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German diaspora

The German diaspora (German: Deutschstämmige) consists of German people and their descendants who live outside of Germany. The term is used in particular to refer to the aspects of migration of German speakers from Central Europe to different countries around the world. This definition describes the "German" term as a sociolinguistic group as opposed to the national one since the emigrant groups came from different regions with diverse cultural practices and different varieties of German. For instance, the Alsatians and Hessians were often simply called "Germans" once they set foot in their new homelands.[citation needed]

Terminology Edit

Volksdeutsche ("ethnic Germans") is a historical term which arose in the early 20th century and was used by the Nazis to describe ethnic Germans, without German citizenship, living outside of Nazi Germany, although many had been in other areas for centuries. During World War II, Hitler forbade the use of the term because it was being used in a derogatory way against the many ethnic Germans in the SS. It is used by many historians who either deliberately or innocently are unaware of its Nazi history.

Auslandsdeutsche (adj. auslandsdeutsch) is a concept that connotes German citizens, regardless of which ethnicity, living abroad, or alternatively ethnic Germans entering Germany from abroad. Today, this means a citizen of Germany living more or less permanently in another country (including expatriates such as long-term academic exchange lecturers and the like), who are allowed to vote in the Republic's elections, but who usually do not pay taxes to Germany but in their resident states. In a looser but still valid sense, and in general discourse, the word is frequently used in lieu of the ideologically tainted term Volksdeutsche, denoting persons living abroad without German citizenship but defining themselves as Germans (culturally or ethnically speaking).

Distribution Edit

 
Map of the German diaspora in the world by population:
  Germany
  + 10,000,000
  + 1,000,000
  + 100,000
  + 10,000

Ethnic Germans are a minority group in many countries. The following sections briefly detail the historical and present distribution of ethnic Germans by region, but generally exclude modern expatriates, who have a presence in the United States, Scandinavia and major urban areas worldwide. See Groups at bottom for a list of all ethnic German groups, or continue for a summary by region.

In the United States census of 1990, 57 million people identified as being fully or partly of German ancestry, forming the largest single ethnic group in the country[note 1] as well as the largest population of Germans outside of Germany. According to the United States Ancestry Census of 2009, there were 50,764,352 people of German descent in the U.S.[1] People of German ancestry form an important minority group in several countries, including Canada (roughly 10% of the population), Argentina (roughly 8% of the population), Brazil (roughly 3% of the population),[2] Australia (roughly 4.5% of the population),[3] Chile (roughly 3% of the population, Namibia and in central and eastern Europe—(Poland, Hungary, Romania, and Russia).

Distribution of German citizens and people claiming German ancestry (figures are only estimates and actual population could be higher, because of wrongly[vague] formulated questions in censuses in various countries (for example in Poland)[4] and other different factors, f.e. related to participant in a census):

Country German ancestry German citizens Comments
  United States 46,882,727 (2012) (almost all German Americans come from Germany)[5][note 2] 132,000 [2](2019) see German American; the largest German population outside Germany.
  Brazil 12,000,000 (2000)[6] 13,500 [3][failed verification] see German Brazilian; the second largest German population outside Germany.
  Argentina 3,500,000 (majority come from Russia and Germany)[7][8][9] 50,000[8] see German Argentine.
  Canada 3,322,405 (2016) (majority come from Germany)[10] 146,000 see German Canadian.
  South Africa 1,200,000 (2009)[11][12][note 3] 17,000 [4] see Afrikaners/Germans in South Africa.
  Australia 1,026,138 (2021)[13] 107,940 see German Australian.
  France 1,000,000 (2010)[14][15][note 4] 130,000 [5] see Alsace and Lorraine.
  Chile 500,000[16] 8,515 see German Chilean.
   Switzerland see note[note 5] 450,000 see German immigration to Switzerland and Swiss people.
  Russia 394,138 (2010) (majority come from Prussia) 142,000 [6] see Germans in Russia, Volga Germans, Caucasus Germans, Black Sea Germans and Crimea Germans.
  Bolivia 375,000 (2014)[17] see Ethnic Germans in Bolivia.
  Netherlands 372,720 (2013)[18][19] 79,470 [7]
  Italy 314,604 (2011)[20][note 6] 35,000 [8] see German-Italian relations
  Paraguay 290,000 (2000)[21]
  United Kingdom 273,654 (2011)[22][note 7] 92,000[23] see German migration to the United Kingdom.
  Uruguay 250,000 (2014)[24] 6,000[25]
  Peru 240,000[26] see German Peruvian
  Kazakhstan 178,409 (2009)[27]
see Germans in Kazakhstan.
  Hungary 131,951 (2011)[28] 178,000 see Germans of Hungary.
  Austria see note[note 8] 170,475[29] see Austrians.
  Poland 148,000 (2011)[30] 120,000 see German minority in Poland.
  Spain 138,917 (2014)[31] 112,000 [9] see Germany-Spain relations
  Sweden 115,550 (2013)[32] 20,000 [10] see Germany–Sweden relations
  Israel 100,000[33] see Sarona (colony), German Colony, Haifa and German Colony, Jerusalem
  Mexico 75,000 including those of partial ancestry Burchard, Gretha (abril de 2010). [34] see German Mexican
  Belgium 73,000 (2008)[note 9] 29,324 [11] (Recognized) see German-speaking Community of Belgium.
  Romania c. 22,900 (as per the 2021 Romanian census)[35] 34,071 (according to Eurostat)[36] see Germans of Romania (e.g. Transylvanian Saxons, Banat Swabians, Sathmar Swabians, Bukovina Germans, or Zipser Germans).
  Ukraine 33,302 (2001) see Black Sea Germans and Crimea Germans.
  Namibia 30,000 (2013)[37] see German Namibian.
  Dominican Republic 25,000[38] 1,792 (2012)[39]
  Norway 25,000 (2012)[40] 10,000 [41] see Germany-Norway relations
  Czech Republic 18,772 (2011)[42] 21,267 Germans in the Czech Republic see Germans in the Czech Republic.
  Portugal Unknown number of individuals of German descent 20,500 (2022)[43] In addition, around 400 Germans have acquired Portuguese citizenship since 2008.[44] see Immigration to Portugal
  Greece 15,498[45] see Greece-Germany relations.
  Guyana 13,000 (majority come from Russia and Germany)[46][8][9] 15,000[8] Germans living in Guyana
  Denmark 15,000[47][48] 15,000 see North Schleswig Germans.
  New Zealand 12,810 (2013)[49] see German New Zealander.
  Cuba 12,387 see German Cuban
  India 10,000-12,000 see Germans in India
  Luxembourg see note[note 10] 12,000 see Luxembourgers.
  Ireland 10,000 (2006)[50] 11,305[51]
  Belize 10,865 (2010)[52] see Mennonites in Belize.
  Costa Rica 10,000
  Guatemala Unknown number of individuals of German descent[53] 7,000-10,000 (2010)[54] see German Guatemalan
  Slovakia 5,000–10,000[55] see Carpathian Germans, Zipser Germans
  Finland 8,894 (2019)[56] 4,102 (2018)[57] Germans in Finland
  Kyrgyzstan 8,563 (2014) see Germans in Kyrgyzstan.
  Philippines 6,400[58] see German settlement in the Philippines.
  Latvia 4,975 (2014)
  Serbia 4,064 (2011) 850 (2016)[59] see Germans of Serbia.
  Uzbekistan 3945[60] see Demographics of Uzbekistan
  Croatia 2,965 (2011)[61] see Germans of Croatia.
  Lithuania 2,418 (2011)
  Estonia 1,544 (2011)
  Iceland 842 (2013)
  Montenegro 131[62] 752[63]
  Jamaica Unknown number of individuals of German descent 300 see Germans in Jamaica.
  Liechtenstein see note[note 11] see Liechtensteiners.
  Nicaragua Unknown number of individuals of German descent see German Nicaraguan.
  Venezuela see German Venezuelan.

Europe Edit

 
German language area in 1910–11, the boundaries of states are in red. Pan-German nationalists wanted to unite much of the green areas into one German nation-state.

Alpine nations Edit

 
Ethnic Germans in Hungary and parts of adjacent Austrian territories, census 1890

Austria, Switzerland, and Liechtenstein each have a German-speaking majority, though the vast majority of the population do not identify themselves as German anymore. Austrians historically were identified as and considered themselves Germans until after the defeat of Nazi Germany and the end of World War II. Post-1945 a broader Austrian national identity began to emerge, and over 90% of the Austrians now see themselves as an independent nation.[64][65][66]

East-Central Europe Edit

Aside from the Germans who migrated to other parts of Europe, the German diaspora also covered the Eastern and Central European states such as Croatia, Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia, along with several post-Soviet states. There has been a continued historical presence of Germans in these regions due to the interrelated processes of conquest and colonization as well as migration and border changes.[67] During the periods of colonization, for instance, there was an influx of Germans who came to Bohemia and parts of Romania as colonizers. Settlements due to border changes were largely 20th century developments caused by the new political order after the two world wars.[67]

Baltic states Edit

Belgium Edit

In Belgium, there is an ethnic German minority. It is the majority in its region of 71,000 inhabitants. Ethnologue puts the national total of German speakers at 150,000, not including Limburgish and Luxembourgish.

Bulgaria Edit

Czech Republic and Slovakia Edit

Before World War II, some 30% of the population in Czechia (historically known as Bohemia) were ethnic Germans, and in the border regions and certain other areas they were in the majority.[68] There are about 21,000 Germans in the Czech Republic (number of Czechs who have at least partly German ancestry probably runs into the hundreds of thousands).[69] Their number has been consistently decreasing since World War II. According to the 2011 census, there remain 11 municipalities and settlements in Czech Republic with more than 6% Germans.

The situation in Slovakia was different from that in Czech Republic, in that the number of Germans was considerably lower and that the Germans from Slovakia were almost completely evacuated to German states as the Soviet army was moving west through Slovakia, and only a fraction of those who returned to Slovakia after the end of the war were deported with the Germans from the Czech lands.

Many representatives of expellee organizations support the erection of bilingual signs in all formerly German-speaking territory as a visible sign of the bilingual linguistic and cultural heritage of the region. The erection of bilingual signs is permitted if a minority constitutes 10% of the population.

Denmark Edit

In Denmark, the part of Schleswig that is now South Jutland County (or Northern Schleswig) is inhabited by about 12,000–20,000 ethnic Germans[70] They speak mainly Standard German and South Jutlandic. A few speak Schleswigsch, a Northern Low Saxon dialect.

France Edit

In France over 100,000 German nationals residing in the French country (the exact number is not known, some statistics indicate more than 300,000 Germans in France but are not officially sanctioned.) There, the Germans live mainly in the northeastern area of France, i.e., in regions close to the Franco-German border (i.e. Alsace), and the island of Corsica.

Hungary Edit

Prior to World War II, approximately 1.5 million Danube Swabians lived in Hungary, Romania, and Yugoslavia.[71] Today the German minority in Hungary have minority rights, organisations, schools and local councils, but spontaneous assimilation is well under way. Many of the deportees visited their old homes after the fall of the Iron Curtain in 1990. Around 178,000 Germans live in Hungary.

