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Demographics of Lithuania

This article is about the demographic features of the population of Lithuania, including population density, ethnicity, level of education, health, economic status, and religious affiliations.

Demographics of Lithuania
Population2,830,546 (2022 est.)
Growth rate−1.04% (2022 est.)
Birth rate9.26 births/1,000 population
Death rate15.12 deaths/1,000 population
Life expectancy75.78 years
 • male70.42 years
 • female81.44 years
Fertility rate1.61 children
Infant mortality rate3.63 deaths/1,000 live births
Net migration rate−4.54 migrant(s)/1,000 population
Age structure
0–14 years15.26%
65 and over20.45%
Sex ratio
Total0.86 male(s)/female
At birth1.06 male(s)/female
65 and over0.45 male(s)/female
Nationality
NationalityLithuanian
Major ethnicLithuanian (84.6%)
Language
OfficialLithuanian (85.3%)

History

Prehistory

The earliest evidence of inhabitants in present-day Lithuania dates back to 10,000 BC. Between 3000 and 2000 BC, the people of the Corded Ware culture spread over a vast region of eastern Europe, between the Baltic Sea and the Vistula River in the West and the MoscowKursk line in the East. Merging with the indigenous peoples, they gave rise to the Balts, a distinct Indo-European ethnic group whose descendants are the present-day Lithuanian and Latvian nations and the former Old Prussians.

Grand Duchy of Lithuania

 
Area of the Lithuanian language in the 16th century

The name of LithuaniaLithuanians – was first mentioned in 1009. Among its etymologies there are a derivation from the word Lietava, for a small river, a possible derivation from a word leičiai, but most probable is the name for union of Lithuanian ethnic tribes ('susilieti, lietis' means to unite and the word 'lietuva' means something which has been united).

The primary Lithuanian state, the Duchy of Lithuania, emerged in the territory of Lietuva, the ethnic homeland of Lithuanians. At the birth of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (GDL), ethnic Lithuanians made up about 70% of the population.[1] With the acquisition of new Ruthenian territories, this proportion decreased to 50% and later to 30%. By the time of the largest expansion towards Kievan Rus' lands, at the end of the 13th and during the 14th century, the territory of the GDL was about 800,000 km2, of which 10% was ethnically Lithuanian.[2] The ethnic Lithuanian population is estimated to have been 420,000 out of 1.4 million in 1375 (the territory was about 700,000 km2), and 550,000 out of 3.8 million in 1490 (territory: 850,000 km2)[3] In addition to the Ruthenians and Lithuanians, other significant ethnic groups throughout GDL were Jews and Tatars. The combined population of Poland and GDL in 1493 is estimated as 7.5 million, of whom 3.25 million were Poles, 3.75 million Ruthenians and 0.5 million Lithuanians.[4]

 
Samogitia (marked in pink) and Lithuania proper (marked in green) in a map of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania from 1712

With the Union of Lublin Lithuanian Grand Duchy lost large part of lands to the Polish Crown (see demographics of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth). An ethnic Lithuanian proportion being about 1/4 in GDL after the Union of Lublin was held until the partitions. There was much devastation and population loss throughout the GDL in the mid and late 17th century,[5] including the ethnic Lithuanian population in Vilnius voivodeship. Besides devastation,[clarification needed] the Ruthenian population declined proportionally[clarification needed] after the territorial losses to the Russian Empire. In 1770 there were about 4.84 million inhabitants in GDL, of which the largest ethnic group were Ruthenians, about 1.39 million – Lithuanians.[clarification needed][1] The voivodeships with a majority ethnic Lithuanian population were Vilnius, Trakai and Samogitian voivodeships, and these three voivodeships comprised the political center of the state. In the southern angle of Trakai voivodeship and south-eastern part of Vilnius voivodeship there were also many Belarusians; in some of the south-eastern areas they were the major linguistic group.

The Ruthenian population formed a majority in GDL from the time of the GDL's expansion in the mid 14th century; and the adjective "Lithuanian", besides denoting ethnic Lithuanians, from early times denoted any inhabitant of GDL, including Slavs and Jews.

The Ruthenian language, corresponding to today's Belarusian and Ukrainian, was then called Russian, and was used as one of the chancellery[clarification needed] languages by Lithuanian monarchs. However, there are fewer extant documents written in this language than those written in Latin and German from the time of Vytautas. Later, Ruthenian became the main language of documentation and writing. In the years that followed, it was the main language of government until the introduction of Polish as the chancellery language of the Lithuanian–Polish Commonwealth in 1697; however there are also examples of documents written in Ruthenian from the second half of the 18th century.[6] The Lithuanian language was used orally in Vilnius, Trakai and Samogitian voivodeships, and by small numbers of people elsewhere. At the royal court in Vilnius of Sigismund II Augustus, the last Grand Duke of Lithuania prior to the Union of Lublin, both Polish and Lithuanian were spoken equally widely.[7]

Russian Empire

 
Distribution of Lithuanians: Samogitians (olive green) and Aukštaitians-Lithuanians (orange) in a 1863 ethnographic map of the governorates of the Russian Empire

After the Third Partition of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth on October 24, 1795, between the Russian Empire, the Kingdom of Prussia and the Habsburg monarchy, the Commonwealth ceased to exist and Lithuania became a part of the Russian empire. After the abolition of serfdom in 1861, the use of the Polish language noticeably increased in eastern Lithuania and western Belarus.[2] Many Lithuanians, living further east, were unable to receive the Lithuanian printed books smuggled into Lithuania by knygnešiai during the time of the ban on printing books in the Latin alphabet, and they switched to Polish. Although this also used the Latin alphabet, it was much less affected by the ban, because Polish was still used by the politically important class of the nobility, and also used predominantly in the biggest towns of Lithuania, and supported by the church.

National Revival

The Lithuanian National Revival had begun to intensify by the end of the 19th century, and the number of Lithuanian speakers and people identifying themselves as ethnic Lithuanians started to increase; but at the same time many Polish speaking Lithuanians, especially former szlachta, cut themselves adrift from the Lithuanian nation. There were population losses due to several border changes, Soviet deportations, the Holocaust of the Lithuanian Jews, and German and Polish repatriations during and after World War II. After World War II, the ethnic Lithuanian population remained stable: 79.3% in 1959 to 83.5% in 2002. Lithuania's citizenship law and the Constitution meet international and OSCE standards, guaranteeing universal human and civil rights.

Population

 
Population pyramid of Lithuania over time

Life expectancy at birth

 
Historical life expectancy

total population: 74.9 years


male: 69.98 years
female: 80.1 years (2009 est.)

Period Life expectancy in
Years[8]
1950–1955 60.83
1955–1960   66.88
1960–1965   69.88
1965–1970   71.28
1970–1975   71.19
1975–1980   70.67
1980–1985   70.53
1985–1990   71.57
1990–1995   69.73
1995–2000   70.25
2000–2005   71.62
2005–2010   71.86
2010–2015   73.99

Fertility

1.29 children born/woman (2014)

Vital statistics

Source:
Average population Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate (per 1000) Crude death rate (per 1000) Natural change (per 1000)
1915 2,137,000 38,722 43,596 −4,874 18.1 20.4 −2.3
1916 2,137,000 35,565 31,512 4,053 16.6 14.7 1.9
1917 2,134,000 32,266 43,047 −10,781 15.1 20.2 −5.1
1918 2,121,000 33,176 47,522 −14,346 15.6 22.4 −6.8
1919 2,108,000 41,095 51,930 −10,835 19.5 24.6 −5.1
1920 2,104,000 47,642 44,487 3,155 22.6 21.1 1.5
1921 2,116,000 51,864 31,915 19,949 24.5 15.1 9.4
1922 2,136,000 58,064 37,598 20,466 27.2 17.6 9.6
1923 2,161,000 60,869 32,432 28,437 28.2 15.0 13.2
1924 2,189,000 63,864 35,493 28,371 29.2 16.2 13.0
1925 2,217,000 63,743 37,179 26,564 28.8 16.8 12.0
1926 2,245,000 63,655 34,380 29,275 28.4 15.3 13.0
1927 2,273,000 66,114 38,897 27,217 29.1 17.1 12.0
1928 2,301,000 65,945 35,698 27,116 28.7 15.5 11.8
1929 2,328,000 63,083 39,669 23,414 27.1 17.0 10.1
1930 2,354,000 64,164 37,151 27,013 27.3 15.8 11.5
1931 2,380,000 63,419 37,478 25,941 26.6 15.7 10.9
1932 2,407,000 65,371 36,577 28,794 27.2 15.2 12.0
1933 2,436,000 62,145 32,749 29,396 25.5 13.4 12.1
1934 2,464,000 60,770 35,789 24,981 24.7 14.5 10.1
1935 2,488,000 57,970 34,595 23,375 23.3 13.9 9.4
1936 2,513,000 60,446 33,440 25,939 24.1 13.3 10.3
1937 2,538,000 56,393 33,260 22,433 22.2 13.1 8.8
1938 2,563,000 57,951 32,256 24,562 22.6 12.6 9.6
19391 2,432,000 54,184 32,983 21,201 22.3 13.6 8.7

