Slavic World

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Countries where a...
  Slavic language is co-official
  Slavic language is unofficial, but significantly used

The Slavic world consists of the Slavic-speaking states and populations in Eurasia. This area is situated in Central and Eastern Europe, the Balkans, Central Asia, and Northern Asia, and includes the nations of Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, the Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro, Poland, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia and Ukraine, and the disputed territories of Transnistria and Kosovo.

The Baltic states also have considerable Slavic populations plus large numbers of other citizens who can speak a Slavic language, particularly Russian. Over three-quarters of the population of Latvia speaks Russian either natively or as a second language.[1] Roughly 29% of Latvia's and Estonia's population is Slavic (mostly Russian and Ukrainian),[2] and 14.3% of the population of Lithuania speaks a Slavic language natively (mostly Polish).[3]

Also included are Lusatia in eastern Germany (homeland of the Sorbs); parts of Carinthia, Burgenland and the city of Vienna in Austria; parts of Macedonia and Thrace in northern Greece; East Thrace in Turkey (by Bulgarians and Pomaks); north-eastern Italy (Trieste and surrounding areas, and in Molise); Romania (Caraș-Severin County, Timișoara and Dobruja); Moldova (home to Bessarabian Bulgarians and a considerable Russian and Ukrainian minority); Hungary (south and west, home to Slovenes, Croats and Serbs, north home to Slovaks and Ukrainians); and Albania in regions close to the border with former Yugoslav lands. These are home to historic Slavic-speaking minorities in what are majority non-Slavic nations.

Outside Europe, Russian is an official language in both Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. Among the other former Soviet states in Central Asia, Russian is spoken as a native language of 14% of the population of Uzbekistan and spoken as a second language by many more. Russian-speakers form at least 12% of the population in Turkmenistan. In Tajikistan, the number of native Russian-speakers has declined to less than 1%, though the language is widely used in government and business.

Russian is also an important language in the Caucasus. In Armenia, a majority of the population can speak the language and in Georgia, 9% of the population speaks Russian. In Azerbaijan, however, it is only spoken by about 2% of the population.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Pan-Slavism

Throughout the late Middle and early Modern Ages, many Slavs were under foreign rule. Whilst the western Slavs were dominated by German Empires, South and East Slavs served as a buffer from Mongol and Turkish attacks onto the rest of Europe, falling under Asiatic rule for a few centuries.

In the 19th century, the consolidation of a national ideology searched for the ancestry of ethnic groups; one of the movements was called Pan-Slavism and it tried to unite nations of Slavic origins to a common interest and develop a common identity. These efforts failed for a number of reasons, one of them being attempts of Imperial Russia to take it over in order to justify its territorial expansion and the subjugation of nations of Slavic origin such as Ukrainians or Poles.

Another fact was due to independent developments among Slavic peoples and the development of antagonisms between them. Thirdly, due to divergent interests between various groups; for example, the Poles repressed the freedom of the Ukrainians both religiously and culturally. Also, while certain Slavic nations such as the Czechs and Slovaks in the Austro-Hungarian Empire desired Russian protection and wanted its dissolution, the Poles were pro-Austrian, because Austria treated its Polish subjects much better than either Germany or Russia, who both brutally repressed theirs. The city of Vienna has always had a population of Slavs who migrated there to find employment from 1800CE onward. The Slavs added a considerable influence to the culture of Vienna, and Russia did not release Vienna from Soviet wardship until 1955. Russia repatriated many Viennese Slavs north to Czechoslovakia to aid the Soviet economy after WW2 To a lesser extent Serb and Croat communities were repatriated to Hungary and the former Jugoslavia to the east and south.

With the Soviet Union came another period of attempts to use the idea of Slavic unity for political purposes, and post-war Soviet propaganda often made use of Pan-slavist ideology, while before World War II, Poland‘s repressive policy created a great deal of resentment among its populous Belarusian and Ukrainian minorities. See also Polish-Ukrainian War in which the Ukrainians fought for independence from Poland. Ukrainians did not fare any better under the Soviet Union as a 1932-33 famine (Holodomor) killed millions partially due to the inaction of Stalin's government.