Italy Edit

 
Map of Austria-Hungary in 1911, showing areas inhabited by ethnic Germans in pink

There are smaller, unique populations of Germans who arrived so long ago that their dialect retains many archaic features heard nowhere else: the Cimbrians are concentrated in various communities in the Carnic Alps, north of Verona, and especially in the Sugana Valley on the high plateau northwest of Vicenza in the Veneto region; the Walsers, who originated in the Swiss Wallis, live in the provinces of Aostatal, Vercelli, and Verbano-Cusio-Ossola; the Mòchenos live in the Fersina Valley. Smaller German-speaking communities also exist in the Friuli Venezia Giulia region: the Carinthians in the Canale Valley (municipalities of Tarvisio, Malborghetto Valbruna and Pontebba) and the Zahren and Timau Germans in Carnia.

Contrarily to the before-mentioned minorities, the German-speaking population of the province of South Tyrol cannot be categorized as "ethnic German" according to the definition of this article, but as Austrian minority. However, as Austrians saw themselves as ethnic Germans until the end of World War II they can technically also be called Germans.[72] The province was part of the Austrian County of Tyrol before the 1919 dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. South Tyrolians were part of the over 3 million German speaking Austrians who in 1918 found themselves living outside of the newborn Austrian Republic as minorities in the newly formed or enlarged respective states of Czechoslovakia, Romania, Yugoslavia, Hungary and Italy. Their dialect is Austro-Bavarian German. Both standard German and dialect are used in schooling and media. German enjoys co-official status with the national language of Italian throughout this region.

Germans have been present in the Iglesiente mining region in the south west of Sardinia since the 13th century.[73] Successively since 1850 groups of specialised workers from Styria, Austria, followed by German miners from Freiburg settled in the same area. Some Germans influenced building and toponym is still visible in this area.[74][75]

Norway Edit

In Norway, there are 27,770 Germans making them the ninth largest ethnic minority in the country, thus constituting 0.52% of Norway's total population, and 2.94% of all foreign residents in Norway.[76] Immigration from Germany to Norway has occurred on since the Middle Ages. There have been many Germans who migrated to Bergen during the Middle Ages and also during Norway's union with Denmark. During the Union with Denmark, a lot of German miners migrated to the town of Kongsberg.[77] As of 2020, there are 1,446 Germans in the city of Bergen, making up 0.51% of the total population, and in the town of Kongsberg there are 114 Germans, making up 0.41% of the total population respectively. The city with the biggest population of Germans is Oslo. 3,743 Germans live in the city, thereby making up 0.55% of the total population.[78] Germany is also the country that sends the most foreign exchange students to Norway, in 2016, 1,570 exchange students came to Norway from Germany.[79]

Poland Edit

 
German minority in Poland, 1925

The remaining German minority in Poland (109,000 people were registered in the 2011 census[80]) enjoys minority rights according to Polish minority law. There are German speakers throughout Poland, and most of the Germans live in the Opole Voivodeship in Silesia. Bilingual signs are posted in some towns of the region. In addition, there are bilingual schools and German can be used instead of Polish in dealings with officials in several towns.

Portugal Edit

As of December 2022, there are 20,500 German nationals residing in Portugal.[43] This number only include foreign nationals and thus excludes German citizens who have acquired Portuguese citizenship (around 400 people since 2008) as well as Portuguese people of German descent.[44]

 
German cemetery in Campo de Ourique

Around 6,000 Germans live in the municipalities of Lisbon, Oeiras, Sintra or Cascais, in the Portuguese Riviera.[81] On the other hand, around 5,000 Germans live in the southern region of Algarve.[82] The German community is especially noticeable in Lisbon and Porto. Each city hosts an German Evangelical Church, a German school and offers German libraries. There is also a German church as well as a German school in Algarve while Madeira hosts a German Evangelical Church.[83][84][85] Lisbon also hosts a Catholic German Church and a German cemetery since 1821.[86][87][88][89] Many Luso-Germans have acquired fame throughout the years. Individuals of the community include Alfredo Keil (1850-1907), composer of A Portuguesa, the Portuguese national anthem, archaeologist Virgínia Rau (1907-1973), banker and industrialist António Champalimaud (1918-2004), architect Francisco Keil do Amaral (1910-1975) and former prime minister Ernesto Hintze Ribeiro (1849-1907). Contemporary figures of German descent include football player Diego Moreira, Eurovision song contest winner Salvador Sobral, surfer Nic von Rupp, actresses Catarina Wallenstein and Vera Kolodzig, and tennis player Maria João Koehler. Amongst the most notable Luso-Germans there is undoubtedly João Frederico Ludovice, who was commissioned the project for the Mafra National Palace in 1711.

Romania Edit

As of 2022, according to the 2021 Romanian census (postponed one year because of the COVID-19 pandemic), there were circa 22,900 ethnic Germans recorded in Romania.

Since the High Middle Ages, the territory of present-day Romania has been continuously inhabited by German-speaking groups, firstly by Transylvanian Saxons then, gradually, by other immigrant groups of ethnic German origin. They are all politically represented by the Democratic Forum of Germans in Romania (FDGR/DFDR).

Sweden Edit

During the 11th century, Sweden was visited by missionaries from Germany. During the Middle Ages, Hanseatic merchants had a great influence on Swedish trade and also the Swedish language. According to a survey, the proportion of German loanwords in Swedish is 24–30 percent (slightly depending on how you calculate). During the period of great power, a number of German congregations were formed in Sweden. Including Karlskrona German parish, which then became part of Karlskrona Admiralty parish. Today, there are two more active German congregations in Sweden. They are part of the parishes of the Church of Sweden, the German Christinae parish and the German St. Gertrude's parish consists of German citizens or Swedes of German origin. In connection with the two world wars, several German children of war came to Sweden. Between the late 1940s and early 1990s, many East German refugees also came to Sweden. On 31 December 2014, there were 49,359 people in Sweden who were born in Germany, of whom 23,195 were men (47.0%) and 26,164 women (53.0%).[citation needed] The corresponding figure for 31 December 2000 was 38,155, of which 16,965 men (44.5%) and 21,190 women (55.5%).[citation needed]There were 28,172 people in Sweden with German citizenship.[citation needed] In 2019, according to Statistics Sweden, German immigrants together with the Chinese were the most highly educated who migrate to Sweden, with a proportion of 70 per cent who are highly educated, which is well above the average for Sweden's population which is 30 per cent.[citation needed] Around 29,505 German Citizens living in Sweden in 2020.

United Kingdom Edit

In the United Kingdom, a German-Briton ethnic group of around 300,000 exists. Some are descended from nineteenth-century immigrants. Others are 20th-century immigrants and their descendants, and World War II prisoners of war held in Great Britain who decided to stay there. Others arrived as spouses of English soldiers from post-war marriages in Germany, when the British were occupying forces. Many of the more recent immigrants have settled in the London and southeast part of England, in particular, Richmond (South West London).

The British Royal Family are partially descended from German monarchs.

Due to Brexit, the number of Germans in the UK has declined significantly, in 2021 there were only 135,000 Germans in the UK.[90]

Africa Edit

 
Examples of German language signage in Namibia

During the long decline of the Roman Empire and the ensuing great migrations Germanic tribes such as the Vandals (who sacked Rome) migrated into North Africa and settled mainly in the lands corresponding to modern Tunisia and northeastern Algeria. While it is likely that some of the people living there at present are descended from these Germanic peoples, they did not leave visible cultural traces.

Cameroon Edit

The first German trading post in the Duala area on the Kamerun River delta was established in 1868 by the Hamburg trading company C. Woermann. The firm's agent in Gabon, Johannes Thormählen, expanded activities to the Kamerun River delta. In 1874, together with the Woermann agent in Liberia, Wilhelm Jantzen, the two merchants founded their own company, Jantzen & Thormählen there. At the outbreak of World War I, French, Belgian and British troops invaded the German colony in 1914 and fully occupied it during the Kamerun campaign. The last German fort to surrender was the one at Mora in the north of the colony in 1916. Following Germany's defeat, the Treaty of Versailles divided the territory into two League of Nations mandates (Class B) under the administration of Great Britain and France. French Cameroun and part of British Cameroons reunified in 1961 as Cameroon, though some Germans still remain in Cameroon.

Namibia Edit

Germany was not as involved in colonizing Africa as other major European powers of the 20th century, and lost its overseas colonies, including German East Africa and German South West Africa, after World War I. Similarly to those in Latin America, the Germans in Africa tended to isolate themselves and were more self-sufficient than other Europeans. In Namibia there are 30,000 ethnic Germans, though it is estimated that only a third of those retain the language. Most German-speakers live in the capital, Windhoek, and in smaller towns such as Swakopmund and Lüderitz, where German architecture is highly visible.

South Africa Edit

In South Africa, a number of Afrikaners and Boers are of partial German ancestry, being the descendants of German immigrants who intermarried with Dutch settlers and adopted Afrikaans as their mother tongue. Professor JA Heese in his book Die Herkoms van die Afrikaner (The Origins of Afrikaners) claims the modern Afrikaners (who total around 3.5 million) have 34.4% German ancestry.[91]

Germans also emigrated to South Africa during the 1850s and 1860s, and settled in the Eastern Cape area around Stutterheim, and in Kwazulu-Natal in the Wartburg area, where there is still a large German-speaking community.[92] Mostly originating from different waves of immigration during the 19th and 20th centuries, an estimated 12,000 people speak German or a German variety as a first language in South Africa.[93] Germans settled quite extensively in South Africa, with many Calvinists immigrating from Northern Europe. Later on, more Germans settled in the KwaZulu-Natal and elsewhere. Here, one of the largest communities are the speakers of "Nataler Deutsch", a variety of Low German, who are concentrated in and around Wartburg. German is slowly disappearing elsewhere, but a number of communities still have a large number of speakers and some even have German language schools. Around 17 000 German Nationals lived in South Africa in 2020

Tanzania Edit

When mainland Tanzania, Rwanda, and Burundi were under German control they were named German East Africa and received some migration from German communities. After Tanganyika and Ruanda-Urundi became British and Belgian mandates following Germany's defeat in World War I, some of these communities remained. There is a small community of Germans remaining in Tanzania.[citation needed]

North America Edit

 
Counties where German ancestry (light blue) is the plurality in the United States, 2000
 
People who have self-identified as having German ancestors are the plurality in many parts of the Prairie provinces (areas coloured in grey).

In the United States are ca. 160,000 German Citizens Registered.

  • Belize: 5,763 Mennonite Low-German speakers.
  • Canada (3.3 million, 9,6% of the population), see also German Canadians.
  • Mexico: See German immigration to Mexico, 22% of Mennonites also speak Low German which is not Standard German but derived from Old Saxon, 30% speak Spanish, 5% speak English and 5% speak Russian as a second language.[94] Sources estimate that there are around 15,000 German citizens and Mexicans of German-citizen origin account for about 75,000 today.[95] Also of note, the 'Colegio Alemán Alexander von Humboldt', or Alexander von Humboldt school in Mexico City is the largest German school outside Germany.
  • In the United States, "German" has been the largest self-identified ancestry group since 1990. There are around 50 million Americans of at least partial German ancestry in the United States, or 17% of the U.S. population, the country's largest self-reported ancestral group.[96] including various groups such as the Pennsylvania Dutch. Of these, 23 million are of German ancestry alone ("single ancestry"), and another 27 million are of partial German ancestry, making them the largest group in the United States, followed by the Irish. Of those who claim partial ancestry, 22 million identify their primary ancestry ("first ancestry") as German. The 22 million Americans of primarily German ancestry are by far the largest part of the German diaspora, a figure equal to over a quarter of the population of Germany itself. Germans form just under half the population in the Upper Midwest.[97][98]
  • Central America: In 1940, there were 16,000 Germans living in Central America; half of them in Guatemala, and most of the remainder were established in Costa Rica.[99]

South America Edit

 
German Argentines celebrate Oktoberfest in Villa General Belgrano.
 