1 the figures of 1939 exclude the Klaipėda Region

Source: Official Statistics Portal[9]

Average population Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate (per 1000) Crude death rate (per 1000) Natural change (per 1000) Total fertility rate
1945 2,520,000 60,392 35,201 25,191 24.0 14.0 10.0
1946 2,530,000 58,399 37,688 20,711 23.1 14.9 8.2
1947 2,540,000 59,680 39,716 19,964 23.5 15.6 7.9
1948 2,550,000 58,780 35,137 23,643 23.1 13.8 9.3
1949 2,560,000 63,034 32,049 30,985 24.6 12.5 12.1
1950 2,567,000 60,719 30,870 29,849 23.7 12.0 11.6
1951 2,569,000 58,504 29,693 28,811 22.8 11.6 11.2
1952 2,576,000 56,944 28,166 28,778 22.1 10.9 11.2
1953 2,590,000 52,610 27,118 25,492 20.3 10.5 9.8
1954 2,607,000 54,229 25,559 28,670 20.8 9.8 11.0
1955 2,629,000 55,525 24,138 31,387 21.1 9.2 11.9
1956 2,653,000 53,741 21,869 31,872 20.3 8.2 12.0
1957 2,681,000 56,223 23,361 32,862 21.0 8.7 12.3
1958 2,711,000 61,190 22,103 39,087 22.6 8.2 14.4 2.63
1959 2,744,000 62,241 24,688 37,553 22.7 9.0 13.7 2.63
1960 2,782,000 62,485 21,611 40,874 22.5 7.8 14.7 2.59
1961 2,828,000 62,775 23,365 39,410 22.2 8.3 13.9 2.57
1962 2,865,000 59,728 24,925 34,803 20.8 8.7 12.1 2.64
1963 2,893,000 57,024 23,112 33,912 19.7 8.0 11.7 2.45
1964 2,928,000 55,856 21,830 34,026 19.1 7.5 11.6 2.31
1965 2,967,000 53,818 23,467 30,351 18.1 7.9 10.2 2.21
1966 3,006,000 54,275 23,799 30,476 18.1 7.9 10.1 2.34
1967 3,045,000 53,806 24,571 29,235 17.7 8.1 9.6 2.27
1968 3,083,000 54,258 25,725 28,533 17.6 8.3 9.3 2.25
1969 3,115,000 54,263 27,156 27,107 17.4 8.7 8.7 2.29
1970 3,144,000 55,519 28,048 27,471 17.7 8.9 8.7 2.40
1971 3,179,000 56,044 26,972 29,072 17.6 8.5 9.1 2.41
1972 3,214,000 54,616 29,252 25,364 17.0 9.1 7.9 2.35
1973 3,244,000 51,944 29,160 22,784 16.0 9.0 7.0 2.22
1974 3,274,000 51,941 29,612 22,329 15.9 9.0 6.8 2.21
1975 3,302,000 51,766 31,265 20,501 15.7 9.5 6.2 2.18
1976 3,329,000 52,296 31,972 20,324 15.7 9.6 6.1 2.18
1977 3,355,000 52,166 32,932 19,234 15.5 9.8 5.7 2.14
1978 3,379,000 51,821 34,008 17,813 15.3 10.1 5.3 2.09
1979 3,398,000 51,937 34,897 17,040 15.3 10.3 5.0 2.05
1980 3,413,000 51,765 35,871 15,894 15.2 10.5 4.7 1.99
1981 3,433,000 52,249 35,579 16,670 15.2 10.4 4.9 1.98
1982 3,457,000 53,141 35,040 18,101 15.4 10.1 5.2 1.97
1983 3,485,000 57,589 36,451 21,138 16.5 10.5 6.1 2.10
1984 3,514,000 57,576 38,666 18,910 16.4 11.0 5.4 2.07
1985 3,545,000 58,454 39,169 19,285 16.5 11.0 5.4 2.09
1986 3,579,000 59,705 35,788 23,917 16.7 10.0 6.7 2.12
1987 3,616,000 59,360 36,917 22,443 16.4 10.2 6.2 2.11
1988 3,655,000 56,727 37,649 19,078 15.5 10.3 5.2 2.02
1989 3,684,000 55,782 38,150 17,632 15.1 10.3 4.8 1.98
1990 3,698,000 56,868 39,760 17,108 15.3 10.7 4.6 2.02
1991 3,704,000 56,219 41,013 15,206 15.2 11.1 4.1 2.00
1992 3,700,000 53,617 41,455 12,162 14.5 11.2 3.3 1.94
1993 3,683,000 47,464 46,107 1,357 12.9 12.5 0.4 1.74
1994 3,657,000 42,376 46,486 −4,110 11.6 12.7 −1.1 1.57
1995 3,629,000 41,195 45,306 −4,111 11.4 12.5 −1.1 1.55
1996 3,602,000 39,066 42,896 −3,830 10.8 11.9 −1.1 1.49
1997 3,575,000 37,812 41,143 −3,331 10.5 11.5 −0.9 1.47
1998 3,549,000 37,019 40,757 −3,738 10.4 11.4 −1.0 1.46
1999 3,524,000 36,415 40,003 −3,588 10.3 11.3 −1.0 1.46
2000 3,500,000 34,149 38,919 −4,770 9.7 11.1 −1.4 1.39
2001 3,471,000 31,185 40,399 −9,214 8.9 11.6 −2.6 1.29
2002 3,443,000 29,541 41,072 −11,531 8.6 11.9 −3.3 1.23
2003 3,415,000 29,977 40,990 −11,013 8.7 11.9 −3.2 1.26
2004 3,377,000 29,769 41,340 −11,571 8.8 12.2 −3.4 1.27
2005 3,323,000 29,510 43,799 −14,289 8.8 13.1 −4.3 1.29
2006 3,270,000 29,606 44,813 −15,207 9.0 13.6 −4.6 1.33
2007 3,231,000 30,020 45,624 −15,604 9.2 14.0 −4.8 1.36
2008 3,198,000 31,536 43,832 −12,296 9.8 13.6 −3.8 1.45
2009 3,163,000 32,165 42,032 −9,867 10.1 13.2 −3.1 1.50
2010 3,097,000 30,676 42,120 −11,444 9.8 13.4 −3.6 1.50
2011 3,028,000 30,268 41,037 −10,769 9.9 13.4 −3.5 1.55
2012 2,988,000 30,459 40,938 −10,479 10.1 13.6 −3.5 1.60
2013 2,944,000 29,885 41,511 −11,626 10.1 14.0 −3.9 1.59
2014 2,907,000 30,369 40,252 −9,883 10.3 13.7 −3.4 1.63
2015 2,878,000 31,475 41,776 −10,301 10.8 14.3 −3.5 1.70
2016 2,848,000 30,623 41,106 −10,483 10.6 14.2 −3.6 1.69
2017 2,809,000 28,696 40,142 −11,446 10.1 14.1 −4.0 1.63
2018 2,808,901 28,149 39,574 −11,425 10.0 14.1 −4.1 1.63
2019 2,794,184 27,393 38,281 −10,888 9.8 13.7 −3.9 1.61
2020 2,794,090 25,144 43,547 −18,403 9.0 15.6 −6.6 1.48
2021[10] 2,795,175 24,606 47,976 −23,370 8.8 17.2 −8.4 1.34
2022 2,860,002 21,957 40,325 −18,368 7.7 14.1 –6.4

Current vital statistics

By data of Statistics Lithuania[11]

Period Live births Deaths Natural increase
January - March 2022 4,934 11,442 -6,508
January - March 2023 4,813 9,795 -4,982
Difference   -121 (-2.45%)   -1,647 (−14.39%)   +1,526

Ethnic composition

Lithuanians are a Baltic ethnic group (i.e. Balts), closely related to neighbouring Latvians, who speak Lithuanian, a Baltic language of the Indo-European language family. The group is distinct from neighbouring Slavic and Germanic peoples, although the historical union with Poland in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, as well German and Russian colonization and settlement left cultural and religious influences.

