The Soviet Passport. Albert Baiburin. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Albert Baiburin
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
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Жанр произведения: Историческая литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781509543205
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out the christening, the wedding or the burial of the parishioner. The register of births included the following details: date of birth and christening; first name and surname; place of residence and religious denomination of the parents and godparents; and whether the birth was within or outside wedlock. Other religions, too, were ordered to keep registers: Lutherans from 1764; Catholics from 1826 (although in practice these had been kept from 1710); Muslims from 1828; Jews from 1835; Raskol’niki [schismatics, the Old Believers who split from the Orthodox Church at the time of the Church reforms in the seventeenth century – Tr.] from 1874; and Baptists from 1879. In practice, the registration of births, marriages and deaths of many of the minority ethnic groups of Siberia and Central Asia did not take place at all, even though the police and local administrations were legally responsible for this. In Turkestan, for example, the registers were supposed to be kept by the ‘people’s judges’, or mullahs. Up until 1905 the registers of the Raskol’niki and Orthodox sectarians and Evangelical Christians were handled by the police.31

      Entries in the registers (and later in civil registration) became important parts of the foundation on which the passport system and its use as a means of identification depended, because the details that were recorded here (particularly information about the birth) were the defining ones for identifying the individual. Proof of age was essential not only for establishing identity (it was something entered in the designation ‘identifying features’) but also for determining whether someone was eligible for military service.

      The first name and the place of residence became the basic method for marking a person out as an individual (and they still are), while the social estate that a person belonged to became an instrument of social categorization.32 A little later, religion and ethnicity would be added to the list. The social estate to which you belonged determined your rights. The divisions were: nobility, clergy, merchants, lower middle class and peasantry. It could be said that such categories were brought in as a means of ranking the different groups of the population, since they were based on the unequal status of these groups. The passport placed its owner into one of these groups, or created and strengthened new classifications (such as ‘ethnicity’; see chapter 5). For identification purposes the name and place of residence were sufficient; but the passport was never simply an identity document. From the very beginning it became one of the principal methods for strengthening the social structure.

      A significant step towards the creation and operation of the passport as an identity document was the inclusion of information about a person’s physical appearance in the list of essential details: the designation of identifying features. What had originally been written in the Legal Code of 1649 as a demand to describe ‘villeins by their features and identifying marks’ was made more detailed. For the ‘letters of passage’ issued in Peter’s reign, the instruction was that ‘the one who is being allowed to travel be described by height, face and without fail his identifying features’. In the ‘Regulations on Passports and Runaways’, published in 1832,34 the following identifying features were listed: ‘age; height; colour of hair and eyebrows; colour of eyes; nose; mouth; chin; face; distinguishing features’. However, by the start of the twentieth century, the only details required in residents’ permits and passports were ‘height; hair colour; and distinguishing features’. It is curious that ‘colour of eyes’ had been removed from the list, even though it is impossible to change their colour, whilst hair colour can be changed. This shows again the imperfect logic behind the denomination of distinguishing features, and how the link between these and the referent (the passport holder) was at best tenuous. The emphasis had shifted to other identifying details, most notably the signature (see chapter 5).

      During Empress Elizabeth’s reign (1741–62) a detail was added to the passport template which at the time appeared to be simply a technicality: instead of the date being printed, it was written in by hand when the passport was received.35 This introduced a characteristic of modern passports (and other documents): the combination of the printed and the handwritten, which widened the scope for the use of documents. It was one example of how the technical side of the passport’s function was still developing. In 1798 a decree of the Senate introduced templates for different types of passports depending on the length of their validity (one, two or three years);36 and slightly before this (in the same year) it was announced that the validity of a passport could be extended.37

      Under Empress Catherine II, passports were used as a means of controlling where settlers from European countries could live. After