German population in Southern Brazil:
  Less than 1% of population (Uruguay)
  Between 1 – 5% of population (State of São Paulo)
  Between 5 – 10% of population (State of Paraná)
  Between 10 – 25% of population (State of Rio Grande do Sul)
  Around 35% of population (State of Santa Catarina)
 
Mennonites in San Ignacio, Paraguay
  • Argentina: Those of German ancestry constitute about 8% of the Argentine population — over 3 million — most of them Volga Germans alone — about 2 million.[100] There are more than 400,000 of other German ancestries including Mennonites and German Swiss. These two groups are more common in Southern Argentina, and also in Santa Fe, Entre Rios and Cordoba provinces. A notable example is the town of Villa General Belgrano, founded by Germans in the 1930s. In the 1960s it became the site of the Fiesta Nacional de la Cerveza, or Oktoberfest, which has become a major attraction in Argentina.[101] By 1940, there were 250,000 people of German descent living in the country.[99] The German embassy in Argentina estimates that 660,000 Argentines, or 1.5% of the total population, are descendants of Germans who emigrated directly from Germany (It means that it doesn't includes other ethnic Germans who emigrated from Austria, Switzerland, Russia/USSR, etc.).[102][103] 50,000 German citizens live in Argentina.[8]
Nazi Minister Walther Darré was born in Argentina. After the Second World War, almost a thousand prominent Nazi leaders and politicians fled to Argentina. Adolf Eichmann and Josef Mengele were among them. Kurt Tank, who developed some of the greatest World War II aircraft fighters, also entered Argentina in the late 1940s.[104]
There are about 500,000 German-speakers in Argentina,[105] slightly over 1% of population.

Furthermore, a wave of Ashkenazi immigrants came after the rise of Nazism in 1933, followed by as many as 19,000 German Jews. From 1939 until the end of World War II, immigration was put to a halt by anti-immigrant feelings in the country and restrictions on immigration from Germany.

In the 1980s, thousands of German Colombians emigrated back to West Germany due to the Colombian armed conflict. However, this trend began to decline in the late 2000s (decade) as living standards rose sharply after the Colombian economic boom.

  • Bolivia: There are two different German groups, the descendants of those who emigrated from Germany and Brazil (estimated in about a quarter of million, 2.0% of Bolivian population[106]), and the descendants of Mennonites that emigrated from Canada and Mexico (at least 85,000 of them live in agrarian communities).[107][108] Germans are 237,000 or 2,5% of Bolivian population.[109]
There are over 20,000 Standard German-speakers,[106] plus 85,000 Mennonite Low German-speakers.[107]
  • Brazil: Mostly living in Southern Brazil. Brazil received 250,000 Germans between the 19th and 20th centuries. According to Born and Dickgiesser (1989, p. 55) the number of Brazilians of German descent in 1986 was 3.6 million. According to a 1999 survey by IBGE researcher Simon Schwartzman, in a representative sample of the Brazilian population 3,6% said they had German ancestry, a percentage that in a population of about 200 million amount to 7.2 million descendants.[110] In 2004, Deutsche Welle cited the number of 5 million Brazilians of German descent.[111] Hunsrückisch and East Pomeranian are some of the most prominent groups.[112][113]
By 1940, the German diaspora in Brazil amounted about a million.[99]

Around 14,000 German Citizens Registered in Brazil.

There are 3 million German-speakers in Brazil,[105] slightly over 1.5% of population.
  • Chile: The German-Chilean Chamber of Commerce estimated at 500,000 the descendants of Germans, about 3% of the total population of Chile estimated at 16 million (in the same source).[114] There are 40,000 Standard German-speakers.[115]
  • Ecuador: Ecuador has only few people of German descent. Notable is a small German population on the Island of Floreana (Galapagos): Between 1929 and circa 1950 roughly half a dozen Aussteigers were living on the Island. In 1934 three of them died under unclear circumstances, these events caused international media attention called Galapagos-affair. Today, the descendants of the Floreana-Germans have been assimilated into the local Ecuadorian population or re-immigrated to Germany.[116][117]
  • Paraguay : 166,000 Standard German-speakers (including 18,000 Mennonites, who don't speak Plattdeutsch or Mennonite Low German), most Germans in Paraguay are of Brazilian descent and Portuguese speakers;[106] plus 20,000 Mennonite Low German, spoken by Mennonites who live in Chaco and Eastern Paraguay[106] The Mennonites emigrated to Paraguay from Chihuahua State (in Mexico), the Soviet Union, Canada, and Bolivia.[118][119] Non-Mennonites German emigrated to Paraguay mainly from Brazil, the Kingdom of Prussia, and the German Empire.[119]
Those of German ancestry are 290,000 or 4.4% of Paraguayan population.[21]

Asia Edit

In Japan, during the Meiji period (1868–1912), many Germans came to work in Japan as advisors to the new government. Despite Japan's isolationism and geographic distance, there have been a few Germans in Japan, since Germany's and Japan's fairly parallel modernization made Germans ideal O-yatoi gaikokujin. (See also Germany–Japan relations)

In China, the German trading colony of Jiaozhou Bay in what is now Qingdao existed until 1914, and did not leave much more than breweries, including Tsingtao Brewery.

Smaller numbers of ethnic Germans immigrated in the former Southeast Asian territories of Malaysia (British), Indonesia (Dutch) and the Philippines (American) in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[citation needed] In Indonesia, some of them became well-known figures in history, such as C.G.C. Reinwardt (founder and first director of Bogor Botanical Garden), Walter Spies (German of Russian origin, who became the artist that made Bali known to the world), and Franz Wilhelm Junghuhn (owner of a big plantation in the south of Bandung and dubbed "the Humboldt of the East" because of his ethno-geographical notes).

Members of the German religious group known as Templers settled in Palestine in the late 19th century and lived there for several generations, but were expelled by the British from Mandatory Palestine during World War II, due to pro-Nazi sympathies expressed by many of them.

Communist East Germany had relations with Vietnam and Uganda in Africa, but in these cases population movement went mostly to, not from, Germany. After the German reunification, a large percentage of "guest workers" from Communist nations sent to East Germany returned to their home countries.

See also: German colonial empire and List of former German colonies

Oceania Edit

 
People with German ancestry as a percentage of the population in Australia divided geographically by statistical local area, as of the 2011 census
  • Australia has received a significant number of ethnic-German immigrants from Germany and elsewhere. Numbers vary depending on who is counted, but moderate criteria give an estimate of 750,000 (4% of the population). The first wave of German immigration to Australia began in 1838, with the arrival of Prussian Lutheran settlers in South Australia (see German settlement in Australia). After the Second World War, Australia received a large influx of displaced ethnic Germans. In the 1950s and 1960s, German immigration continued as part of a large post-war wave of European immigration to Australia.

There have been ethnic Germans in Australia since the founding of the New South Wales colony in 1788, Governor Arthur Phillip (the first Governor of New South Wales) had a German father. But, the first significant wave of German immigration was in 1838. These Germans, mostly Prussian immigrants (but also winegrowers from the Hesse-Nassau state and the Rheingau). From there after, thousands of Germans emigrated to Australia until World War I. Also, German Australian was the most identified ethnicity behind English and Irish in Australia until World War I.

After World War II, large numbers of Germans emigrated to Australia to escape war-torn Europe.

  • New Zealand has received modest, but steady, ethnic German immigration from the mid-19th century. Today the number of New Zealanders with German ancestry is estimated to be approximately 200,000 (5% of the population). Many German New Zealanders anglicized their names during the 20th century due to the negative perception of Germans fostered by World War I and World War II. New Zealanders of German descent include the late former Prime Minister David Lange. The vast majority of Germans in New Zealand settled in the North Island, with a couple settling in the Christchurch area. Cities such as Tauranga, Nelson and, to a lesser extent, Auckland have been somewhat influenced by German culture and values.

History Edit

 
German eastward expansion 895—1400
 
Map depicting the distribution of the German diaspora during the early 20th century

From Celtic times the early Germanic tribes settled from the Baltic all the way to the Black Sea until the great migrations of the 4-6th century AD.

Medieval Germans migrated eastwards during the medieval period Ostsiedlung until the flight, evacuation and expulsion of Germans after World War II; many areas in Central and Eastern Europe had an ethnic German population.[123][124] In the Middle Ages, Germans were invited to migrate to Poland and the central and eastern regions of the German Holy Roman Empire and also the Kingdom of Hungary following the Mongol invasions of the 12th century, and then once again during the late 17th century after the Austrian-Ottoman wars to set up farms and repopulate the eastern regions of the Austrian Empire and Balkans.

The Nazi government termed such ethnic Germans Volksdeutsche, regardless of how long they had been residents of other countries. (Now they would be considered Auslandsdeutsche). During World War II, Nazi Germany classified ethnic Germans as Übermenschen, while Jews, Gypsies, Slavic peoples, mainly ethnic Poles and Serbs, along with Black and mixed-race people were called Untermenschen. After the war, Central European nations such as Poland, the Czechoslovakia, Hungary, as well as the Soviet Union in Eastern Europe, and Yugoslavia in the Balkan region of Southern Europe, expelled most of the ethnic Germans living in their territories.

There were significant ethnic German populations in such areas as Romania, Moldova, and Ukraine at one time. As recently as 1990, there were one million standard German speakers and 100,000 Plautdietsch speakers in Kazakhstan alone[citation needed], and 38,000, 40,000 and 101,057 standard German speakers in Ukraine, Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan, respectively.[citation needed]

There were reportedly 500,000 ethnic Germans in Poland in 1998.[125] Recent official figures show 147,000 (as of 2002).[126] Of the 745,421 Germans in Romania in 1930,[127] only about 60,000 remain.[128] In Hungary the situation is quite similar, with only about 220,000.[129] There are up to one million Germans in the former Soviet Union, mostly in a band from southwestern Russia and the Volga valley, through Omsk and Altai Krai (597,212 Germans in Russia, 2002 Russian census) to Kazakhstan (353,441 Germans in Kazakhstan, 1999 Kazakhstan census). Germany admitted approximately 1.63 million ethnic Germans from the former Soviet Union between 1990 and 1999.[130]

These Auslandsdeutsche, as they are now generally known, have been streaming out of the former Eastern Bloc since the early 1990s. For example, many ethnic Germans from the former Soviet Union have taken advantage of the German Law of Return, a policy which grants citizenship to all those who can prove to be a refugee or expellee of German ethnic origin or the spouse or descendant of such a person. This exodus has occurred despite the fact that many of the ethnic Germans from the former Soviet Union were highly assimilated and spoke little or no German.