Before World War II

Population of Lithuania according to ethnic group 1923/1925 1
Ethnic
group
Census of
Lithuania in 1923
Census of the
Klaipėda Region in 1925
Number % Number %
Lithuanians 1,701,863 83.9 37,626 26.6
Memels 34,337 24.2
Jews 153,743 7.6 578 0.4
Germans 29,231 1.4 59,337 41.9
Poles 65,599 3.2 29 0.0
Russians 50,460 2.5 267 0.2
Latvians 14,883 0.7 47 0.0
Belarusians 4,421 0.2
Tatars 973 0.0
Romani 284 0.0
Karaites 141 0.0
Estonians 46 0.0
Ukrainians 43 0.0
Others 7,284 0.2 9,424 6.7
Total 2,028,971 141,645

1 Source: . The Klaipėda Region was annexed from Germany in 1923, but was not included in the 1923 census. A separate census in the Klaipėda region was held in 1925.

After World War II

Among the Baltic states, Lithuania has the most homogeneous population. According to the census conducted in 2021, 84.6% of the population identified themselves as Lithuanians, 6.5% as Poles, 5.0% as Russians, 1.0% as Belarusians, and 2.3% as members of other ethnic groups.

Population of Lithuania according to ethnic group 1959–2021
Ethnic
group
census 19591 census 19702 census 19793 census 19894 census 20015 census 20116 census 20217[12]
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
Lithuanians 2,150,767 79.3 2,506,751 80.1 2,712,233 80.0 2,924,251 79.6 2,907,293 83.4 2,561,314 84.2 2,378,118 84.61
Poles 230,107 8.5 240,203 7.7 247,022 7.3 257,994 7.0 234,989 6.7 200,317 6.6 183,421 6.53
Russians 231,014 8.5 267,989 8.6 303,493 8.9 344,455 9.4 219,789 6.3 176,913 5.8 141,122 5.02
Belarusians 30,256 1.1 45,412 1.5 57,584 1.7 63,169 1.7 42,866 1.2 36,227 1.2 28,183 1.0
Ukrainians 17,692 0.7 25,099 0.8 31,982 0.9 44,789 1.2 22,488 0.6 16,423 0.5 14,168 0.5
Jews 24,667 0.9 23,538 0.8 14,691 0.4 12,390 0.3 4,007 0.1 3,050 0.1 2,256 0.08
Romani 1,238 0.1 1,880 0.1 2,306 0.1 2,718 0.1 2,571 0.1 2,115 0.1 2,251 0.08
Tatars 3,020 0.1 3,454 0.1 3,984 0.1 5,135 0.1 3,235 0.1 2,793 0.1 2,142 0.08
Germans 11,166 0.4 1,904 0.1 2,616 0.1 2,058 0.1 3,243 0.1 2,418 0.1 1,977 0.07
Latvians 6,318 0.2 5,063 0.2 4,354 0.1 4,229 0.1 2,955 0.1 2,025 0.1 1,572 0.06
Armenians 1,125 0.04
Azerbaijanis 575 0.02
Moldovans 451 0.02
Georgians 333 0.01
Estonians 352 0.0 551 0.0 546 0.0 598 0.0 400 0.0 314 0.0 233 0.01
Kazakhs 214 0.01
Karaites 423 0.0 388 0.0 352 0.0 289 0.0 273 0.0 241 0.0 192 0.01
Chuvashs 177 0.01
Greeks 134 0.01
Lezgins 131 0.01
Uzbeks 126 0.01
Mordvins 121 0.01
Ossetians 118 0.01
Bulgarians 110 0.01
Chinese 97 0.01
Chechens 85 0.01
Bashkirs 81 0.01
Turks 78 0.01
Hungarians 76 0.01
Vietnamese 75 0.01
French 71 0.01
Romanians 68 0.01
Finns 68 0.01
Udmurts 67 0.01
Koreans 62 0.01
Maris 60 0.01
Komis 54 0.01
Italians 52 0.01
Britons 48 0.01
Arabs 48 0.01
Karelians 47 0.01
Danes 44 0.01
Tajiks 42 0.01
Czechs 27 0.01
Dutch 25 0.01
Turkmens 25 0.01
Spanish 24 0.01
Egyptians 23 0.01
Swedes 21 0.01
Serbs 19 0.01
Gagauzes 18 0.01
Afghans 16 0.01
Abazins 14 0.01
Mexicans 14 0.01
Norwegians 14 0.01
Punjabis 14 0.01
Albanians 13 0.01
Kyrgyz 13 0.01
Brazilians 13 0.01
Japanese 12 0.01
Abkhazians 11 0.01
Kalmuks 10 0.01
Other 330 0.01
Not indicated 49,633 1.77
Total 2,711,445 3,128,236 3,391,490 3,674,802 3,483,972 3,043,429 2,810,761
1 Source: [2]. 2 Source: [3]. 3 Source: [4]. 4 Source: [5]. 5 Source: . 6 Source: [7].

Poles are concentrated in the Vilnius Region, the area controlled by Poland in the interwar period. There are especially large Polish communities in Vilnius district municipality (47% of the population) and Šalčininkai district municipality (76%). The Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania, an ethnic minority political party, has strong influence in these areas and has representation in the Seimas. The party is most active in local politics and controls several municipal councils.

Russians, even though they are almost as numerous as Poles, are much more evenly scattered and lack strong political cohesion. The most prominent community lives in Visaginas (47%). Most of them are engineers who moved with their families from the Russian SFSR to work at the Ignalina Nuclear Power Plant. A number of ethnic Russians (mostly military) left Lithuania after the declaration of independence in 1990.

Another major change in the ethnic composition of Lithuania was the extermination of the Jewish population during the Holocaust. Before World War II about 7.5% of the population was Jewish; they were concentrated in cities and towns and had a significant influence on crafts and business. They were called Litvaks and had a strong culture. The population of Vilnius, sometimes nicknamed Northern Jerusalem, was about 30% Jewish. Almost all of these Jews were killed during the Nazi German occupation, or later emigrated to the United States and Israel. Now there are only about 4,000 Jews living in Lithuania.

Nationality and immigration

Lithuania's membership of the European Union has made Lithuanian citizenship all the more appealing. Lithuanian citizenship is theoretically easier (see court ruling notes below) to obtain than that of many other European countries—only one great-grandparent is necessary to become a Lithuanian citizen. Persons who held citizenship in the Republic of Lithuania prior to June 15, 1940, and their children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren (provided that these persons did not repatriate) are eligible for Lithuanian citizenship .

Lithuanian citizens are allowed to travel and work throughout the European Union without a visa or other restrictions.

The Lithuanian Constitutional Court ruled in November 2006 that a number of provisions of the Law of the Republic of Lithuania on citizenship are in conflict with the Lithuanian Constitution. In particular, the court ruled that a number of current provisions of the Citizenship Law implicitly or explicitly allowing dual citizenship are in conflict with the Constitution; such provisions amounted to the unconstitutional practice of making dual citizenship a common phenomenon rather than a rare exception. The provisions of the Citizenship Law announced to be unconstitutional are no longer valid and applicable to the extent stated by the Constitutional Court.

The Lithuanian Parliament amended the Citizenship Law substantially as a result of this court ruling, allowing dual citizenship for children of at least one Lithuanian parent who are born abroad, but preventing Lithuanians from retaining their Lithuanian citizenship after obtaining the citizenship of another country.

There are some special cases still permitting dual citizenship. See Lithuanian nationality law.

Largest groups of foreign residents
Rank Nationality Population (2019)[13]
1   Ukraine 16,927
2   Russia 12,529
3   Belarus 12,204
4    Latvia 1,100
5    Estonia 826
6    Germany 768
7    Poland 736
8   United States 507
9   Moldova 490
10   Syria 472
11   China 470
12    Italy 445
13   Israel 445
14   Turkey 416
15   Kazakhstan 399
16   Azerbaijan 382
17   Georgia 369
18   United Kingdom 369
19   Armenia 346
20    Romania 305

Languages

Native languages in Lithuania, 2011 census.[14]
Lithuanian
84.9%
Russian
7.2%
Polish
5.3%
Belarusian
0.2%
Ukrainian
0.2%
Other
0.2%
Two languages
0.6%
Unspecified
1.4%
Knowledge of foreign languages in Lithuania in 2012, according to the survey by European Commission.[15]
Russian
80%
English
38%
German
14%

The Lithuanian language is the country's sole official language countrywide. It is the first language of almost 85% of population and is also spoken by 286,742 out of 443,514 non-Lithuanians.[16] The Soviet era had imposed the official use of Russian, so most adult Lithuanians are able to speak Russian as a second language, while the Polish population generally speaks Polish.[17] Russians who immigrated after World War II speak Russian as their first language. The younger generation usually speaks English as their second language, while a substantial portion of the total population (37%) speak at least two foreign languages. According to census of 2011, 30% of the population can speak English.[16]

Approximately 14,800 pupils started their 2012 school year in schools where the curriculum is conducted in Russian (down from 76,000 in 1991), and about 12,300 enrolled in Polish schools (compared to 11,400 in 1991 and 21,700 in 2001). There are also schools in the Belarusian language, as well as in English, German, and French.[18][19]

There are perhaps 50 speakers of Karaim, a Turkic language spoken by Karaite Jews, in Lithuania.[20]

Lithuanian Sign Language and Russian Sign Language are used by the deaf community.