[edit] Religion and culture

Slavic languages of Europe

The two main religions within countries with Slavic populations are Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism. Religious areas are clearly divided between the East Slavic and West Slavic regions though historically western Ukraine was affected by Roman Catholicism resulting in a Uniate Church. South Slavs are divided between Orthodoxy in Bulgaria, Serbia, Macedonia and Montenegro and Roman Catholicism in Croatia and Slovenia, while in Bosnia and Herzegovina Muslims form a plurality.

Besides religion there are also divisions of culture and political orientations. Over time nations with West Slavic origins and the Slovenes increasingly patterned their thought and institutions on Western models in areas ranging from philosophy, art, literature, and architecture to government, law, and social structure, whereas Eastern Slavs developed their culture influenced by the once powerful Byzantine Empire (Eastern Roman Empire).

For example, while Eastern Slavic people use Cyrillic (a larger alphabet derived from the Greek and Glagolitic alphabets),[4] Western Slavic people use the Latin alphabet. South Slavs are split, Orthodox Bulgarians, Serbs, Macedonians and Montenegrins use the Cyrillic alphabet, while Roman Catholic Croats and Slovenes and Muslim Bosniaks use the Latin alphabet.

[edit] Statistics

Country Official languages Population Area - km ² GDP (nominal
in $ billion) by UN
[5]
GDP (nominal
in $ billion) by
CIA World Factbook
[6]
Capital
 Belarus
Russian
Belarusian
9,709,722 207,600 700455136000000000055,136 700455480000000000055,480 Minsk
 Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bosnian
Serbian
Croatian
4,438,967 51,129 700418037000000000018,037 700417970000000000017,970 Sarajevo
 Bulgaria
Bulgarian
7,389,678 110,910 700453514000000000053,514 700453510000000000053,510 Sofia
 Croatia
Croatian
4,290,612 56,542 700462493000000000062,493 700463840000000000063,840 Zagreb
 Czech Republic
Czech
10,199,540 78,866 7005217077000000000217,077 7005215300000000000215,300 Prague
 Macedonia
Macedonian
2,057,419 25,713 700410165000000000010,165 700410330000000000010,330 Skopje
 Montenegro
Serbian, Montenegrin
703,505 13,812 70034550000000000004,550 70034536000000000004,536 Podgorica
 Poland
Polish
38,518,241 312,685 7005514115000000000514,115 7005506300000000000506,300 Warsaw
 Russia
Russian
143,030,106 17,098,242 70061857770000000001,857,770 70061821000000000001,821,000 Moscow
 Serbia
Serbian
7,186,862 88,361 700441057000000000041,057 700445060000000000045,060 Belgrade
 Slovakia
Slovakian
5,452,987 48,845 700496000000000000096,000 700496090000000000096,090 Bratislava
 Slovenia
Slovenian
2,006,929 20,253 700450284000000000050,284 700449590000000000049,590 Ljubljana
 Ukraine
Ukrainian
46,293,659 603,700 7005165245000000000165,245 7005165000000000000165,000 Kiev
Pan-Slavic flag.svg Total 13 278,825,656 18,716,278 70063145443000000003,145,443 70063104006000000003,104,006

[edit] See also

Other groups:

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Central Statistical Bureau Database for 2000 Census, table on mother tongues (Latvian)
  2. ^ Statistics Estonia
  3. ^ Statistics Lithuania census 2001: (Lithuanian) Population by nationality and mothertongue
  4. ^ Similarities in the case of some letters of the Latin alphabet is due to the common origin of the Greek and Latin alphabets.
  5. ^ http://unstats.un.org/unsd/snaama/dnltransfer.asp?fID=2
  6. ^ "GDP (Official Exchange Rate)". CIA World Factbook. Retrieved June 2, 2012. 
  1. ^ Michael Fleischer: Niemcy, Europa, USA i Rosja w polskim systemie kultury, Wrocław 2004 (in Polish)

http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/BURGENLAND-NEWSLETTER/1999-06/0929705539