Historical countries Edit

Former Soviet Union Edit

Former Yugoslavia Edit

According to the 1921 census, the German community was the largest minority group in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia (505,790 inhabitants or 4.22%).[131]

Groupings Edit

 
German Namibians in Keetmanshoop, 1926

Note that many of these groups have since migrated elsewhere. This list simply gives the region with which they are associated, and does not include people from countries with German as an official national language. In general, it also omits some collective terms in common use defined by political border changes where this is antithetical to the current structure.[clarification needed] Such terms include:

Roughly grouped:

In the Americas, one can divide the groups by current nation of residence:

Heavy concentration of German, Austrian and Swiss descendants in Southern Chile. (German Chileans).

...or by ethnic or religious criteria:

In Africa, Oceania, and East/Southeast Asia

German-language media worldwide Edit

 
Distribution of native German speakers in the world today

A visible sign of the geographical extension of the German language is the German-language media outside the German-speaking countries. German is the second most commonly used scientific language[132] as well as the third most widely used language on websites after English and Russian.[133]

Deutsche Welle (German pronunciation: [ˈdɔʏtʃə ˈvɛlə]; "German Wave" in German), or DW, is Germany's public international broadcaster. The service is available in 30 languages. DW's satellite television service consists of channels in German, English, Spanish, and Arabic.

German-speaking people living abroad (and people wanting to learn German) can visit the websites of German-language newspapers and TV- and radio stations. The free software MediathekView allows the downloading of videos from the websites of some public German, Austrian, and Swiss TV stations and of the public Franco-German TV network ARTE. With the webpage "onlinetvrecorder.com," it is possible to record programs of many German and some international TV stations.

Note that some material is region-restricted due to legal reasons and cannot be accessed from everywhere in the world. Some websites have a paywall or limit the access for free/unregistered users.

See also:

Germany's policy on dual citizenship Edit

German nationality law allows dual citizenship with other EU countries and Switzerland; with other countries, it is possible in some cases:

  1. With special permission ("Beibehaltungsgenehmigung"), for which German citizens must apply before taking the other citizenship (otherwise, German citizenship is automatically lost). Non-EU and non-Swiss citizens wanting to be naturalized in Germany must usually renounce their old citizenship, but may keep it if their country does not allow the renunciation of citizenship, or if the renunciation process is too difficult/humiliating/expensive, or, rarely, in individual cases if the renunciation of the old citizenship means enormous disadvantages for the concerned person.
  2. If dual citizenship was obtained at birth. Some countries do not accept the "dual-citizenship-by-birth principle," so the concerned person must later choose one citizenship and renounce the other.
  3. Under Article 116 par. 2 of the Basic Law (Grundgesetz), former German citizens who between 30 January 1933, and 8 May 1945, were deprived of their German citizenship on political, racial, or religious grounds may re-invoke their citizenship and the same applies to their descendants, and are permitted to hold dual (or multiple) citizenship.[134]

A law adopted in June 2019 allows the revocation of the German citizenship of dual citizens who have joined or supported a terror militia such as the Islamic State and are at least 18 years old.

Naturalized Germans can lose their German citizenship if it is found out that they got it by willful deceit / bribery / menacing / giving intentionally false or incomplete information that had been important for the naturalization process. In June 2019, it was decided to prolong the deadline from 5 to 10 years after naturalization.

Visa requirements Edit

 
Visa requirements for German citizens:
  Germany - Right of abode
  Freedom of movement
  Visa and passport not required[a] - ID card travel
  Visa not required / eTA[b]
  Visa on arrival
  eVisa / ETA[c] / EASE[135] / ESTA / NZeTA / eVisitor / K-ETA
  Visa available both on arrival or online
  Visa required prior to arrival
 
Diplomatic missions of Germany
 
Diplomatic missions in Germany

As of April 2021, German citizens can visit 191 countries without a visa or with visa on arrival. The Henley Passport Index ranks the German passport third in the world in terms of travel freedom.

Freedom of movement within other EU countries and the EFTA countries Edit

As EU citizens, Germans can live and work indefinitely in other EU countries and the EFTA countries; however, the right to vote and work in certain sensitive fields (such as government, police, military) might in some cases be restricted to the local citizens only. The EU/EFTA countries can exclude immigrants from getting welfare for a certain time period to avoid "welfare tourism," and they can refuse welfare completely if the immigrants do not have a job after a certain period of time and do not try to get one. Immigrants convicted of welfare fraud can be deported and be refused the re-entry of the country.

Right to consular protection in non-EU countries Edit

When in a non-EU country where there is no German embassy, Germans as EU citizens have the right to get consular protection from the embassy of any other EU country present in that country. See List of diplomatic missions of Germany and List of diplomatic missions in Germany.

German citizens can be extradited only to other EU countries or to international courts of justice, and only if a law allows this (German Basic Law, Art. 16). Before the introduction of the European Arrest Warrant, the extradition of German citizens was generally prohibited by the German Basic Law.

Germany regularly publishes travel warnings on the website of the Auswärtiges Amt (Federal Foreign Office) to its citizens. The Office allows German citizens to register online in a special list, the Krisenvorsorgeliste ("Crisis-Prevention List") before they travel abroad (Elektronische Erfassung von Deutschen im Ausland [ELEFAND] Electronic Registration of Germans Being Abroad). With a password, the registered persons can change or update their data. The registration is voluntary and free of charge. It can be used for longer stays (longer than 6 months), but also for a vacation of only two weeks. The earliest date of registration is 10 days before the planned trip.

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ In 1980, Americans self-identifying as being of German ancestry formed the second-largest group on the US Census. With the introduction of the "American" ethnic category in 1990, millions of Americans ceased identifying as being of English ancestry, instead opting to identify only as "American" (or ignoring the ancestry question altogether); Americans of English descent were historically always the plurality. English ancestry is the most widespread in the United States, though no longer the most popular choice for self-identification.
  2. ^ This is an American Community Survey estimate, not a United States Census number.
  3. ^ Afrikaners are predominantly of Dutch, but also of German and English ancestries.
  4. ^ This number represents native Alsatian speakers.
  5. ^ Depends on definition; see Swiss people.
  6. ^ This number counts only Germans in South Tyrol.
  7. ^ This figure includes children born to British Military personnel serving on British Military bases in Germany
  8. ^ Depends on definition; see Austrians.
  9. ^ Approximately 73,000 people constitute the German-speaking Community of Belgium.
  10. ^ Depends on definition; see Luxembourgers.
  11. ^ Depends on definition; see Liechtensteiners.
  1. ^ Visa on arrival or eVisa for Egypt
  2. ^ required if arriving by air
  3. ^ Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Grenada

See also Edit

Notes Edit

Most numbers are from the www.ethnologue.com, apart from a few from German language and Germans, as well as the following:

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External links Edit

  • A global map of the German digital Diaspora
  • Standard German
  • Plautdietsch
  • German-American Heritage Foundation of the USA in Washington, DC
  • Sitio Internacional de Villa General Belgrano - Colonia Alemana Argentina