Baltic Romani is spoken by the Lithuanian Roma (Gypsy) minority.[21]

Religion

As per the 2011 census, 77.2% of Lithuanians identified themselves as Roman Catholic.[22] The Church has been the majority denomination since the Christianisation of Lithuania at the end of the 14th century. Some priests actively led the resistance against the Communist regime (symbolised by the Hill of Crosses).

In the first half of the 20th century, the Lutheran Protestant church had around 200,000 members, 9% of the total population, mostly Protestant Lithuanians from the former Memel Territory and Germans, but it has declined since 1945. Small Protestant communities are dispersed throughout the northern and western parts of the country. Believers and clergy suffered greatly during the Soviet occupation, with many killed, tortured or deported to Siberia. Various Protestant churches have established missions in Lithuania since 1990.[23] 4.1% are Orthodox, 0.8% are Old Believers (both mainly among the Russian minority), 0.8% are Protestant and 6.1% have no religion.

Lithuania was historically home to a significant Jewish community and was an important center of Jewish scholarship and culture from the 18th century, until the community, numbering about 160,000 before World War II, was almost entirely annihilated during the Holocaust.[24][25] By 2011, around 3000 people in Lithuania identified themselves as Jews, while around 1200 identified with Judaic religious community.[26][27]

According to the 2005 Eurobarometer Poll,[28] 12% said that "they do not believe there is any sort of spirit, god, or life force", 36% answered that "they believe there is some sort of spirit or life force" and 49% of Lithuanian citizens responded that "they believe there is a God".[dead link]

Education

According to the 2011 census, only around 0.2% of the Lithuanian population aged 10 and over were illiterate, the majority of them in rural areas. The proportion is similar for males and females.[29]

The general education system in Lithuania consists of primary, basic, secondary and tertiary education. Primary, basic and secondary (or high school) education is free of charge to all residents and is compulsory for pupils under 16 years of age.[30] Pre-primary education is also available free of charge to 5- and 6-year-old children but is not compulsory. Pre-primary schooling is attended by about 90% of pre-school age children in Lithuania.[31] Primary, basic and secondary education in Lithuania is available to some ethnic minorities in their native languages, including Polish, Russian and Belarusian.

Primary schooling (Lithuanian: pradinis ugdymas) is available to children who have reached age 7 (or younger, should the parents so desire) and lasts four years. Primary school students are not assessed through a grade system, instead using oral or written feedback. Students begin studying their first foreign language in their second year of primary school.[32] Data from the 2011 census showed that 99.1% of the population aged 20 and older have attained at least primary education, while around 27,000 pupils started the first grade in 2012.[33]

Basic education (Lithuanian: pagrindinis ugdymas) covers grades 5 to 10. It is provided by basic, secondary, youth, vocational schools and gymnasiums. After completing the 10th grade, the students must take the basic education achievement test in the Lithuanian language, mathematics, and an elective basic education achievement test in their mother tongue (Belarusian, Polish, Russian or German).[30] In 2011, 90.9% of the population of Lithuania aged 20 or older had attained the basic level of education.[33]

Secondary education (Lithuanian: vidurinis ugdymas) in Lithuania is optional and available to students who have attained basic education. It covers two years (11th–12th grades in secondary schools and 3rd–4th grades in gymnasiums). At this level, students have the opportunity to adapt their study plans (subjects and study level) to their individual preferences.[32] Secondary education is completed upon passing national matura examinations. These consist of as many as six separate examinations of which two (Lithuanian Language and Literature and one elective subject) are required to attain the diploma. As of 2011, 78.2% of the population of Lithuania aged 20 or older had attained the secondary level of education, including secondary education provided by vocational schools.[33]

More than 60% of the graduates from secondary school every year choose to continue education at colleges and universities of the Lithuanian higher education system. As of 2013, there were 23 universities (including academies and business schools recognized as such) and 24 colleges operating in Lithuania. Vilnius University, founded in 1579, is the oldest and largest university in Lithuania. More than 48,000 students enrolled in all higher education programmes in Lithuania in 2011, including level I (professional bachelor and bachelor), level II (masters) and level III (doctorate) studies.[34] Higher education in Lithuania is partly state-funded, with free-of-charge access to higher education constitutionally guaranteed to students deemed "good". There are also scholarships available to the best students.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Letukienė, Nijolė; Gineika, Petras (2003). "Istorija. Politologija: kurso santrauka istorijos egzaminui" (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Alma littera: 182. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help) Statistical numbers, probably accepted in historiography (the sources, their treatment, the procedure of counting is not discussed in this book) are given, according which in 1260 there were about 0.27 million Lithuanians of 0.4 million of a whole population; in percentage: 67,5%.
  2. ^ a b Bjorn Wiemer, Dialect and language contacts on the territory of the Grand Duchy from the 15th century until 1939, Kurt Braunmüller, Gisella Ferraresi, Aspects of multilingualism in European language history, John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2003, ISBN 90-272-1922-2, Google Print, p.109; 125
  3. ^ Letukienė, N., Istorija. Politologija: kurso santrauka istorijos egzaminui, 2003, p. 182. There can be found also different numbers, for example: Kevin O'Connor, The history of the Baltic States, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2003, ISBN 0-313-32355-0, Google Print, p.17. Here author estimates that there were 9 million inhabitants in GDL, and 1 million of them were ethnic Lithuanians by 1387.
  4. ^ Based on 1493 population map (p.92) from Iwo Cyprian Pogonowski, Poland a Historical Atlas, Hippocrene Books, 1987, ISBN 0-88029-394-2
  5. ^ Jarmo Kotilaine, Russia's foreign trade and economic expansion in the seventeenth century: windows on the world, BRILL, 2005, ISBN 90-04-13896-X, Google Print, p.45
  6. ^ (in Lithuanian) Lietuvos Didžiosios kunigaikštystės kanceliarinės slavų kalbos termino nusakymo problema 2009-07-10 at the Wayback Machine Z. Zinkevičius
  7. ^ Daniel. Z Stone, A History of East Central Europe, p. 4, 52.
  8. ^ "World Population Prospects – Population Division – United Nations". esa.un.org. Retrieved 2018-08-26.
  9. ^ "Official Statistics Portal".
  10. ^ "Official Statistics Lithuania".
  11. ^ "Statistics Lithuania, Vital Statistics".
  12. ^ "Gyventojų ir būstų surašymai – Oficialiosios statistikos portalas".
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 2020-06-29. Retrieved 2020-05-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  14. ^ Statistics Lithuania census 2011: GYVENTOJAI PAGAL TAUTYBĘ, GIMTĄJĄ KALBĄ IR TIKYBĄ
  15. ^ "Eurobarometer: Europeans and their languages, 2012, factsheet Lithuania" (PDF).
  16. ^ a b "Census 2011: GYVENTOJAI PAGAL IŠSILAVINIMĄ IR KALBŲ MOKĖJIMĄ" (PDF).
  17. ^ Vitold Jancis. "What is happening to the Russian language in Lithuania". dw.com. Retrieved 2017-06-07.
  18. ^ General school pupils, Statistics Lithuania
  19. ^ "Initiative "Schulen: Partner der Zukunft" – Hermann-Sudermann-Gymnasium Klaipėda".
  20. ^ UNESCO, Audio-visual resources 2011-12-28 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 2011-09-12.
  21. ^ Roma and Romani in Lithuania in the 21st century
  22. ^ Department of Statistics to the Government of the Republic of Lithuania. . Archived from the original on 2014-10-08.. 2013-03-15.
  23. ^ "United Methodists evangelize in Lithuania with ads, brochures". Umc.org. 11 August 2006. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  24. ^ Arūnas Bubnys (2004). "Holocaust in Lithuania: An Outline of the Major Stages and Their Results". The Vanished World of Lithuanian Jews. Rodopi. pp. 218–219. ISBN 90-420-0850-4.
  25. ^ "Lithuania". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 12 April 2012.
  26. ^ . Statistics Lithuania. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  27. ^ . Statistics Lithuania. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  28. ^ (PDF). p. 11. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-05-24. Retrieved 2007-05-05.
  29. ^ Statistics Lithuania, 2011 Census, Population by educational attainment and command of languages 2013-11-02 at the Wayback Machine
  30. ^ a b Ministry of Education and Science, Education, Lower secondary education 2013-11-05 at the Wayback Machine
  31. ^ Ministry of Education and Science, Education, Pre-school education
  32. ^ a b Government of the Republic of Lithuania, The Official Gateway of Lithuania, Education System 2013-11-05 at the Wayback Machine
  33. ^ a b c Statistics Lithuania, 2011 Census, Population by educational attainment, age group and municipality 2013-11-05 at the Wayback Machine
  34. ^ Ministry of Education and Science of the Republic of Lithuania, Lietuvos švietimas skaičiais, 2012

