Georgian, Armenian, Azerbaijani, Ossetian, Chechen, Kazakh, Uzbek, Turkmen, Mongol, Tajik, Urger and about 160 others.
Russifictaion was the policy of forcing Russian culture on all ethnic groups in the Russian empire.
Russifictaion was the policy of forcing Russian culture on all ethnic groups in the Russian empire.
Germanic
Mexican.
Russian
Russian people are the largest ethnic group in Russia.
Belarusians. and oly then we can speak about Russian ethnic group, polsh and ukranian
Yes, Slavs are the majority ethnic group in Russia.
it is people of all the world
It includes autonomous regions for different ethnic groups
The Russian language spread through conquest, political influence, and colonization by the Russian Empire. It became widely spoken throughout the territories under Russian control, including parts of Eastern Europe, Central Asia, and the Caucasus. The Soviet Union's policies also promoted the use of Russian as a lingua franca among the various ethnic groups within its borders.