#Ученичество

| #Ученичество. 2026. Вып. 1 | #Apprenticeship. 2026. Issue 1 30 Russian Cadet Corps, Bela Crkva 21 278 Russian Girls’ Institute, Bela Crkva 17 166 Elementary School and Kindergarten, Belgrade 16 306 Elementary School, Bor 2 46 Elementary School, Zemun 2 13 Elementary School, Novi Sad 2 61 Elementary School, Pančevo 2 21 Elementary School, Petrovgrad 2 15 Total 112 928 Based on the Information on the Number of Teachers and Pupils in Russian Schools dated 29 July 1942, which was compiled for the needs of the school board, it can be concluded that the number of pupils and teachers changed during the war . 8 Number of Teachers and Pupils in 1942 School Teachers Pupils Russian-Serbian Male Gymnasium, Belgrade 23 145 Russian-Serbian Female Gymnasium, Belgrade 17 241 Russian Cadet Corps, Bela Crkva - 270 Elementary School and Kindergarten, Belgrade 13 308 Elementary School, Bor 2 42 Elementary School, Pančevo 2 21 Total 59 1048 Based on the presented data, it appears that during the war years, there were fewer teachers working in Russian schools, but the number of pupils was slightly higher. This could be explained by the fact that the increase in pupils was likely due to migrants arriving from other parts of Serbia. Meanwhile, the decrease in teachers could be attributed to departures from the country or other personal circumstances. As for elementary schools for Russian émigrés, they operated in Belgrade, Pančevo, and Bor, with a total of 393 pupils, whose parents were required to pay tuition fees of 70 dinars per month. 9 At the elementary school in the Russian House in Belgrade, there were 154 boys and 159 girls between the ages of eight and eleven in January 1942. They were divided into four grades, and teaching was provided by 14 teachers, both male and female. The principal of the school was E. Kučinska . 10 n Pančevo, the elementary school had 50 students, with A. Bogoljubova as the principal. In Bor, there were only 30 students, and the principal was L. Levina. 11 II.2. Grammar Schools The secondary educational institutions with the longest tradition were the Male and Female Russian–Serbian Grammar Schools in Belgrade, which operated within the Russian House. 12 At the beginning of the 1941/42 school year, the Male Grammar School had 287 students enrolled across eight grades. Until April 1942, the school was headed by 8 Timofeyev A., Živanović M., Mandić S. The Russian Émigré… P. 72. 9 Timofeev A. Unstoppable Russian… P. 218. 10 Ibid. P. 218. 11 Ibid. P. 220. 12 The Russian–Serbian Male Grammar School in Belgrade was opened in October 1920, and the Russian–Serbian Female Grammar School in 1926 ; Nikolova M. The Russian - Serbian Male Grammar School, The Russian–Serbian Female Grammar School in Belgrade, 1920–1940 . Belgrade, 2017. P. 32.

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy ODQ5NTQ=