External links

  • statistics about education in Lithuania (PDF)
  • 2020 Population pyramid of Lithuania.

demographics, lithuania, this, article, about, demographic, features, population, lithuania, including, population, density, ethnicity, level, education, health, economic, status, religious, affiliations, population, pyramid, lithuania, 2022population2, 2022, . This article is about the demographic features of the population of Lithuania including population density ethnicity level of education health economic status and religious affiliations Demographics of LithuaniaPopulation pyramid of Lithuania in 2022Population2 830 546 2022 est Growth rate 1 04 2022 est Birth rate9 26 births 1 000 populationDeath rate15 12 deaths 1 000 populationLife expectancy75 78 years male70 42 years female81 44 yearsFertility rate1 61 childrenInfant mortality rate3 63 deaths 1 000 live birthsNet migration rate 4 54 migrant s 1 000 populationAge structure0 14 years15 26 65 and over20 45 Sex ratioTotal0 86 male s femaleAt birth1 06 male s female65 and over0 45 male s femaleNationalityNationalityLithuanianMajor ethnicLithuanian 84 6 LanguageOfficialLithuanian 85 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistory 1 2 Grand Duchy of Lithuania 1 3 Russian Empire 1 4 National Revival 2 Population 2 1 Life expectancy at birth 2 2 Fertility 3 Vital statistics 3 1 Current vital statistics 4 Ethnic composition 4 1 Before World War II 4 2 After World War II 5 Nationality and immigration 6 Languages 7 Religion 8 Education 9 See also 10 Notes 11 External linksHistory EditPrehistory Edit The earliest evidence of inhabitants in present day Lithuania dates back to 10 000 BC Between 3000 and 2000 BC the people of the Corded Ware culture spread over a vast region of eastern Europe between the Baltic Sea and the Vistula River in the West and the Moscow Kursk line in the East Merging with the indigenous peoples they gave rise to the Balts a distinct Indo European ethnic group whose descendants are the present day Lithuanian and Latvian nations and the former Old Prussians Grand Duchy of Lithuania Edit See also Grand Duchy of Lithuania Demographics Grand Duchy of Lithuania Languages and Demographic history of Poland Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 1569 1795 Area of the Lithuanian language in the 16th century The name of Lithuania Lithuanians was first mentioned in 1009 Among its etymologies there are a derivation from the word Lietava for a small river a possible derivation from a word leiciai but most probable is the name for union of Lithuanian ethnic tribes susilieti lietis means to unite and the word lietuva means something which has been united The primary Lithuanian state the Duchy of Lithuania emerged in the territory of Lietuva the ethnic homeland of Lithuanians At the birth of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania GDL ethnic Lithuanians made up about 70 of the population 1 With the acquisition of new Ruthenian territories this proportion decreased to 50 and later to 30 By the time of the largest expansion towards Kievan Rus lands at the end of the 13th and during the 14th century the territory of the GDL was about 800 000 km2 of which 10 was ethnically Lithuanian 2 The ethnic Lithuanian population is estimated to have been 420 000 out of 1 4 million in 1375 the territory was about 700 000 km2 and 550 000 out of 3 8 million in 1490 territory 850 000 km2 3 In addition to the Ruthenians and Lithuanians other significant ethnic groups throughout GDL were Jews and Tatars The combined population of Poland and GDL in 1493 is estimated as 7 5 million of whom 3 25 million were Poles 3 75 million Ruthenians and 0 5 million Lithuanians 4 Samogitia marked in pink and Lithuania proper marked in green in a map of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania from 1712 With the Union of Lublin Lithuanian Grand Duchy lost large part of lands to the Polish Crown see demographics of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth An ethnic Lithuanian proportion being about 1 4 in GDL after the Union of Lublin was held until the partitions There was much devastation and population loss throughout the GDL in the mid and late 17th century 5 including the ethnic Lithuanian population in Vilnius voivodeship Besides devastation clarification needed the Ruthenian population declined proportionally clarification needed after the territorial losses to the Russian Empire In 1770 there were about 4 84 million inhabitants in GDL of which the largest ethnic group were Ruthenians about 1 39 million Lithuanians clarification needed 1 The voivodeships with a majority ethnic Lithuanian population were Vilnius Trakai and Samogitian voivodeships and these three voivodeships comprised the political center of the state In the southern angle of Trakai voivodeship and south eastern part of Vilnius voivodeship there were also many Belarusians in some of the south eastern areas they were the major linguistic group The Ruthenian population formed a majority in GDL from the time of the GDL s expansion in the mid 14th century and the adjective Lithuanian besides denoting ethnic Lithuanians from early times denoted any inhabitant of GDL including Slavs and Jews The Ruthenian language corresponding to today s Belarusian and Ukrainian was then called Russian and was used as one of the chancellery clarification needed languages by Lithuanian monarchs However there are fewer extant documents written in this language than those written in Latin and German from the time of Vytautas Later Ruthenian became the main language of documentation and writing In the years that followed it was the main language of government until the introduction of Polish as the chancellery language of the Lithuanian Polish Commonwealth in 1697 however there are also examples of documents written in Ruthenian from the second half of the 18th century 6 The Lithuanian language was used orally in Vilnius Trakai and Samogitian voivodeships and by small numbers of people elsewhere At the royal court in Vilnius of Sigismund II Augustus the last Grand Duke of Lithuania prior to the Union of Lublin both Polish and Lithuanian were spoken equally widely 7 Russian Empire Edit Distribution of Lithuanians Samogitians olive green and Aukstaitians Lithuanians orange in a 1863 ethnographic map of the governorates of the Russian Empire After the Third Partition of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth on October 24 1795 between the Russian Empire the Kingdom of Prussia and the Habsburg monarchy the Commonwealth ceased to exist and Lithuania became a part of the Russian empire After the abolition of serfdom in 1861 the use of the Polish language noticeably increased in eastern Lithuania and western Belarus 2 Many Lithuanians living further east were unable to receive the Lithuanian printed books smuggled into Lithuania by knygnesiai during the time of the ban on printing books in the Latin alphabet and they switched to Polish Although this also used the Latin alphabet it was much less affected by the ban because Polish was still used by the politically important class of the nobility and also used predominantly in the biggest towns of Lithuania and supported by the church National Revival Edit The Lithuanian National Revival had begun to intensify by the end of the 19th century and the number of Lithuanian speakers and people identifying themselves as ethnic Lithuanians started to increase but at the same time many Polish speaking Lithuanians especially former szlachta cut themselves adrift from the Lithuanian nation There were population losses due to several border changes Soviet deportations the Holocaust of the Lithuanian Jews and German and Polish repatriations during and after World War II After World War II the ethnic Lithuanian population remained stable 79 3 in 1959 to 83 5 in 2002 Lithuania s citizenship law and the Constitution meet international and OSCE standards guaranteeing universal human and civil rights Population Edit Population pyramid of Lithuania over time Life expectancy at birth Edit Historical life expectancytotal population 74 9 yearsmale 69 98 years female 80 1 years 2009 est Period Life expectancy inYears 8 1950 1955 60 831955 1960 66 881960 1965 69 881965 1970 71 