Poles

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Poles
Total population

50-60 million (est.)[2]

Regions with significant populations
Flag of Poland Poland 38,860,000
(2006 est.)
[3]
Flag of United States United States 9,385,233 [4]
Flag of United Kingdom United Kingdom 2,000,000 [5]
Flag of Germany Germany 1,500,000 [6][7]
Flag of France France 1,000,000 [8]
Flag of Brazil Brazil 850,000 [9]
Flag of Canada Canada 820,000 [10]
Flag of Argentina Argentina 500,000 [11]
Flag of Belarus Belarus 400,000 [12]
Flag of Lithuania Lithuania 250,000 [13]
Flag of Australia Australia 150,900 [14]
Flag of Ukraine Ukraine 144,130 [15]
Flag of Russia Russia 73,000 [16]
Flag of Republic of Ireland Ireland 63,276 [17]
Flag of Latvia Latvia 57,000
(est.)
[18]
Flag of Czech Republic Czech Republic 52,000
(2001)
[19]
Flag of Italy Italy 50,790 [20]
Flag of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan 47,293 [21]
Flag of Spain Spain 44,147
(2006)
[22]
Flag of Netherlands Netherlands 39,500 [23]
Flag of Austria Austria 21,000 [24]
Flag of Iceland Iceland 7,000 [25]
Flag of Mexico Mexico 5,000 [26]
Flag of Turkey Turkey 5,000 [27]
Rest of World 1,145,000
(est.)
[28]
Languages
Polish
Religions
Predominantly Roman Catholic (+90%), with other Christian[29], Jewish, and secular minorities.
Related ethnic groups
West Slavs

Polish people, or Poles (Polish: Polacy) are a western Slavic ethnic group of Central Europe, living predominantly in Poland. Poles are sometimes defined as people who share a common Polish culture and are of Polish descent. Their religion is predominantly Roman Catholic. The Poles can also be referred to as the inhabitants of the Republic of Poland and Polish emigrants irrespective of their ethnicity. A wide-ranging Polish diaspora exists throughout Western and Eastern Europe, the Americas and Australia.

There is no commonly accepted definition of the Poles. According to the preamble of the Constitution of Poland, the Polish Nation consists of all citizens of Poland. However, like in most European countries, many people limit the group to native speakers of the Polish language, people that share certain views or traditions, or people who share a common ethnic background originating from Poland. As to the ethnicity, the name of the nation comes from a western Slavic ethnic group primarily associated with Poland and the Polish language. Poles belong to the Lechitic subgroup of these ethnic people. The Polans of Giecz, Gniezno, and Poznań were one of the most influential tribes of Greater Poland and managed to unite many other West Slavic tribes in the area under the rule of what became the Piast dynasty, thus giving birth to a new state. The Polish name for a Pole is Polak (male) and Polka (female).

Contents

[edit] Statistics

Estimates vary greatly, though most data suggests a total number around 50 million. There are 38 million Poles in Poland alone as well as autochthonous Polish minorities in the surrounding countries such as Germany, Lithuania, Ukraine, and Belarus. There are some smaller minorities in other nearby countries like Moldova and Latvia. Note that there is also a Polish minority in Russia which included autochthonous Poles as well as some forcibly deported Poles. The total number of Poles in what was the former Soviet Union is estimated at 3 million.

The term "Polonia" is usually used in Poland to refer to people of Polish origin who live outside Polish borders, officially estimated at around 10-12 to 20 million. There is a notable Polish diaspora in the United States, Canada, Mexico, and Brazil (see Polish Brazilian). In the United States a significant number of Polish immigrants settled in Chicago, Detroit, New York City, and Buffalo. In recent years, since joining the European Union, many Polish people have emigrated to countries such as Ireland, where an estimated 150,000 Polish people have entered the labour market and in the United Kingdom, where a quarter of a million have entered.

[edit] Polish tribes

The following is the list of Polish tribes - tribes which constituted the lands of Poland in the early Middle Ages, at the beginning of the Polish state. Some of them have remained a separate ethnicity while others have been assimilated into the culture of Poland.

[edit] European Union

for ethnic Poles living abroad see Polonia

Following Poland's entry into the EU in May 2004 it is estimated that as of September 2006, 307,670 Poles have registered to work in the United Kingdom alone.[1] Many Poles work in seasonal occupations and a large number is likely to move back and forth including between Ireland and other EU Western nations.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Home Office, Department for Work and Pensions, HM Revenue & Customs and Department for Communities and Local Government, Accession Monitoring Report: May 2004-September 2006PDF, 21 November 2006, accessed 22 November 2006.
  2. ^ This estimate includes people of non-primary ethnic origin. Source to be provided.
  3. ^ Excel spreadsheet from Polish Central Statistical Office
  4. ^ Poles in US The American Community Survey 2004PDF (468 KiB) by the US Census Bureau estimates 9,385,233 people claiming Polish ancestry.
  5. ^ Poles In United Kingdom
  6. ^ German text about polish migrantsPDF (886 KiB). Lists with Germanys aliens.
  7. ^ 1.5 million people in Germany have a connection to the Polish language, culture and their family in Poland. Only 330,000 people in Germany has not the german citizenship (2005) [1].
  8. ^ Poles In France
  9. ^ Poles in Brazil
  10. ^ List of Canadians by ethnicity
  11. ^ Poles in Argentina
  12. ^ Poles in Belarus
  13. ^ Poles in Lithuania
  14. ^ Poles in AustraliaPDF (56.3 KiB)
  15. ^ Poles in Ukraine
  16. ^ Poles in Russia
  17. ^ Poles in Ireland
  18. ^ CIA World Factbook
  19. ^ >http://wtd.vlada.cz/files/rvk/rnm/zprava_mensiny_2001_en.pdfPDF
  20. ^ Poles in Italy
  21. ^ [2]PDF (87.2 KiB)
  22. ^[citation needed]
  23. ^ Poles in NetherlandsPDF (162 KiB)
  24. ^ Poles in AustriaPDF
  25. ^ [3]
  26. ^[citation needed]
  27. ^ [4]
  28. ^ Poles around the World (>polonia > statystyka)
  29. ^ The various denominations ordered by size: Eastern Orthodox, Jehovah's Witnesses, Lutheran, Pentecostal, and the Polish Catholic Church.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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