Rusko Selo (; ) is a village in northeastern Serbia, located within the Kikinda municipality, North Banat District, Vojvodina.
In Serbian the village is known as Rusko Selo (àÃÂÃÂúþ áõûþ), meaning "Russian Village". In German it is known as Ruskodorf, and in Hungarian as Kisorosz or Torontáloroszi.
In the Middle Ages, the settlement was known as Oroszi. During Ottoman times, it was populated by Serbs. In 1718, it was incorporated into the Habsburg province of Banat of Temeswar, at which time it was known in Serbian as Mali Orosin. In 1723âÂÂ25, the place was uninhabited. It was repopulated in 1767 by German colonists, while Hungarian colonists were settled in the village in 1776. In the 19th century, Romanians settled in the village as well. After World War I, a new settlement known as Kolonija or ÃÂarnojeviÃÂevo was built near the old village. After World War II, Serb refugees from Bosnia settled in the village.
The village has a Serb ethnic majority and a population of 2,811 (2011 census).
In 2002 village had population of 3,328 and ethnic groups in the village were: Serbs (1,880) or 56.49%, Hungarians (1,181) or 35.48%, Yugoslavs (55), Roma (48), Montenegrins (43), Croats (18), Ukrainians (12), etc.