281970 1975 71 191975 1980 70 671980 1985 70 531985 1990 71 571990 1995 69 731995 2000 70 252000 2005 71 622005 2010 71 862010 2015 73 99Fertility Edit 1 29 children born woman 2014 Vital statistics EditSource Statistical yearbooks of LithuaniaAverage population Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate per 1000 Crude death rate per 1000 Natural change per 1000 1915 2 137 000 38 722 43 596 4 874 18 1 20 4 2 31916 2 137 000 35 565 31 512 4 053 16 6 14 7 1 91917 2 134 000 32 266 43 047 10 781 15 1 20 2 5 11918 2 121 000 33 176 47 522 14 346 15 6 22 4 6 81919 2 108 000 41 095 51 930 10 835 19 5 24 6 5 11920 2 104 000 47 642 44 487 3 155 22 6 21 1 1 51921 2 116 000 51 864 31 915 19 949 24 5 15 1 9 41922 2 136 000 58 064 37 598 20 466 27 2 17 6 9 61923 2 161 000 60 869 32 432 28 437 28 2 15 0 13 21924 2 189 000 63 864 35 493 28 371 29 2 16 2 13 01925 2 217 000 63 743 37 179 26 564 28 8 16 8 12 01926 2 245 000 63 655 34 380 29 275 28 4 15 3 13 01927 2 273 000 66 114 38 897 27 217 29 1 17 1 12 01928 2 301 000 65 945 35 698 27 116 28 7 15 5 11 81929 2 328 000 63 083 39 669 23 414 27 1 17 0 10 11930 2 354 000 64 164 37 151 27 013 27 3 15 8 11 51931 2 380 000 63 419 37 478 25 941 26 6 15 7 10 91932 2 407 000 65 371 36 577 28 794 27 2 15 2 12 01933 2 436 000 62 145 32 749 29 396 25 5 13 4 12 11934 2 464 000 60 770 35 789 24 981 24 7 14 5 10 11935 2 488 000 57 970 34 595 23 375 23 3 13 9 9 41936 2 513 000 60 446 33 440 25 939 24 1 13 3 10 31937 2 538 000 56 393 33 260 22 433 22 2 13 1 8 81938 2 563 000 57 951 32 256 24 562 22 6 12 6 9 619391 2 432 000 54 184 32 983 21 201 22 3 13 6 8 71 the figures of 1939 exclude the Klaipeda RegionSource Official Statistics Portal 9 Average population Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate per 1000 Crude death rate per 1000 Natural change per 1000 Total fertility rate1945 2 520 000 60 392 35 201 25 191 24 0 14 0 10 01946 2 530 000 58 399 37 688 20 711 23 1 14 9 8 21947 2 540 000 59 680 39 716 19 964 23 5 15 6 7 91948 2 550 000 58 780 35 137 23 643 23 1 13 8 9 31949 2 560 000 63 034 32 049 30 985 24 6 12 5 12 11950 2 567 000 60 719 30 870 29 849 23 7 12 0 11 61951 2 569 000 58 504 29 693 28 811 22 8 11 6 11 21952 2 576 000 56 944 28 166 28 778 22 1 10 9 11 21953 2 590 000 52 610 27 118 25 492 20 3 10 5 9 81954 2 607 000 54 229 25 559 28 670 20 8 9 8 11 01955 2 629 000 55 525 24 138 31 387 21 1 9 2 11 91956 2 653 000 53 741 21 869 31 872 20 3 8 2 12 01957 2 681 000 56 223 23 361 32 862 21 0 8 7 12 31958 2 711 000 61 190 22 103 39 087 22 6 8 2 14 4 2 631959 2 744 000 62 241 24 688 37 553 22 7 9 0 13 7 2 631960 2 782 000 62 485 21 611 40 874 22 5 7 8 14 7 2 591961 2 828 000 62 775 23 365 39 410 22 2 8 3 13 9 2 571962 2 865 000 59 728 24 925 34 803 20 8 8 7 12 1 2 641963 2 893 000 57 024 23 112 33 912 19 7 8 0 11 7 2 451964 2 928 000 55 856 21 830 34 026 19 1 7 5 11 6 2 311965 2 967 000 53 818 23 467 30 351 18 1 7 9 10 2 2 211966 3 006 000 54 275 23 799 30 476 18 1 7 9 10 1 2 341967 3 045 000 53 806 24 571 29 235 17 7 8 1 9 6 2 271968 3 083 000 54 258 25 725 28 533 17 6 8 3 9 3 2 251969 3 115 000 54 263 27 156 27 107 17 4 8 7 8 7 2 291970 3 144 000 55 519 28 048 27 471 17 7 8 9 8 7 2 401971 3 179 000 56 044 26 972 29 072 17 6 8 5 9 1 2 411972 3 214 000 54 616 29 252 25 364 17 0 9 1 7 9 2 351973 3 244 000 51 944 29 160 22 784 16 0 9 0 7 0 2 221974 3 274 000 51 941 29 612 22 329 15 9 9 0 6 8 2 211975 3 302 000 51 766 31 265 20 501 15 7 9 5 6 2 2 181976 3 329 000 52 296 31 972 20 324 15 7 9 6 6 1 2 181977 3 355 000 52 166 32 932 19 234 15 5 9 8 5 7 2 141978 3 379 000 51 821 34 008 17 813 15 3 10 1 5 3 2 091979 3 398 000 51 937 34 897 17 040 15 3 10 3 5 0 2 051980 3 413 000 51 765 35 871 15 894 15 2 10 5 4 7 1 991981 3 433 000 52 249 35 579 16 670 15 2 10 4 4 9 1 981982 3 457 000 53 141 35 040 18 101 15 4 10 1 5 2 1 971983 3 485 000 57 589 36 451 21 138 16 5 10 5 6 1 2 101984 3 514 000 57 576 38 666 18 910 16 4 11 0 5 4 2 071985 3 545 000 58 454 39 169 19 285 16 5 11 0 5 4 2 091986 3 579 000 59 705 35 788 23 917 16 7 10 0 6 7 2 121987 3 616 000 59 360 36 917 22 443 16 4 10 2 6 2 2 111988 3 655 000 56 727 37 649 19 078 15 5 10 3 5 2 2 021989 3 684 000 55 782 38 150 17 632 15 1 10 3 4 8 1 981990 3 698 000 56 868 39 760 17 108 15 3 10 7 4 6 2 021991 3 704 000 56 219 41 013 15 206 15 2 11 1 4 1 2 001992 3 700 000 53 617 41 455 12 162 14 5 11 2 3 3 1 941993 3 683 000 47 464 46 107 1 357 12 9 12 5 0 4 1 741994 3 657 000 42 376 46 486 4 110 11 6 12 7 1 1 1 571995 3 629 000 41 195 45 306 4 111 11 4 12 5 1 1 1 551996 3 602 000 39 066 42 896 3 830 10 8 11 9 1 1 1 491997 3 575 000 37 812 41 143 3 331 10 5 11 5 0 9 1 471998 3 549 000 37 019 40 757 3 738 10 4 11 4 1 0 1 461999 3 524 000 36 415 40 003 3 588 10 3 11 3 1 0 1 462000 3 500 000 34 149 38 919 4 770 9 7 11 1 1 4 1 392001 3 471 000 31 185 40 399 9 214 8 9 11 6 2 6 1 292002 3 443 000 29 541 41 072 11 531 8 6 11 9 3 3 1 232003 3 415 000 29 977 40 990 11 013 8 7 11 9 3 2 1 262004 3 377 000 29 769 41 340 11 571 8 8 12 2 3 4 1 272005 3 323 000 29 510 43 799 14 289 8 8 13 1 4 3 1 292006 3 270 000 29 606 44 813 15 207 9 0 13 6 4 6 1 332007 3 231 000 30 020 45 624 15 604 9 2 14 0 4 8 1 362008 3 198 000 31 536 43 832 12 296 9 8 13 6 3 8 1 452009 3 163 000 32 165 42 032 9 867 10 1 13 2 3 1 1 502010 3 097 000 30 676 42 120 11 444 9 8 13 4 3 6 1 502011 3 028 000 30 268 41 037 10 769 9 9 13 4 3 5 1 552012 2 988 000 30 459 40 938 10 479 10 1 13 6 3 5 1 602013 2 944 000 29 885 41 511 11 626 10 1 14 0 3 9 1 592014 2 907 000 30 369 40 252 9 883 10 3 13 7 3 4 1 632015 2 878 000 31 475 41 776 10 301 10 8 14 3 3 5 1 702016 2 848 000 30 623 41 106 10 483 10 6 14 2 3 6 1 692017 2 809 000 28 696 40 142 11 446 10 1 14 1 4 0 1 632018 2 808 901 28 149 39 574 11 425 10 0 14 1 4 1 1 632019 2 794 184 27 393 38 281 10 888 9 8 13 7 3 9 1 612020 2 794 090 25 144 43 547 18 403 9 0 15 6 6 6 1 482021 10 2 795 175 24 606 47 976 23 370 8 8 17 2 8 4 1 342022 2 860 002 21 957 40 325 18 368 7 7 14 1 6 4Current vital statistics Edit By data of Statistics Lithuania 11 Period Live births Deaths Natural increaseJanuary March 2022 4 934 11 442 6 508January March 2023 4 813 9 795 4 982Difference 121 2 45 1 647 14 39 1 526Ethnic composition EditFurther information Ethnic minorities in Lithuania Lithuanians are a Baltic ethnic group i e Balts closely related to neighbouring Latvians who speak Lithuanian a Baltic language of the Indo European language family The group is distinct from neighbouring Slavic and Germanic peoples although the historical union with Poland in the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth as well German and Russian colonization and settlement left cultural and religious influences Before World War II Edit Population of Lithuania according to ethnic group 1923 1925 1 Ethnicgroup Census ofLithuania in 1923 Census of theKlaipeda Region in 1925Number Number Lithuanians 1 701 863 83 9 37 626 26 6Memels 34 337 24 2Jews 153 743 7 6 578 0 4Germans 29 231 1 4 59 337 41 9Poles 65 599 3 2 29 0 0Russians 50 460 2 5 267 0 2Latvians 14 883 0 7 47 0 0Belarusians 4 421 0 2 Tatars 973 0 0Romani 284 0 0Karaites 141 0 0Estonians 46 0 0Ukrainians 43 0 0Others 7 284 0 2 9 424 6 7Total 2 028 971 141 6451 Source 1 The Klaipeda Region was annexed from Germany in 1923 but was not included in the 1923 census A separate census in the Klaipeda region was held in 1925 After World War II Edit Among the Baltic states Lithuania has the most homogeneous population According to the census conducted in 2021 84 6 of the population identified themselves as Lithuanians 6 5 as Poles 5 0 as Russians 1 0 as Belarusians and 2 3 as members of other ethnic groups Population of Lithuania according to ethnic group 1959 2021 Ethnicgroup census 19591 census 19702 census 19793 census 19894 census 20015 census 20116 census 20217 12 Number Number Number Number Number Number Number Lithuanians 2 150 767 79 3 2 506 751 80 1 2 712 233 80 0 2 924 251 79 6 2 907 293 83 4 2 561 314 84 2 2 378 118 84 61Poles 230 107 8 5 240 203 7 7 247 022 7 3 257 994 7 0 234 989 6 7 200 317 6 6 183 421 6 53Russians 231 014 8 5 267 989 8 6 303 493 8 9 344 455 9 4 219 789 6 3 176 913 5 8 141 122 5 02Belarusians 30 256 1 1 45 412 1 5 57 584 1 7 63 169 1 7 42 866 1 2 36 227 1 2 28 183 1 0Ukrainians 17 692 0 7 25 099 0 8 31 982 0 9 44 789 1 2 22 488 0 6 16 