Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5057355 | Economics & Human Biology | 2011 | 8 Pages |
Since 1843 Jews inhabiting the Kingdom of Poland were obliged to serve in the Russian army and therefore were examined by draft boards on a par with Christians. We explore the trends in the height of recruits by religion and place of birth. Basing on samples drawn from 21-year-old conscripts born between 1845 and 1892 we find that Jewish conscripts were shorter than the Christians by 2.5Â cm at the beginning of the period under scrutiny and the difference exceeded 4Â cm in the 1890s. The height of Jewish conscripts inhabiting provincial towns declined in the late 1880s and in the early 1890s was about the same as in the 1840s, i.e. 161Â cm. The socioeconomic crisis of provincial towns caused a massive migration to Warsaw and abroad as well. In the 1870s the stature of Warsaw and provincial Jews was similar, but in the early 1890s men from Warsaw were by 2Â cm taller than provincial Jews. The height gap mirrors the difference in the standard of living between Warsaw and provincial towns.
Research highlightsⶠWe research stature of Polish Jews born 1845-1892 conscripted to the Russian army. ⶠThe height of Jews inhabiting provincial towns declined in the late 1880s. ⶠThe height difference between conscripts from small towns and Warsaw widened. ⶠThe height gap mirrors the difference in the standard of living.