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Silesians

Silesians (Silesian: Ślōnzŏki or Ślůnzoki; Silesian German: Schläsinger or Schläsier; German: Schlesier; Polish: Ślązacy; Czech: Slezané) is a geographical term[5] for the inhabitants of Silesia, a historical region in Central Europe divided by the current national boundaries of Poland, Germany, and the Czech Republic. Historically, the region of Silesia (Lower and Upper) has been inhabited by Polish (West Slavic Lechitic people), Czechs and later in modern era by Germans.[6] Therefore, the term Silesian can refer to anyone of these ethnic groups. However, in 1945, great demographic changes occurred in the region as a result of the Potsdam Agreement leaving most of the region ethnically Polish and/or Slavic Upper Silesian. Silesian dialect is one of the main dialects of the Polish language and based on Polish/Lechitic grammar. The term "Silesia" is a Latinised word of the original Polish/Lechitic word "Śląsk" that was inhabited by the ancient Lechitic tribe called Ślężanie. There are many ancient pagan places related to this ancient tribe, for example Góra Ślęża.

Silesians
  • Ślōnzŏki, Ślůnzoki (Silesian)
  • Polish Ślązacy (Polish), Old
  • Polish Ślężnie
  • colloquial Polish Ślązaki, Ślązoki
  • Slezané (Czech)
Total population
Several million (of which about 0.8 million officially declared Silesian nationality in national censuses in Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia).
Regions with significant populations
 Germanyc. 2.4–3.6 million[1]
 Poland585,700[2] officially declared Silesian nationality. (Polish-Silesian nationality included)
 Czech RepublicNo data, 31,301 declared Silesian nationality, of which 12,451 declared it as their only nationality[3]
 Slovakiano data; 22 declared Silesian nationality[4]
Languages
Silesian
Polish
German (incl. Silesian German dialects)
Czech (Cieszyn Silesian and Lach dialects)
Religion
Roman Catholicism
Protestantism (Mainly Lutheranism)
Related ethnic groups
Sorbs, Poles, Czechs, Germans, Vilamovians, Moravians, Slovaks.
Silesians in the Opole and Silesian Voivodeships of Poland (2011 census)
Silesians in Czech Silesia (2021 census)
Woman in Silesian dress from Cieszyn Silesia, 1914
"Ślōnskŏ nacyjŏ bōła, je a bydzie", which means "Silesian Nation was, is, and will be" - Eighth Autonomy March, Katowice, 18 July 2009

The name in Silesian dialect:'Ślōnzŏki, Ślůnzoki (Silesian) in Polish language Ślązacy (Polish), Old Polish Ślężnie, colloquial Polish Ślązaki, Ślązoki
Slezané (Czech)

The Silesian dialect is one of the main dialects of the Polish language, based on Polish/Lechitic grammar.

The term "Silesia" is a Latinised word of the original Polish/Lechitic name "Śląsk" inhabited by the ancient Lechitic tribes called Ślężanie. In Silesia, there are many places of the ancient Slavic Lechitic pagan cult of these ancient people, for example Góra Ślęża.

847,000 people declared themselves to be of Polish nationality from Silęsian ręgion in the 2011 Polish national census (including 376,000 who declared it to be their only description and 431,000 who declared joint Silesian and Polish nationality. (legally there is no Silsian nationality. That is, about 10% of the population of the Polish part of Upper Silesia declares themselves as only Silesians),[2] making them the largest minority group. About 126,000 people declared themselves as members of the German minority (58,000 declared it jointly with Polish nationality), making it the third largest minority group in the country (93% of Germans living in Poland are in the Polish part of Silesia). 31,301 people declared Silesian nationality in the Czech national census of 2021, including 18,850 of those who declared two nationalities[3] (44,446 in Czechoslovakia in 1991),[7] and 6,361 people declared joint Silesian and Moravian nationality in the Slovak national census.[8] Over 85% of the population in the Polish part of Upper Silesia declare themselves as Poles, and in the Czech part as Czechs.

During the German occupation of Poland, Nazi authorities conducted a census in East Upper Silesia in 1940. At the time, 157,057 people declared Silesian nationality (Slonzaken Volk), and the Silesian language was declared by 288,445 people. However, the Silesian nationality could only be declared in the Cieszyn part of the region. Approximately 400–500,000 respondents from the other areas of East Upper Silesia who declared "Upper Silesian nationality" (Oberschlesier) were assigned to the German nationality category.[9] After World War II in Poland, the 1945 census showed a sizable group of people in Upper Silesia who declared Silesian nationality. According to police reports, 22% of people in Zabrze considered themselves to be Silesians, and that number was around 50% in Strzelce County.[10]

History edit

Archaeological findings of the 20th century in Silesia confirm the existence of an early settlement inhabited by Celtic tribes.[11]

Until the 2nd century some parts of Silesia were populated by Celtic Boii, predecessors of the states of Bohemia and Bavaria and subsequently until the 5th century, by the Germanic Silingi, a tribe of the Vandals, which moved south and west to invade Andalusia. Silesia remained depopulated until the second phase of the migration period.