423 0 5 14 168 0 5Jews 24 667 0 9 23 538 0 8 14 691 0 4 12 390 0 3 4 007 0 1 3 050 0 1 2 256 0 08Romani 1 238 0 1 1 880 0 1 2 306 0 1 2 718 0 1 2 571 0 1 2 115 0 1 2 251 0 08Tatars 3 020 0 1 3 454 0 1 3 984 0 1 5 135 0 1 3 235 0 1 2 793 0 1 2 142 0 08Germans 11 166 0 4 1 904 0 1 2 616 0 1 2 058 0 1 3 243 0 1 2 418 0 1 1 977 0 07Latvians 6 318 0 2 5 063 0 2 4 354 0 1 4 229 0 1 2 955 0 1 2 025 0 1 1 572 0 06Armenians 1 125 0 04Azerbaijanis 575 0 02Moldovans 451 0 02Georgians 333 0 01Estonians 352 0 0 551 0 0 546 0 0 598 0 0 400 0 0 314 0 0 233 0 01Kazakhs 214 0 01Karaites 423 0 0 388 0 0 352 0 0 289 0 0 273 0 0 241 0 0 192 0 01Chuvashs 177 0 01Greeks 134 0 01Lezgins 131 0 01Uzbeks 126 0 01Mordvins 121 0 01Ossetians 118 0 01Bulgarians 110 0 01Chinese 97 0 01Chechens 85 0 01Bashkirs 81 0 01Turks 78 0 01Hungarians 76 0 01Vietnamese 75 0 01French 71 0 01Romanians 68 0 01Finns 68 0 01Udmurts 67 0 01Koreans 62 0 01Maris 60 0 01Komis 54 0 01Italians 52 0 01Britons 48 0 01Arabs 48 0 01Karelians 47 0 01Danes 44 0 01Tajiks 42 0 01Czechs 27 0 01Dutch 25 0 01Turkmens 25 0 01Spanish 24 0 01Egyptians 23 0 01Swedes 21 0 01Serbs 19 0 01Gagauzes 18 0 01Afghans 16 0 01Abazins 14 0 01Mexicans 14 0 01Norwegians 14 0 01Punjabis 14 0 01Albanians 13 0 01Kyrgyz 13 0 01Brazilians 13 0 01Japanese 12 0 01Abkhazians 11 0 01Kalmuks 10 0 01Other 330 0 01Not indicated 49 633 1 77Total 2 711 445 3 128 236 3 391 490 3 674 802 3 483 972 3 043 429 2 810 7611 Source 2 2 Source 3 3 Source 4 4 Source 5 5 Source 6 6 Source 7 Poles are concentrated in the Vilnius Region the area controlled by Poland in the interwar period There are especially large Polish communities in Vilnius district municipality 47 of the population and Salcininkai district municipality 76 The Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania an ethnic minority political party has strong influence in these areas and has representation in the Seimas The party is most active in local politics and controls several municipal councils Russians even though they are almost as numerous as Poles are much more evenly scattered and lack strong political cohesion The most prominent community lives in Visaginas 47 Most of them are engineers who moved with their families from the Russian SFSR to work at the Ignalina Nuclear Power Plant A number of ethnic Russians mostly military left Lithuania after the declaration of independence in 1990 Another major change in the ethnic composition of Lithuania was the extermination of the Jewish population during the Holocaust Before World War II about 7 5 of the population was Jewish they were concentrated in cities and towns and had a significant influence on crafts and business They were called Litvaks and had a strong culture The population of Vilnius sometimes nicknamed Northern Jerusalem was about 30 Jewish Almost all of these Jews were killed during the Nazi German occupation or later emigrated to the United States and Israel Now there are only about 4 000 Jews living in Lithuania Nationality and immigration EditLithuania s membership of the European Union has made Lithuanian citizenship all the more appealing Lithuanian citizenship is theoretically easier see court ruling notes below to obtain than that of many other European countries only one great grandparent is necessary to become a Lithuanian citizen Persons who held citizenship in the Republic of Lithuania prior to June 15 1940 and their children grandchildren and great grandchildren provided that these persons did not repatriate are eligible for Lithuanian citizenship 8 Lithuanian citizens are allowed to travel and work throughout the European Union without a visa or other restrictions The Lithuanian Constitutional Court ruled in November 2006 that a number of provisions of the Law of the Republic of Lithuania on citizenship are in conflict with the Lithuanian Constitution In particular the court ruled that a number of current provisions of the Citizenship Law implicitly or explicitly allowing dual citizenship are in conflict with the Constitution such provisions amounted to the unconstitutional practice of making dual citizenship a common phenomenon rather than a rare exception The provisions of the Citizenship Law announced to be unconstitutional are no longer valid and applicable to the extent stated by the Constitutional Court The Lithuanian Parliament amended the Citizenship Law substantially as a result of this court ruling allowing dual citizenship for children of at least one Lithuanian parent who are born abroad but preventing Lithuanians from retaining their Lithuanian citizenship after obtaining the citizenship of another country There are some special cases still permitting dual citizenship See Lithuanian nationality law Largest groups of foreign residents Rank Nationality Population 2019 13 1 Ukraine 16 9272 Russia 12 5293 Belarus 12 2044 Latvia 1 1005 Estonia 8266 Germany 7687 Poland 7368 United States 5079 Moldova 49010 Syria 47211 China 47012 Italy 44513 Israel 44514 Turkey 41615 Kazakhstan 39916 Azerbaijan 38217 Georgia 36918 United Kingdom 36919 Armenia 34620 Romania 305Languages EditNative languages in Lithuania 2011 census 14 Lithuanian 84 9 Russian 7 2 Polish 5 3 Belarusian 0 2 Ukrainian 0 2 Other 0 2 Two languages 0 6 Unspecified 1 4 Knowledge of foreign languages in Lithuania in 2012 according to the survey by European Commission 15 Russian 80 English 38 German 14 The Lithuanian language is the country s sole official language countrywide It is the first language of almost 85 of population and is also spoken by 286 742 out of 443 514 non Lithuanians 16 The Soviet era had imposed the official use of Russian so most adult Lithuanians are able to speak Russian as a second language while the Polish population generally speaks Polish 17 Russians who immigrated after World War II speak Russian as their first language The younger generation usually speaks English as their second language while a substantial portion of the total population 37 speak at least two foreign languages According to census of 2011 30 of the population can speak English 16 Approximately 14 800 pupils started their 2012 school year in schools where the curriculum is conducted in Russian down from 76 000 in 1991 and about 12 300 enrolled in Polish schools compared to 11 400 in 1991 and 21 700 in 2001 There are also schools in the Belarusian language as well as in English German and French 18 19 There are perhaps 50 speakers of Karaim a Turkic language spoken by Karaite Jews in Lithuania 20 Lithuanian Sign Language and Russian Sign Language are used by the deaf community Baltic Romani is spoken by the Lithuanian Roma Gypsy minority 21 Religion EditMain article Religion in Lithuania St Anne s Church VilniusAs per the 2011 census 77 2 of Lithuanians identified themselves as Roman Catholic 22 The Church has been the majority denomination since the Christianisation of Lithuania at the end of the 14th century Some priests actively led the resistance against the Communist regime symbolised by the Hill of Crosses In the first half of the 20th century the Lutheran Protestant church had around 200 000 members 9 of the total population mostly Protestant Lithuanians from the former Memel Territory and Germans but it has declined since 1945 Small Protestant communities are dispersed throughout the northern and western parts of the country Believers and clergy suffered greatly during the Soviet occupation with many killed tortured or deported to Siberia Various Protestant churches have established missions in Lithuania since 1990 23 4 1 are Orthodox 0 8 are Old Believers both mainly among the Russian minority 0 8 are Protestant and 6 1 have no religion Lithuania was historically home to a significant Jewish community and was an important center of Jewish scholarship and culture from the 18th century until the community numbering about 160 000 before World War II was almost entirely annihilated during the Holocaust 24 25 By 2011 around 3000 people in Lithuania identified themselves as Jews while around 1200 identified with Judaic religious community 26 27 According to the 2005 Eurobarometer Poll 28 12 said that they do not believe there is any sort of spirit god or life force 36 answered that they believe there is some sort of spirit or life force and 49 of