german, diaspora, german, deutschstämmige, consists, german, people, their, descendants, live, outside, germany, term, used, particular, refer, aspects, migration, german, speakers, from, central, europe, different, countries, around, world, this, definition, . The German diaspora German Deutschstammige consists of German people and their descendants who live outside of Germany The term is used in particular to refer to the aspects of migration of German speakers from Central Europe to different countries around the world This definition describes the German term as a sociolinguistic group as opposed to the national one since the emigrant groups came from different regions with diverse cultural practices and different varieties of German For instance the Alsatians and Hessians were often simply called Germans once they set foot in their new homelands citation needed Contents 1 Terminology 2 Distribution 2 1 Europe 2 1 1 Alpine nations 2 1 2 East Central Europe 2 1 3 Baltic states 2 1 4 Belgium 2 1 5 Bulgaria 2 1 6 Czech Republic and Slovakia 2 1 7 Denmark 2 1 8 France 2 1 9 Hungary 2 1 10 Italy 2 1 11 Norway 2 1 12 Poland 2 1 13 Portugal 2 1 14 Romania 2 1 15 Sweden 2 1 16 United Kingdom 2 2 Africa 2 2 1 Cameroon 2 2 2 Namibia 2 2 3 South Africa 2 2 4 Tanzania 2 3 North America 2 4 South America 2 5 Asia 2 6 Oceania 3 History 3 1 Historical countries 3 1 1 Former Soviet Union 3 1 2 Former Yugoslavia 4 Groupings 5 German language media worldwide 6 Germany s policy on dual citizenship 7 Visa requirements 7 1 Freedom of movement within other EU countries and the EFTA countries 7 2 Right to consular protection in non EU countries 8 Footnotes 9 See also 10 Notes 11 External linksTerminology EditVolksdeutsche ethnic Germans is a historical term which arose in the early 20th century and was used by the Nazis to describe ethnic Germans without German citizenship living outside of Nazi Germany although many had been in other areas for centuries During World War II Hitler forbade the use of the term because it was being used in a derogatory way against the many ethnic Germans in the SS It is used by many historians who either deliberately or innocently are unaware of its Nazi history Auslandsdeutsche adj auslandsdeutsch is a concept that connotes German citizens regardless of which ethnicity living abroad or alternatively ethnic Germans entering Germany from abroad Today this means a citizen of Germany living more or less permanently in another country including expatriates such as long term academic exchange lecturers and the like who are allowed to vote in the Republic s elections but who usually do not pay taxes to Germany but in their resident states In a looser but still valid sense and in general discourse the word is frequently used in lieu of the ideologically tainted term Volksdeutsche denoting persons living abroad without German citizenship but defining themselves as Germans culturally or ethnically speaking See also German as a minority languageDistribution Edit nbsp Map of the German diaspora in the world by population Germany 10 000 000 1 000 000 100 000 10 000Ethnic Germans are a minority group in many countries The following sections briefly detail the historical and present distribution of ethnic Germans by region but generally exclude modern expatriates who have a presence in the United States Scandinavia and major urban areas worldwide SeeGroupsat bottom for a list of all ethnic German groups or continue for a summary by region In the United States census of 1990 57 million people identified as being fully or partly of German ancestry forming the largest single ethnic group in the country note 1 as well as the largest population of Germans outside of Germany According to the United States Ancestry Census of 2009 there were 50 764 352 people of German descent in the U S 1 People of German ancestry form an important minority group in several countries including Canada roughly 10 of the population Argentina roughly 8 of the population Brazil roughly 3 of the population 2 Australia roughly 4 5 of the population 3 Chile roughly 3 of the population Namibia and in central and eastern Europe Poland Hungary Romania and Russia Distribution of German citizens and people claiming German ancestry figures are only estimates and actual population could be higher because of wrongly vague formulated questions in censuses in various countries for example in Poland 4 and other different factors f e related to participant in a census Country German ancestry German citizens Comments nbsp United States 46 882 727 2012 almost all German Americans come from Germany 5 note 2 132 000 2 2019 see German American the largest German population outside Germany nbsp Brazil 12 000 000 2000 6 13 500 3 failed verification see German Brazilian the second largest German population outside Germany nbsp Argentina 3 500 000 majority come from Russia and Germany 7 8 9 50 000 8 see German Argentine nbsp Canada 3 322 405 2016 majority come from Germany 10 146 000 see German Canadian nbsp South Africa 1 200 000 2009 11 12 note 3 17 000 4 see Afrikaners Germans in South Africa nbsp Australia 1 026 138 2021 13 107 940 see German Australian nbsp France 1 000 000 2010 14 15 note 4 130 000 5 see Alsace and Lorraine See also Germans in France See also France Germany relations nbsp Chile 500 000 16 8 515 see German Chilean nbsp Switzerland see note note 5 450 000 see German immigration to Switzerland and Swiss people nbsp Russia 394 138 2010 majority come from Prussia 142 000 6 see Germans in Russia Volga Germans Caucasus Germans Black Sea Germans and Crimea Germans nbsp Bolivia 375 000 2014 17 see Ethnic Germans in Bolivia nbsp Netherlands 372 720 2013 18 19 79 470 7 nbsp Italy 314 604 2011 20 note 6 35 000 8 see German Italian relations nbsp Paraguay 290 000 2000 21 nbsp United Kingdom 273 654 2011 22 note 7 92 000 23 see German migration to the United Kingdom nbsp Uruguay 250 000 2014 24 6 000 25 nbsp Peru 240 000 26 see German Peruvian nbsp Kazakhstan 178 409 2009 27 see Germans in Kazakhstan nbsp Hungary 131 951 2011 28 178 000 see Germans of Hungary nbsp Austria see note note 8 170 475 29 see Austrians nbsp Poland 148 000 2011 30 120 000 see German minority in Poland nbsp Spain 138 917 2014 31 112 000 9 see Germany Spain relations nbsp Sweden 115 550 2013 32 20 000 10 see Germany Sweden relations nbsp Israel 100 000 33 see Sarona colony German Colony Haifa and German Colony Jerusalem nbsp Mexico 75 000 including those of partial ancestry Burchard Gretha abril de 2010 34 see German Mexican nbsp Belgium 73 000 2008 note 9 29 324 11 Recognized see German speaking Community of Belgium nbsp Romania c 22 900 as per the 2021 Romanian census 35 34 071 according to Eurostat 36 see Germans of Romania e g Transylvanian Saxons Banat Swabians Sathmar Swabians Bukovina Germans or Zipser Germans nbsp Ukraine 33 302 2001 see Black Sea Germans and Crimea Germans nbsp Namibia 30 000 2013 37 see German Namibian nbsp Dominican Republic 25 000 38 1 792 2012 39 nbsp Norway 25 000 2012 40 10 000 41 see Germany Norway relations nbsp Czech Republic 18 772 2011 42 21 267 Germans in the Czech Republic see Germans in the Czech Republic nbsp Portugal Unknown number of individuals of German descent 20 500 2022 43 In addition around 400 Germans have acquired Portuguese citizenship since 2008 44 see Immigration to Portugal nbsp Greece 15 498 45 see Greece Germany relations nbsp Guyana 13 000 majority come from Russia and Germany 46 8 9 15 000 8 Germans living in Guyana nbsp Denmark 15 000 47 48 15 000 12 see North Schleswig Germans nbsp New Zealand 12 810 2013 49 see German New Zealander nbsp Cuba 12 387 see German Cuban nbsp India 10 000 12 000 see Germans in India nbsp Luxembourg see note note 10 12 000 see Luxembourgers nbsp Ireland 10 000 2006 50 11 305 51 nbsp Belize 10 865 2010 52 see Mennonites in Belize nbsp Costa Rica 10 000 nbsp Guatemala Unknown number of individuals of German descent 53 7 000 10 000 2010 54 see German Guatemalan nbsp Slovakia 5 000 10 000 55 see Carpathian Germans Zipser Germans nbsp Finland 8 894 2019 56 4 102 2018 57 Germans in Finland nbsp Kyrgyzstan 8 563 2014 see Germans in Kyrgyzstan nbsp Philippines 6 400 58 see German settlement in the Philippines nbsp Latvia 4 975 2014 nbsp Serbia 4 064 2011 850 2016 59 see Germans of Serbia nbsp Uzbekistan 3945 60 see Demographics of Uzbekistan nbsp Croatia 2 965 2011 61 see Germans of Croatia nbsp Lithuania 2 418 2011 nbsp Estonia 1 544 2011 nbsp Iceland 842 2013 nbsp Montenegro 131 62 752 63 nbsp Jamaica Unknown number of individuals of German descent 300 see Germans in Jamaica nbsp Liechtenstein see note note 11 see Liechtensteiners nbsp Nicaragua Unknown number of individuals of German descent see German Nicaraguan nbsp Venezuela see German Venezuelan Europe Edit Main articles German speaking Europe Ostsiedlung History of German settlement in Central and Eastern Europe Organised persecution of ethnic Germans and Flight and expulsion of Germans 1944 1950 nbsp German language area in 1910 11 the boundaries of states are in red Pan German nationalists wanted to unite much of the green areas into one German nation state Alpine nations Edit Further information German immigration to Switzerland nbsp Ethnic Germans in Hungary and parts of adjacent Austrian territories census 1890Austria Switzerland and Liechtenstein each have a German speaking majority though the vast majority of the population do not identify themselves as German anymore Austrians historically were identified as and considered themselves Germans until after the defeat of Nazi Germany and the end of World War II Post 1945 a broader Austrian national identity began to emerge and over 90 of the Austrians now see themselves as an independent nation 64 65 66 East Central Europe Edit Aside from the Germans who migrated to other parts of Europe the German diaspora also covered the Eastern and Central European states such as Croatia Hungary Poland the Czech Republic and Slovakia along with several post Soviet states There has been a continued historical presence of Germans in these regions due to the interrelated processes of conquest and colonization as well as migration and border changes 67 During the periods of colonization for instance there was an influx of Germans who came to Bohemia and parts of Romania as colonizers Settlements due to border changes were largely 20th century developments caused by the new political order after the two world wars 67 Baltic states Edit Main article Baltic Germans Further information Nazi Soviet population transfers Belgium Edit Main article German speaking Community of BelgiumIn Belgium there is an ethnic German minority It is the majority in its region of 71 000 inhabitants Ethnologue puts the national total of German speakers at 150 000 not including Limburgish and Luxembourgish Bulgaria Edit Main article Germans in Bulgaria Czech Republic and Slovakia Edit Main articles Germans in Czechoslovakia 1918 1938 Germans in the Czech Republic and Germans from Slovakia Further information Sudeten Germans Carpathian Germans and Expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia Before World War II some 30 of the population in Czechia historically known as Bohemia were ethnic Germans and in the border regions and certain other areas they were in the majority 68 There are about 21 000 Germans in the Czech Republic number of Czechs who have at least partly German ancestry probably runs into the hundreds of thousands 69 Their number has been consistently decreasing since World War II According to the 2011 census there remain 11 municipalities and settlements in Czech Republic with more than 6 Germans The situation in Slovakia was different from that in Czech Republic in that the number of Germans was considerably lower and that the Germans from Slovakia were almost completely evacuated to German states as the Soviet army was moving west through Slovakia and only a fraction of those who returned to Slovakia after the end of the war were deported with the Germans from the Czech lands Many representatives of expellee organizations support the erection of bilingual signs in all formerly German speaking territory as a visible sign of the bilingual linguistic and cultural heritage of the region The erection of bilingual signs is permitted if a minority constitutes 10 of the population Denmark Edit In Denmark the part of Schleswig that is now South Jutland County or Northern Schleswig is inhabited by about 12 000 20 000 ethnic Germans 70 They speak mainly Standard German and South Jutlandic A few speak Schleswigsch a Northern Low Saxon dialect France Edit In France over 100 000 German nationals residing in the French country the exact number is not known some statistics indicate more than 300 000 Germans in France but are not officially sanctioned There the Germans live mainly in the northeastern area of France i e in regions close to the Franco German border i e Alsace and the island of Corsica Hungary Edit Main article Germans of Hungary Prior to World War II approximately 1 5 million Danube Swabians lived in Hungary Romania and Yugoslavia 71 Today the German minority in Hungary have minority rights organisations schools and local councils but spontaneous assimilation is well under way Many of the deportees visited their old homes after the fall of the Iron Curtain in 1990 Around 178 000 Germans live in Hungary Further information Danube Swabians Italy Edit nbsp Map of Austria Hungary in 1911 showing areas inhabited by ethnic Germans in pinkThere are smaller unique populations of Germans who arrived so long ago that their dialect retains many archaic features heard nowhere else the Cimbrians are concentrated in various communities in the Carnic Alps north of Verona and especially in the Sugana Valley on the high plateau northwest of Vicenza in the Veneto region the Walsers who originated in the Swiss Wallis live in the provinces of Aostatal Vercelli and Verbano Cusio Ossola the Mochenos live in the Fersina Valley Smaller German speaking communities also exist in the Friuli Venezia Giulia region the Carinthians in the Canale Valley municipalities of Tarvisio Malborghetto Valbruna and Pontebba and the Zahren and Timau Germans in Carnia Contrarily to the before mentioned minorities the German speaking population of the province of South Tyrol cannot be categorized as ethnic German according to the definition of this article but as Austrian minority However as Austrians saw themselves as ethnic Germans until the end of World War