The Slavs, predominantly White Croats entered the depopulated territory of Silesia in the first half of the 6th century. The Slavic territories were mostly abandoned, because the Celtic and Germanic tribes that lived there before had moved west.[12] Chronologically, the first group of Slavs were those that dwelt by the Dnieper River, the second was the Sukov-Dzidzice type Slavs, and the last were groups of Avaro-Slavic peoples from the Danube river areas.[13] In the early 9th century, the settlement stabilized. Local West Slavs began to erect a series of defensive systems, such as the Silesian Przesieka and the Silesia Walls to guard them from invaders. The north-eastern border with Western Polans was not reinforced, due to their common culture and language.[14]

The 9th-century Bavarian Geographer records the tribal names of the Opolanie, Dadosesani, Golenzizi, Lupiglaa, and the Ślężanie. The 1086 Prague Document, which is believed to document the 10th-century settlements,[14] also mentions the Bobrzanie and Trzebowianie tribes. Later sources classified those tribes as Silesian tribes, which were also jointly classified as part of Polish tribes.[15][16][17][18] The reason for this classification was the "fundamentally common culture and language" of Silesian, Polan, Masovian, Vistulan and Pomeranian tribes that "were considerably more closely related to one another than were the Germanic tribes."[19]

According to Perspectives on Ethnicity, written by anthropologist V. I. Kozlov and edited by R. Holloman, the Silesian tribes, together with other Polish tribes, formed what is now Polish ethnicity and culture. This process is called ethnic consolidation, in which several ethnic communities of the same origin and cognate languages merge into one.[16]

Middle Ages edit

The Silesians lived on the territory that became part of the Great Moravia in 875. Later, in 990, the first Polish state was created by Duke Mieszko I, and then expanded by king Boleslaw I at the beginning of the 11th century. He established the Bishopric of Wrocław in Lower Silesia in the year 1000.

In the Middle Ages, Slavic tribal confederacies, and then Slavic states, dominated. Silesia was part of Great Moravia, then Kingdom of Bohemia and finally the Piast monarchy of Poland. The tribal differences started to disappear after the consolidation of Poland in the 10th and 11th centuries. The main factors of this process were the establishment of a single monarchy that ruled over all Polish tribes, as well as creation of a separate ecclesiastical organization within the boundaries of the newly established Polish state.[20] The names of the smaller tribes disappeared from historical records, as well as the names of some prominent tribes. However, in some places, the names of the most important tribes transformed into names representing the whole region, such as Mazovians for Mazovia, and Silesians for Silesia. As a result of the fragmentation of Poland, some of those regions were again divided into smaller entities, such as the division of Silesia into Lower Silesia and Upper Silesia). However, the tribal era was already over, and these divisions reflected only political subdivisions of the Polish realm.[21] Within Poland, from 1177 onward, Silesia was divided into many smaller duchies. In 1178, parts of the Duchy of Kraków around Bytom, Oświęcim, Chrzanów and Siewierz were transferred to the Silesian Piasts, although their population was of Vistulan and not of Silesian descent.[22] Parts of those territories were bought by the Polish kings in the second half of the 15th century, but the Bytom area remained in the possession of the Silesian Piasts, even though it remained a part of the Diocese of Kraków.[22] Between 1327 and 1348, the duchies of Silesia came under the suzerainty of the Crown of Bohemia, which was then passed to the Habsburg monarchy of Austria in 1526.

Beginning in the 13th century, Slavic Silesia began to be settled by Germans from various parts of Germany, including Prussia and Austria. This led to changes in the ethnic structure of the province. In the Middle Ages, various German dialects of the new settlers became widely used throughout Lower Silesia and some Upper Silesian cities. However, after the era of German colonization, the Polish language was still predominant in Upper Silesia and parts of Lower and Middle Silesia north of the Odra river. Germans usually dominated large cities, and Poles mostly lived in rural areas. This required the Prussian authorities to issue official documents in Polish, or in German and Polish. The Polish-speaking territories of Lower and Middle Silesia, commonly called the Polish side until the end of the 19th century, were mostly Germanized in the 18th and 19th centuries, except for some areas along the northeastern frontier.[23][24]

Modern history edit

In 1742, most of Silesia was seized in the War of the Austrian Succession by King Frederick the Great of Prussia, who named himself a 'Piast prince' (he was actually a remote descendant) in his first declaration. The remainder of Silesia, known as Cieszyn Silesia, remained in the Austrian Empire. The Prussian part of Silesia constituted the Province of Silesia until 1918. Later, the province was split into the Prussian provinces of Upper and Lower Silesia. Owing to the development of education, a rebirth of Polish culture took place in the second half of the 1800s in Silesia, which was connected with the emergence of a Polish national movement of a clearly Catholic character. At the beginning of the twentieth century, the fact that Silesians were part of the Polish nation was not questioned.[25] The language and culture of the self-declared Polish Silesians were put under the pressure of the Prussian Kulturkampf policies, which attempted to Germanize them in culture and language. The process of Germanisation was never completely successful. The cultural distance of Upper Silesians from the German population resulted in the development of Polish national awareness at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, culminating in the pro-Polish movements at the end of World War I.[26]