Lithuanian citizens responded that they believe there is a God dead link Education EditMain article Education in Lithuania According to the 2011 census only around 0 2 of the Lithuanian population aged 10 and over were illiterate the majority of them in rural areas The proportion is similar for males and females 29 The general education system in Lithuania consists of primary basic secondary and tertiary education Primary basic and secondary or high school education is free of charge to all residents and is compulsory for pupils under 16 years of age 30 Pre primary education is also available free of charge to 5 and 6 year old children but is not compulsory Pre primary schooling is attended by about 90 of pre school age children in Lithuania 31 Primary basic and secondary education in Lithuania is available to some ethnic minorities in their native languages including Polish Russian and Belarusian Primary schooling Lithuanian pradinis ugdymas is available to children who have reached age 7 or younger should the parents so desire and lasts four years Primary school students are not assessed through a grade system instead using oral or written feedback Students begin studying their first foreign language in their second year of primary school 32 Data from the 2011 census showed that 99 1 of the population aged 20 and older have attained at least primary education while around 27 000 pupils started the first grade in 2012 33 Basic education Lithuanian pagrindinis ugdymas covers grades 5 to 10 It is provided by basic secondary youth vocational schools and gymnasiums After completing the 10th grade the students must take the basic education achievement test in the Lithuanian language mathematics and an elective basic education achievement test in their mother tongue Belarusian Polish Russian or German 30 In 2011 90 9 of the population of Lithuania aged 20 or older had attained the basic level of education 33 Secondary education Lithuanian vidurinis ugdymas in Lithuania is optional and available to students who have attained basic education It covers two years 11th 12th grades in secondary schools and 3rd 4th grades in gymnasiums At this level students have the opportunity to adapt their study plans subjects and study level to their individual preferences 32 Secondary education is completed upon passing national matura examinations These consist of as many as six separate examinations of which two Lithuanian Language and Literature and one elective subject are required to attain the diploma As of 2011 78 2 of the population of Lithuania aged 20 or older had attained the secondary level of education including secondary education provided by vocational schools 33 More than 60 of the graduates from secondary school every year choose to continue education at colleges and universities of the Lithuanian higher education system As of 2013 there were 23 universities including academies and business schools recognized as such and 24 colleges operating in Lithuania Vilnius University founded in 1579 is the oldest and largest university in Lithuania More than 48 000 students enrolled in all higher education programmes in Lithuania in 2011 including level I professional bachelor and bachelor level II masters and level III doctorate studies 34 Higher education in Lithuania is partly state funded with free of charge access to higher education constitutionally guaranteed to students deemed good There are also scholarships available to the best students See also EditLithuania Lithuanians in Brazil Ethnic history of the Vilnius region Russians in Lithuania Aging of Europe Lithuania portalNotes Edit a b Letukiene Nijole Gineika Petras 2003 Istorija Politologija kurso santrauka istorijos egzaminui in Lithuanian Vilnius Alma littera 182 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Statistical numbers probably accepted in historiography the sources their treatment the procedure of counting is not discussed in this book are given according which in 1260 there were about 0 27 million Lithuanians of 0 4 million of a whole population in percentage 67 5 a b Bjorn Wiemer Dialect and language contacts on the territory of the Grand Duchy from the 15th century until 1939 Kurt Braunmuller Gisella Ferraresi Aspects of multilingualism in European language history John Benjamins Publishing Company 2003 ISBN 90 272 1922 2 Google Print p 109 125 Letukiene N Istorija Politologija kurso santrauka istorijos egzaminui 2003 p 182 There can be found also different numbers for example Kevin O Connor The history of the Baltic States Greenwood Publishing Group 2003 ISBN 0 313 32355 0 Google Print p 17 Here author estimates that there were 9 million inhabitants in GDL and 1 million of them were ethnic Lithuanians by 1387 Based on 1493 population map p 92 from Iwo Cyprian Pogonowski Poland a Historical Atlas Hippocrene Books 1987 ISBN 0 88029 394 2 Jarmo Kotilaine Russia s foreign trade and economic expansion in the seventeenth century windows on the world BRILL 2005 ISBN 90 04 13896 X Google Print p 45 in Lithuanian Lietuvos Didziosios kunigaikstystes kanceliarines slavu kalbos termino nusakymo problema Archived 2009 07 10 at the Wayback Machine Z Zinkevicius Daniel Z Stone A History of East Central Europe p 4 52 World Population Prospects Population Division United Nations esa un org Retrieved 2018 08 26 Official Statistics Portal Official Statistics Lithuania Statistics Lithuania Vital Statistics Gyventoju ir bustu surasymai Oficialiosios statistikos portalas Archived copy Archived from the original on 2020 06 29 Retrieved 2020 05 16 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Statistics Lithuania census 2011 GYVENTOJAI PAGAL TAUTYBe GIMTAJA KALBA IR TIKYBA Eurobarometer Europeans and their languages 2012 factsheet Lithuania PDF a b Census 2011 GYVENTOJAI PAGAL ISSILAVINIMA IR KALBŲ MOKĖJIMA PDF Vitold Jancis What is happening to the Russian language in Lithuania dw com Retrieved 2017 06 07 General school pupils Statistics Lithuania Initiative Schulen Partner der Zukunft Hermann Sudermann Gymnasium Klaipeda UNESCO Audio visual resources Archived 2011 12 28 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2011 09 12 Roma and Romani in Lithuania in the 21st century Department of Statistics to the Government of the Republic of Lithuania Ethnicity mother tongue and religion Archived from the original on 2014 10 08 2013 03 15 United Methodists evangelize in Lithuania with ads brochures Umc org 11 August 2006 Retrieved 25 April 2010 Arunas Bubnys 2004 Holocaust in Lithuania An Outline of the Major Stages and Their Results The Vanished World of Lithuanian Jews Rodopi pp 218 219 ISBN 90 420 0850 4 Lithuania Holocaust Encyclopedia United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Retrieved 12 April 2012 Census 2011 Population by ethnicity and municipality Statistics Lithuania Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 28 October 2013 Census 2011 Population by religious community indicated municipalities Statistics Lithuania Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 28 October 2013 Eurobarometer on Social Values Science and technology 2005 PDF p 11 Archived from the original PDF on 2006 05 24 Retrieved 2007 05 05 Statistics Lithuania 2011 Census Population by educational attainment and command of languages Archived 2013 11 02 at the Wayback Machine a b Ministry of Education and Science Education Lower secondary education Archived 2013 11 05 at the Wayback Machine Ministry of Education and Science Education Pre school education a b Government of the Republic of Lithuania The Official Gateway of Lithuania Education System Archived 2013 11 05 at the Wayback Machine a b c Statistics Lithuania 2011 Census Population by educational attainment age group and municipality Archived 2013 11 05 at the Wayback Machine Ministry of Education and Science of the Republic of Lithuania Lietuvos svietimas skaiciais 2012External links Editstatistics about education in Lithuania PDF Key results of Lithuanian census 2020 Population pyramid of Lithuania Suicide statistics as of 2005 Lith Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Demographics of Lithuania amp oldid 1149656674, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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