II they can technically also be called Germans 72 The province was part of the Austrian County of Tyrol before the 1919 dissolution of the Austro Hungarian Empire South Tyrolians were part of the over 3 million German speaking Austrians who in 1918 found themselves living outside of the newborn Austrian Republic as minorities in the newly formed or enlarged respective states of Czechoslovakia Romania Yugoslavia Hungary and Italy Their dialect is Austro Bavarian German Both standard German and dialect are used in schooling and media German enjoys co official status with the national language of Italian throughout this region Germans have been present in the Iglesiente mining region in the south west of Sardinia since the 13th century 73 Successively since 1850 groups of specialised workers from Styria Austria followed by German miners from Freiburg settled in the same area Some Germans influenced building and toponym is still visible in this area 74 75 Norway Edit In Norway there are 27 770 Germans making them the ninth largest ethnic minority in the country thus constituting 0 52 of Norway s total population and 2 94 of all foreign residents in Norway 76 Immigration from Germany to Norway has occurred on since the Middle Ages There have been many Germans who migrated to Bergen during the Middle Ages and also during Norway s union with Denmark During the Union with Denmark a lot of German miners migrated to the town of Kongsberg 77 As of 2020 there are 1 446 Germans in the city of Bergen making up 0 51 of the total population and in the town of Kongsberg there are 114 Germans making up 0 41 of the total population respectively The city with the biggest population of Germans is Oslo 3 743 Germans live in the city thereby making up 0 55 of the total population 78 Germany is also the country that sends the most foreign exchange students to Norway in 2016 1 570 exchange students came to Norway from Germany 79 Poland Edit nbsp German minority in Poland 1925Main articles German minority in Poland and Walddeutsche The remaining German minority in Poland 109 000 people were registered in the 2011 census 80 enjoys minority rights according to Polish minority law There are German speakers throughout Poland and most of the Germans live in the Opole Voivodeship in Silesia Bilingual signs are posted in some towns of the region In addition there are bilingual schools and German can be used instead of Polish in dealings with officials in several towns Further information Bilingual communes in Poland Former eastern territories of Germany Oledrzy Vistula Germans and Flight and expulsion of Germans from Poland during and after World War II Portugal Edit As of December 2022 there are 20 500 German nationals residing in Portugal 43 This number only include foreign nationals and thus excludes German citizens who have acquired Portuguese citizenship around 400 people since 2008 as well as Portuguese people of German descent 44 nbsp German cemetery in Campo de OuriqueAround 6 000 Germans live in the municipalities of Lisbon Oeiras Sintra or Cascais in the Portuguese Riviera 81 On the other hand around 5 000 Germans live in the southern region of Algarve 82 The German community is especially noticeable in Lisbon and Porto Each city hosts an German Evangelical Church a German school and offers German libraries There is also a German church as well as a German school in Algarve while Madeira hosts a German Evangelical Church 83 84 85 Lisbon also hosts a Catholic German Church and a German cemetery since 1821 86 87 88 89 Many Luso Germans have acquired fame throughout the years Individuals of the community include Alfredo Keil 1850 1907 composer of A Portuguesa the Portuguese national anthem archaeologist Virginia Rau 1907 1973 banker and industrialist Antonio Champalimaud 1918 2004 architect Francisco Keil do Amaral 1910 1975 and former prime minister Ernesto Hintze Ribeiro 1849 1907 Contemporary figures of German descent include football player Diego Moreira Eurovision song contest winner Salvador Sobral surfer Nic von Rupp actresses Catarina Wallenstein and Vera Kolodzig and tennis player Maria Joao Koehler Amongst the most notable Luso Germans there is undoubtedly Joao Frederico Ludovice who was commissioned the project for the Mafra National Palace in 1711 Romania Edit Main article Germans of Romania Further information Transylvanian Saxons Transylvanian Landler Banat Swabians Sathmar Swabians Bukovina Germans Zipser Germans Regat Germans Dobrujan Germans Bessarabia Germans and Deportation of Germans from Romania after World War II As of 2022 according to the 2021 Romanian census postponed one year because of the COVID 19 pandemic there were circa 22 900 ethnic Germans recorded in Romania Since the High Middle Ages the territory of present day Romania has been continuously inhabited by German speaking groups firstly by Transylvanian Saxons then gradually by other immigrant groups of ethnic German origin They are all politically represented by the Democratic Forum of Germans in Romania FDGR DFDR Sweden Edit Main article Germans in Sweden During the 11th century Sweden was visited by missionaries from Germany During the Middle Ages Hanseatic merchants had a great influence on Swedish trade and also the Swedish language According to a survey the proportion of German loanwords in Swedish is 24 30 percent slightly depending on how you calculate During the period of great power a number of German congregations were formed in Sweden Including Karlskrona German parish which then became part of Karlskrona Admiralty parish Today there are two more active German congregations in Sweden They are part of the parishes of the Church of Sweden the German Christinae parish and the German St Gertrude s parish consists of German citizens or Swedes of German origin In connection with the two world wars several German children of war came to Sweden Between the late 1940s and early 1990s many East German refugees also came to Sweden On 31 December 2014 there were 49 359 people in Sweden who were born in Germany of whom 23 195 were men 47 0 and 26 164 women 53 0 citation needed The corresponding figure for 31 December 2000 was 38 155 of which 16 965 men 44 5 and 21 190 women 55 5 citation needed There were 28 172 people in Sweden with German citizenship citation needed In 2019 according to Statistics Sweden German immigrants together with the Chinese were the most highly educated who migrate to Sweden with a proportion of 70 per cent who are highly educated which is well above the average for Sweden s population which is 30 per cent citation needed Around 29 505 German Citizens living in Sweden in 2020 United Kingdom Edit Main article Germans in the United Kingdom In the United Kingdom a German Briton ethnic group of around 300 000 exists Some are descended from nineteenth century immigrants Others are 20th century immigrants and their descendants and World War II prisoners of war held in Great Britain who decided to stay there Others arrived as spouses of English soldiers from post war marriages in Germany when the British were occupying forces Many of the more recent immigrants have settled in the London and southeast part of England in particular Richmond South West London The British Royal Family are partially descended from German monarchs Due to Brexit the number of Germans in the UK has declined significantly in 2021 there were only 135 000 Germans in the UK 90 Africa Edit nbsp Examples of German language signage in NamibiaDuring the long decline of the Roman Empire and the ensuing great migrations Germanic tribes such as the Vandals who sacked Rome migrated into North Africa and settled mainly in the lands corresponding to modern Tunisia and northeastern Algeria While it is likely that some of the people living there at present are descended from these Germanic peoples they did not leave visible cultural traces Cameroon Edit The first German trading post in the Duala area on the Kamerun River delta was established in 1868 by the Hamburg trading company C Woermann The firm s agent in Gabon Johannes Thormahlen expanded activities to the Kamerun River delta In 1874 together with the Woermann agent in Liberia Wilhelm Jantzen the two merchants founded their own company Jantzen amp Thormahlen there At the outbreak of World War I French Belgian and British troops invaded the German colony in 1914 and fully occupied it during the Kamerun campaign The last German fort to surrender was the one at Mora in the north of the colony in 1916 Following Germany s defeat the Treaty of Versailles divided the territory into two League of Nations mandates Class B under the administration of Great Britain and France French Cameroun and part of British Cameroons reunified in 1961 as Cameroon though some Germans still remain in Cameroon Namibia Edit Main article German Namibians Germany was not as involved in colonizing Africa as other major European powers of the 20th century and lost its overseas colonies including German East Africa and German South West Africa after World War I Similarly to those in Latin America the Germans in Africa tended to isolate themselves and were more self sufficient than other Europeans In Namibia there are 30 000 ethnic Germans though it is estimated that only a third of those retain the language Most German speakers live in the capital Windhoek and in smaller towns such as Swakopmund and Luderitz where German architecture is highly visible South Africa Edit Main article Germans in South Africa In South Africa a number of Afrikaners and Boers are of partial German ancestry being the descendants of German immigrants who intermarried with Dutch settlers and adopted Afrikaans as their mother tongue Professor JA Heese in his book Die Herkoms van die Afrikaner The Origins of Afrikaners claims the modern Afrikaners who total around 3 5 million have 34 4 German ancestry 91 Germans also emigrated to South Africa during the 1850s and 1860s and settled in the Eastern Cape area around Stutterheim and in Kwazulu Natal in the Wartburg area where there is still a large German speaking community 92 Mostly originating from different waves of immigration during the 19th and 20th centuries an estimated 12 000 people speak German or a German variety as a first language in South Africa 93 Germans settled quite extensively in South Africa with many Calvinists immigrating from Northern Europe Later on more Germans settled in the KwaZulu Natal and elsewhere Here one of the largest communities are the speakers of Nataler Deutsch a variety of Low German who are concentrated in and around Wartburg German is slowly disappearing elsewhere but a number of communities still have a large number of speakers and some even have German language schools Around 17 000 German Nationals lived in South Africa in 2020 Tanzania Edit Main article White Africans of European ancestry Tanzania When mainland Tanzania Rwanda and Burundi were under German control they were named German East Africa and received some migration from German communities After Tanganyika and Ruanda Urundi became British and Belgian mandates following Germany s defeat in World War I some of these communities remained There is a small community of Germans remaining in Tanzania citation needed North America Edit Further information German Americans German Canadians and German Mexicans nbsp Counties where German ancestry light blue is the plurality in the United States 2000 nbsp People who have self identified as having German ancestors are the plurality in many parts of the Prairie provinces areas coloured in grey In the United States are ca 160 000 German Citizens Registered Belize 5 763 Mennonite Low German speakers Canada 3 3 million 9 6 of the population see also German Canadians Mexico See German immigration to Mexico 22 of Mennonites also speak Low German which is not Standard German but derived from Old Saxon 30 speak Spanish 5 speak English and 5 speak Russian as a second language 94 Sources estimate that there are around 15 000 German citizens and Mexicans of German citizen origin account for about 75 000 today 95 Also of note the Colegio Aleman Alexander von Humboldt or Alexander von Humboldt school in Mexico City is the largest German school outside Germany In the United States German has been the largest self identified ancestry group since 1990 There are around 50 million Americans of at least partial German ancestry in the United States or 17 of the U S population the country s largest self reported ancestral group 96 including various groups such as the Pennsylvania Dutch Of these 23 million are of German ancestry alone single ancestry and another 27 million are of partial German ancestry making them the largest group in the United States followed by the Irish Of those who claim partial ancestry 22 million identify their primary ancestry first ancestry as German The 22 million Americans of primarily German ancestry are by far the largest part of the German diaspora a figure equal to over a quarter of the population of Germany itself Germans form just under half the population in the Upper Midwest 97 98 Central America In 1940 there were 16 000 Germans living in Central America half of them in Guatemala and most of the remainder were established in Costa Rica 99 South America Edit Further information German Brazilians German Argentines German Chileans German Uruguayans Germans in Paraguay German Bolivians German Peruvians and German Venezuelans nbsp German Argentines celebrate Oktoberfest in Villa General Belgrano nbsp German population in Southern Brazil Less than 1 of population Uruguay Between 1 5 of population State of Sao Paulo Between 5 10 of population State of Parana Between 10 25 of population State of Rio Grande do Sul Around 35 of population State of Santa Catarina nbsp Mennonites in San Ignacio ParaguayArgentina Those of German ancestry constitute about 8 of the Argentine population over 3 million most of them Volga Germans alone about 2 million 100 There are more than 400 000 of other German ancestries including Mennonites and German Swiss These two groups are more common in Southern Argentina and also in Santa Fe Entre Rios and Cordoba provinces A notable example is the town of Villa General Belgrano founded by Germans in the 1930s In the 1960s it became the site of the Fiesta Nacional de la Cerveza or Oktoberfest which has become a major attraction in Argentina 101 By 1940 there were 250 000 people of German descent living in the country 99 The German embassy in Argentina estimates that 660 000 Argentines or 1 5 of the total population are descendants of Germans who emigrated directly from Germany It means that it doesn t includes other ethnic Germans who emigrated from Austria Switzerland Russia USSR etc 102 103 50 000 German citizens live in Argentina 8 Nazi Minister Walther Darre was born in Argentina After the Second World War almost a thousand prominent Nazi leaders and politicians fled to Argentina Adolf Eichmann and Josef Mengele were among them Kurt Tank who developed some of the greatest World War II aircraft fighters also entered Argentina in the late 1940s 104 There are about 500 000 German speakers in Argentina 105 slightly over 1 of population Furthermore a wave of Ashkenazi immigrants came after the rise of Nazism in 1933 followed by as many as 19 000 German Jews From 1939 until the end of World War II immigration was put to a halt by anti immigrant feelings in the country and restrictions on immigration from Germany In the 1980s thousands of German Colombians emigrated back to West Germany due to the Colombian armed conflict However this trend began to decline in the late 2000s decade as living standards rose sharply after the Colombian economic boom Bolivia There are two different German groups the descendants of those who emigrated from Germany and Brazil estimated in about a quarter of million 2 0 of Bolivian population 106 and the descendants of Mennonites that emigrated from Canada and Mexico at least 85 000 of them live in agrarian communities 107 108 Germans are 237 000 or 2 5 of Bolivian population 109 There are over 20 000 Standard German speakers 106 plus 85 000 Mennonite Low German speakers 107 Brazil Mostly living in Southern Brazil Brazil received 250 000 Germans between the 19th and 20th centuries According to Born and Dickgiesser 1989 p 55 the number of Brazilians of German descent in 1986 was 3 6 million According to a 1999 survey by IBGE researcher Simon Schwartzman in a representative sample of the Brazilian population 3 6 said they had German ancestry a percentage that in a population of about 200 million amount to 7 2 million descendants 110 In 2004 Deutsche Welle cited the number of 5 million Brazilians of German descent 111 Hunsruckisch and East Pomeranian are some of the most prominent groups 112 113 By 1940 the German diaspora in Brazil amounted about a million 99 Around 14 000 German Citizens Registered in Brazil There are 3 million German speakers in Brazil 105 slightly over 1 5 of population Chile The German Chilean Chamber of Commerce estimated at 500 000 the descendants of Germans about 3 of the total population of Chile estimated at 16 million in the same source 114 There are 40 000 Standard German speakers 115 Ecuador Ecuador has only few people of German descent Notable is a small German population on the Island of Floreana Galapagos Between 1929 and circa 1950 roughly half a dozen Aussteigers were living on the Island In 1934 three of them died under unclear circumstances these events caused international media attention called Galapagos affair Today the descendants of the Floreana Germans have been assimilated into the local Ecuadorian population or re immigrated to Germany 116 117 Paraguay 166 000 Standard German speakers including 18 000 Mennonites who don t speak Plattdeutsch or Mennonite Low German most Germans in Paraguay are of Brazilian descent and Portuguese speakers 106 plus 20 000 Mennonite Low German spoken by Mennonites who live in Chaco and Eastern Paraguay 106 The Mennonites emigrated to Paraguay from Chihuahua State in Mexico the Soviet Union Canada and Bolivia 118 119 Non Mennonites German emigrated to Paraguay mainly from Brazil the Kingdom of Prussia and the German Empire 119 Those of German ancestry are 290 000 or 4 4 of Paraguayan population 21 Peru The communities of Oxapampa Pozuzo and Villa Rica in the high jungles of the Peruvian Amazon basin were settled in the middle of the 19th century by Austrian and Prussian immigrants Many of its present day inhabitants speak German 120 In the 18th century German immigrants settled the areas of Tingo Maria Tarapoto Moyobamba and the Amazonas Department 121 German immigrants largely settled in Lima and to a lesser extent Arequipa 122 Uruguay By 1940 there were 50 000 Germans living in the country 99 Venezuela Main article Colonia Tovar Asia Edit In Japan during the Meiji period 1868 1912 many Germans came to work in Japan as advisors to the new government Despite Japan s isolationism and geographic distance there have been a few Germans in Japan since Germany s and Japan s fairly parallel modernization made Germans ideal O yatoi gaikokujin See also Germany Japan relations In China the German trading colony of Jiaozhou Bay in what is now Qingdao existed until 1914 and did not leave much more than breweries including Tsingtao Brewery Smaller numbers of ethnic Germans immigrated in the former Southeast Asian territories of Malaysia British Indonesia Dutch and the Philippines American in the late 19th and early 20th centuries citation needed In Indonesia some of them became well known figures in history such as C G C Reinwardt founder and first director of Bogor Botanical Garden Walter Spies German of Russian origin who became the artist that made Bali known to the world and Franz Wilhelm Junghuhn owner of a big plantation in the south of Bandung and dubbed the Humboldt of the East because of his ethno geographical notes Members of the German religious group known as Templers settled in Palestine in the late 19th century and lived there for several generations but were expelled by the British from Mandatory Palestine during World War II due to pro Nazi sympathies expressed by many of them Communist East Germany had relations with Vietnam and Uganda in Africa but in these cases population movement went mostly to not from Germany After the German reunification a large percentage of guest workers from Communist nations sent to East Germany returned to their home countries See also German colonial empire and List of former German colonies Oceania Edit nbsp People with German ancestry as a percentage of the population in Australia divided geographically by statistical local area as of the 2011 censusAustralia has received a significant number of ethnic German immigrants from Germany and elsewhere Numbers vary depending on who is counted but moderate criteria give an estimate of 750 000 4 of the population The first wave of German immigration to Australia began in 1838 with the arrival of Prussian Lutheran settlers in South Australia see German settlement in Australia After the Second World War Australia received a large influx of displaced ethnic Germans In the 1950s and 1960s German immigration continued as part of a large post war wave of European immigration to Australia There have been ethnic Germans in Australia since the founding of the New South Wales colony in 1788 Governor Arthur Phillip the first Governor of New South Wales had a German father But the first significant wave of German immigration was in 1838 These Germans mostly Prussian immigrants but also winegrowers from the Hesse Nassau state and the Rheingau From there after thousands of Germans emigrated to Australia until World War I Also German Australian was the most identified ethnicity behind English and Irish in Australia until World War I After World War II large numbers of Germans emigrated to Australia to escape war torn Europe New Zealand has received modest but steady ethnic German immigration from the mid 19th century Today the number of New Zealanders with German ancestry is estimated to be approximately 200 000 5 of the population Many German New Zealanders anglicized their names during the 20th century due to the negative perception of Germans fostered by World War I and World War II New Zealanders of German descent include the late former Prime Minister David Lange The vast majority of Germans in New Zealand settled in the North Island with a couple settling in the Christchurch area Cities such as Tauranga Nelson and to a lesser extent Auckland have been somewhat influenced by German culture and values History Edit nbsp German eastward expansion 895 1400 nbsp Map depicting the distribution of the German diaspora during the early 20th centuryFrom Celtic times the early Germanic tribes settled from the Baltic all the way to the Black Sea until the great migrations of the 4 6th century AD Medieval Germans migrated eastwards during the medieval period Ostsiedlung until the flight evacuation and expulsion of Germans after World War II many areas in Central and Eastern Europe had an ethnic German population 123 124 In the Middle Ages Germans were invited to migrate to Poland and the central and eastern regions of the German Holy Roman Empire and also the Kingdom of Hungary following the Mongol invasions of the 12th century and then once again during the late 17th century after the Austrian Ottoman wars to set up farms and repopulate the eastern regions of the Austrian Empire and Balkans The Nazi government termed such ethnic Germans Volksdeutsche regardless of how long they had been residents of other countries Now they would be considered Auslandsdeutsche During World War II Nazi Germany classified ethnic Germans as Ubermenschen while Jews Gypsies Slavic peoples mainly ethnic Poles and Serbs along with Black and mixed race people were called Untermenschen After the war Central European nations such as Poland the Czechoslovakia Hungary as well as the Soviet Union in Eastern Europe and Yugoslavia in the Balkan region of Southern Europe expelled most of the ethnic Germans living in their territories There were significant ethnic German populations in such areas as Romania Moldova and Ukraine at one time As recently as 1990 there were one million standard German speakers and 100 000 Plautdietsch speakers in Kazakhstan alone citation needed and 38 000 40 000 and 101 057 standard German speakers in Ukraine Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan respectively citation needed There were reportedly 500 000 ethnic Germans in Poland in 1998 125 Recent official figures show 147 000 as of 2002 126 Of the 745 421 Germans in Romania in 1930 127 only about 60 000 remain 128 In Hungary the situation is quite similar with only about 220 000 129 There are up to one million Germans in the former Soviet Union mostly in a band from southwestern Russia and the Volga valley through Omsk and Altai Krai 597 212 Germans in Russia 2002 Russian census to Kazakhstan 353 441 Germans in Kazakhstan 1999 Kazakhstan census Germany admitted approximately 1 63 million ethnic Germans from the former Soviet Union between 1990 and 1999 130 These Auslandsdeutsche as they are now generally known have been streaming out of the former Eastern Bloc since the early 1990s For example many ethnic Germans from the former Soviet Union have taken advantage of the German Law of Return a policy which grants citizenship to all those who can prove to be a refugee or expellee of German ethnic origin or the spouse or descendant of such a person This exodus has occurred despite the fact that many of the ethnic Germans from the former Soviet Union were highly assimilated and spoke little or no German Historical countries Edit Former Soviet Union Edit Main article History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union Further information Black Sea Germans Bessarabia Germans Bukovina Germans Crimea Germans Germans of Kazakhstan Caucasus Germans Russian Mennonite and Volga Germans Former Yugoslavia Edit Main article Germans of Yugoslavia According to the 1921 census the German community was the largest minority group in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia 505 790 inhabitants or 4 22 131 Groupings Edit nbsp German Namibians in Keetmanshoop 1926Note that many of these groups have since migrated elsewhere This list simply gives the region with which they are associated and does not include people from countries with German as an official national language In general it also omits some collective terms in common use defined by political border changes where this is antithetical to the current structure clarification needed Such terms include Ungarndeutsche Germans of Hungary of the Austria Hungary empire 1867 1918 Serbiendeutsche Germans of Serbia former Yugoslavia Rumaniendeutsche Germans of Romania one of Many Eastern European German settlements extending from Belarus to Slovakia to Ukraine Roughly grouped Germans of Bohemia and Moravia often known as Sudeten Germans now the Czech Republic Germans of Silesia now Poland Germans of East Prussia the largest group including Germans of Poland see also the Polonized Bambrzy notice that Bambrzy are not part of German minority those from Lithuania Prussian Lithuanians and Baltic Germans Baltic Germans of Latvia and Estonia Prussian Polonians Prussian Latvians and ethnic Germans in Belarus The German Briton group of the United Kingdom sometimes called British Germans and German Poles living in the UK since the end of World War II Schleswigsch Germans in South Jutland County Denmark see North Schleswig Germans German speaking citizens of the Netherlands 386 200 2 37 of the population including Limburger Germans German speaking Belgians mostly in the German speaking Community of Belgium DGB Deutschsprachige Gemeinschaft Belgiens and about 1 to 3 percent of Belgians speak German Cimbrians in Italy Mochenos in Italy Germans in Slovenia in the Gottschee County in the Lower Styrian towns of Maribor Celje and Ptuj and in the Apace area the original Hutterites Russian Mennonites in Ukraine including the Mennonite Brethren Transylvanian Saxons in Romania Transylvanian Landler Protestants in Romania Bukovina Germans from Bukovina Romania Carpathian Germans in Romania as well as nearby Hungary Slovakia and Ukraine Zipser from Spis Carpathian German heartland to northern Romania Regat Germans in southern and eastern Romania Danube Swabians including those in the Backa Banat Swabians in the Serbian and Romanian Banat as well as a handful in Bulgaria Satu Mare Swabians in Romania a much smaller colony as a result of the two world wars and the Communist era most Germans of Hungary especially Swabian Turkey in Croatia where it is a recognized minority language and Bosnia and Herzegovina though are now minuscule in number since World War II Black Sea Germans in southern Ukraine Moldova Romania and Bulgaria including Germans of the Crimea Dobrujan Germans of Romania and Bulgaria Bessarabia Germans roughly from what is now Moldova Germans of Volhynia German Volhynians Galiziendeutsche in Galicia German Russians estimated at 5 million throughout Russia and German Ukrainians included in Ukraine Caucasus Germans also Swabians in the northern Caucasus Georgia and Azerbaijan the rest of the Germans in the former USSR including Volga Germans Russian Mennonites Germans of Kazakhstan Bosporus Germans originally craftsmen in and around Istanbul Turkey Cyprus has a German expatriate community In the Americas one can divide the groups by current nation of residence German Canadians and German Americans the largest ethno ancestral group in the USA documented by the 2000 United States Census Texas Germans see also the List of German Texans Hutterites who speak Hutterite German German Mexicans including Mennonites in Mexico as well as many notable figures see German Austrian Hungarian and Polish subcategories of European Mexicans esp in the Northern states Deutschbrasilianer in Brazil whose various languages comprise Brazilian German German Argentines with prominent personalities and a notable German impact on Argentine culture Uruguay known for a German community Germans of Paraguay Germans mostly from outside the borders of Germany in the rest of Latin America especially German Puerto Ricans and a similar community in the Virgin Islands Heavy concentration of German Austrian and Swiss descendants in Southern Chile German Chileans Peru not many are German speakers see German Peruvian German Venezuelans for example Colonia Tovar where settlers came from Baden and Colonia Agricola de Turen where settlers were Germans of the Bukovina Region and some Germans of Poland in Colonia Tovar the dialect Aleman Coloniero is dramatically disappearing and losing popularity being replaced mainly by Spanish meanwhile in Colonia Agricola de Turen some German is still spoken Colombia Cuba and the Dominican Republic Central America or by ethnic or religious criteria Pennsylvania Dutch in the Northeastern US Amish found in the US notably Ohio Pennsylvania Indiana and New York Volga Germans and Plautdietsch speaking Russian Mennonites in Canada e g Chortitzer Mennonite Conference in the United States for instance in Kansas New York and Chicago Illinois where millions of residents self claim to be German American throughout Latin America most notably in Mexico Hutterites who speak Hutterite German Germania from the mid 19th century to after World Wars I or II a large ethnic and cultural German presence in many towns in the Midwestern US In Africa Oceania and East Southeast Asia Germans of Namibia Togo Cameroon Tanzania and South Africa which was never a pre WWI German colony German Australians and German New Zealanders Germans in the colony of Jiaozhou Bay China who founded among others the Tsingtao Brewery in today s Qingdao Small numbers of German expatriates in East Asia and Southeast Asia Burma Hong Kong Indonesia Japan Malaysia Philippines South Korea Taiwan Thailand and Vietnam German cultural traits remain in Papua New Guinea German language media worldwide Edit nbsp Distribution of native German speakers in the world todayA visible sign of the geographical extension of the German language is the German language media outside the German speaking countries German is the second most commonly used scientific language 132 as well as the third most widely used language on websites after English and Russian 133 Deutsche Welle German pronunciation ˈdɔʏtʃe ˈvɛle German Wave in German or DW is Germany s public international broadcaster The service is available in 30 languages DW s satellite television service consists of channels in German English Spanish and Arabic German speaking people living abroad and people wanting to learn German can visit the websites of German language newspapers and TV and radio stations The free software MediathekView allows the downloading of videos from the websites of some public German Austrian and Swiss TV stations and of the public Franco German TV network ARTE With the webpage onlinetvrecorder com it is possible to record programs of many German and some international TV stations Note that some material is region restricted due to legal reasons and cannot be accessed from everywhere in the world Some websites have a paywall or limit the access for free unregistered users See also List of newspapers in Germany and List of German language newspapers published in the United States List of magazines in Germany List of television stations in Germany and List of German language television channels List of radio stations in Germany and List of German language radio stations Goethe Institut ˈɡoːte ʔɪnstiˌtuːt a non profit German cultural association operational worldwide with 159 institutes promoting the study of the German language abroad and encouraging international cultural exchange and relations Germany s policy on dual citizenship EditGerman nationality law allows dual citizenship with other EU countries and Switzerland with other countries it is possible in some cases With special permission Beibehaltungsgenehmigung for which German citizens must apply before taking the other citizenship otherwise German citizenship is automatically lost Non EU and non Swiss citizens wanting to be naturalized in Germany must usually renounce their old citizenship but may keep it if their country does not allow the renunciation of citizenship or if the renunciation process is too difficult humiliating expensive or rarely in individual cases if the renunciation of the old citizenship means enormous disadvantages for the concerned person If dual citizenship was obtained at birth Some countries do not accept the dual citizenship by birth principle so the concerned person must later choose one citizenship and renounce the other Under Article 116 par 2 of the Basic Law Grundgesetz former German citizens who between 30 January 1933 and 8 May 1945 were deprived of their German citizenship on political racial or religious grounds may re invoke their citizenship and the same applies to their descendants and are permitted to hold dual or multiple citizenship 134 A law adopted in June 2019 allows the revocation of the German citizenship of dual citizens who have joined or supported a terror militia such as the Islamic State and are at least 18 years old Naturalized Germans can lose their German citizenship if it is found out that they got it by willful deceit bribery menacing giving intentionally false or incomplete information that had been important for the naturalization process In June 2019 it was decided to prolong the deadline from 5 to 10 years after naturalization Visa requirements EditMain article Visa requirements for German citizens nbsp Visa requirements for German citizens Germany Right of abode Freedom of movement Visa and passport not required a ID card travel Visa not required eTA b Visa on arrival eVisa ETA c EASE 135 ESTA NZeTA eVisitor K ETA Visa available both on arrival or online Visa required prior to arrival nbsp Diplomatic missions of Germany nbsp Diplomatic missions in GermanyAs of April 2021 German citizens can visit 191 countries without a visa or with visa on arrival The Henley Passport Index ranks the German passport third in the world in terms of travel freedom Freedom of movement within other EU countries and the EFTA countries Edit As EU citizens Germans can live and work indefinitely in other EU countries and the EFTA countries however the right to vote and work in certain sensitive fields such as government police military might in some cases be restricted to the local citizens only The EU EFTA countries can exclude immigrants from getting welfare for a certain time period to avoid welfare tourism and they can refuse welfare completely if the immigrants do not have a job after a certain period of time and do not try to get one Immigrants convicted of welfare fraud can be deported and be refused the re entry of the country Right to consular protection in non EU countries Edit When in a non EU country where there is no German embassy Germans as EU citizens have the right to get consular protection from the embassy of any other EU country present in that country See List of diplomatic missions of Germany and List of diplomatic missions in Germany German citizens can be extradited only to other EU countries or to international courts of justice and only if a law allows this German Basic Law Art 16 Before the introduction of the European Arrest Warrant the extradition of German citizens was generally prohibited by the German Basic Law Germany regularly publishes travel warnings on the website of the Auswartiges Amt Federal Foreign Office to its citizens The Office allows German citizens to register online in a special list the Krisenvorsorgeliste Crisis Prevention List before they travel abroad Elektronische Erfassung von Deutschen im Ausland ELEFAND Electronic Registration of Germans Being Abroad With a password the registered persons can change or update their data The registration is voluntary and free of charge It can be used for longer stays longer than 6 months but also for a vacation of only two weeks The earliest date of registration is 10 days before the planned trip Footnotes Edit In 1980 Americans self identifying as being of German ancestry formed the second largest group on the US Census With the introduction of the American ethnic category in 1990 millions of Americans ceased identifying as being of English ancestry instead opting to identify only as American or ignoring the ancestry question altogether Americans of English descent were historically always the plurality English ancestry is the most widespread in the United States though no longer the most popular choice for self identification This is an American Community Survey estimate not a United States Census number Afrikaners are predominantly of Dutch but also of German and English ancestries This number represents native Alsatian speakers Depends on definition see Swiss people This number counts only Germans in South Tyrol This figure includes children born to British Military personnel serving on British Military bases in Germany Depends on definition see Austrians Approximately 73 000 people constitute the German speaking Community of Belgium Depends on definition see Luxembourgers Depends on definition see Liechtensteiners Visa on arrival or eVisa for Egypt required if arriving by air Pakistan Sri Lanka and GrenadaSee also Edit nbsp Germany portalGeographical distribution of German speakers German dialects German language in Europe German question Germanic peoples Imperial Germans Pan Germanism Unification of Germany Volkisch movementNotes EditMost numbers are from the www ethnologue com apart from a few from German language and Germans as well as the following Regular Session 2009 2010 Senate Resolution 141 P N 1216 Retrieved 5 March 2015 Levy Maria Stella Ferreira 1974 O Papel Da Migracao Internacional Na Evolucao Da Populacao Brasileira 1872 a 1972 PDF p 57 Reflecting a Nation Stories from the 2011 Census 2012 2013 2011 Census Australian Bureau of Statistics 21 June 2012 Retrieved 19 March 2013 Number of Germans in Silesia difficulties with the latest census in Polish Lubczasopismo salon24 pl 3 May 2012 Retrieved 7 January 2013 Bureau U S Census American FactFinder Results factfinder2 census gov Archived from the original on 28 January 2015 Demografia Imigracoes A imigracao alema Demographics Immigration German immigration Deustche Welle in Portuguese passeiweb com Archived from the original on 15 July 2011 Retrieved 12 February 2016 Germans represent approximately 5 of immigrants seeking a new homeland in Brazil Over a period of more than a hundred years approximately 250 000 Germans have arrived in Brazil Currently it is estimated German descendants number at five million on Brazilian soil Including Volga Germans German Swiss Mennonites and other German ancestries Centro Argentino Cultural Wolgadeutsche Archived from the original on 6 October 2011 Retrieved 31 May 2011 a b c d e Argentina Embajada de Alemania en Argentina 13 February 2010 Archived from the original on 13 February 2010 Retrieved 2 August 2012 a b Obsevatorio de Colectividades Comunidad Alemana Buenosaires gob ar Archived from the original on 28 November 2011 Retrieved 28 September 2011 2016 Canadian Census see List of Canadians by ethnicity Germans in South Africa Webcitation org Archived from the original on 9 October 2009 Retrieved 28 September 2011 Professor JA Heese in his book Die Herkoms van die Afrikaner The Origins of Afrikaners claims the modern Afrikaners who total around 3 5 million have 34 4 German heritage How Pure was the Average Afrikaner Archived 13 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine 2021 Australia Census All persons QuickStats Australian Bureau of Statistics Retrieved 27 July 2022 Vladimir Geroimenko France Ling gu se Retrieved 28 September 2011 Alsatians Everyculture com 16 January 2010 Retrieved 28 September 2011 Alemanes en Chile entre el pasado colono y el presente empresarial DW 31 03 2011 DW COM Bolivia WorldStatesMen Retrieved 16 June 2013 white 10 of which German 3 2001 Garssen Joop Han Nicolaas and Arno Sprangers 2005 Demografie van de allochtonen in Nederland PDF in Dutch Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek Archived from the original PDF on 9 October 2018 Retrieved 2 July 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple 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peste un milion de locuitori față de acum 10 ani Digi24 ro in Romanian Retrieved 30 December 2022 Population on 1 January by age group sex and country of birth Eurostat Namibia Restores An African Name To Historic Caprivi Strip 14 August 2013 Dominican Republic in German Auswaertiges amt de Retrieved 28 September 2011 Martinez Darlenny 2 May 2013 Estudio en RD viven 534 632 extranjeros El Caribe in Spanish Retrieved 29 May 2014 Segun la Primera Encuesta Nacional de Inmigrantes de la Republica Dominicana ENI 2012 Despues de Haiti explica la investigacion las 10 naciones de donde proceden mas inmigrantes son Estados Unidos con 13 524 Espana con 6 720 y Puerto Rico con 4 416 Ademas Italia con 4 040 China con 3 643 Francia con 3 599 Venezuela con 3 434 Cuba con 3 145 inmigrantes Colombia con 2 738 y Alemania con 1 792 Personer med innvandringsbakgrunn etter innvandringskategori landbakgrunn og kjonn 1 januar 2012 Archived 18 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine Statistics Norway retrieved 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