After the Silesian Uprisings, the eastern minor, but richer, part of Upper Silesia became part of the newly restored Poland; most of the land that had been ruled by the Habsburgs following the 1742 war went to Czechoslovakia, while Lower Silesia and most of Upper Silesia remained in Germany. The ethnic situation of the region became more complex as the division of Upper Silesia into Polish and German parts led to ethnic polarization. The people that lived in the western part of Upper Silesia were subject to a strong German Ostsiedlung, where those living in the eastern part of Silesia started to identify with the Polish culture and statehood.[25]

World War II and its aftermath amplified this polarization. Three groups took shape within the Silesian population. The Polish-speaking group was the largest, while the German-speaking group, which primarily lived in central Silesia, was noticeably smaller. A third group supported separatism and an independent Silesian nation-state. The separatists were of marginal importance, finding little support among native Silesians.[27]

 
Silesians in traditional costumes during the 2015 Autonomy March

The reasons for these transitions were boundary shifts and population changes that came after World War II. As a result, the vast majority of the former German Silesia, even Lower Silesia, which did not have sizeable Polish-speaking population, was incorporated into Poland, with smaller regions remaining under the control of the German Democratic Republic (which later became a part of unified Germany). Czechoslovakia obtained most of Cieszyn Silesia. Millions of Silesians, mostly of German ethnicity, were subsequently expelled, but after being sifted out from the ethnic Germans by a process of "national verification", the Silesians classified as "autochthons" by the Polish communist authorities were allowed to remain, and they were intensely polonized.[28]

Between 1955 and 1959, under the supervision of the Red Cross, some of the remaining Silesians were able to emigrate to West and East Germany to reunite with their families there.[29] But some had to wait for years. Until 1989, nearly 600,000 Silesians emigrated to Germany.

Between 1945 and 1949, millions of ethnic Poles from the former (pre-1939) eastern Poland (especially Lviv, Volhynia, Podolia, Vilnius, etc.) and central Poland moved into Silesia, particularly in Lower Silesia. Since the end of Communist rule in Poland, there have been calls for greater political representation for the Silesian ethnic minority. In 1997, a Katowice court of law registered the Union of People of Silesian Nationality (ZLNS) as the political representative organization of the Silesian ethnic minority, but after two months, the registration was revoked by a regional court.[30]

According to M.E. Sharpe, Silesians inhabiting Poland are considered to belong to a Polish ethnographic group, and they speak a dialect of Polish. United States Immigration Commission also counted Silesian as one of the dialects of Polish.[31] As a result of German influence,[32][33] Silesians have been influenced by German culture.[25] Many German and their descendants who inhabited both Lower and Upper Silesia have been displaced to Germany in 1945-47.

Language edit

The Slavic Silesian language[34] (often called Upper Silesian) is spoken by the Silesian ethnic group or nationality inside Polish Upper Silesia. According to the last census in Poland (2011), some 509,000[35] people declared Silesian to be their native language; however, as many as 817,000 people declared themselves to be of Silesian nationality, not necessarily speaking Silesian, even though the Silesian nationality has not been recognized by Polish governments since its creation in 1945.

There is some contention over whether Silesian is a dialect or a language in its own right. Most Polish linguists consider Silesian to be a prominent regional dialect of Polish. However, many Silesians regard it to be a separate language belonging to the West Slavic branch of Slavic languages, together with Polish and other Lechitic languages, such as Upper and Lower Sorbian, Czech and Slovak. In July 2007, the Silesian language was officially recognized by the Library of Congress and SIL International. The language was attributed an ISO code: SZL. The first official dictation contest of the Silesian language took place in August 2007.

Although the German language is still spoken in Silesia, as it has a sizable minority of speakers in the Opole Voivodship in Poland, the vast majority of native speakers were expelled during or after 1945. Therefore, the number of German speakers in the region was radically and significantly decreased after World War II, even though the Germans had settled there for centuries. The Silesian German dialect is a distinct variety of East Central German, with some West Slavic influence likely caused by centuries of contact between Germans and Slavs in the region; the dialect is related to contemporary Saxon in some ways. The Silesian German dialect is often misleading referred to as Lower Silesian in the German language. The usage of this dialect appears to be decreasing, as most Silesian Germans prefer either Standard German or even Polish.

Historical data edit

Prussian Lower Silesia edit

In year 1819, the Breslau Regency had 833,253 inhabitants, the majority of whom—755,553 (90%)—were German-speakers; with a Polish-speaking minority numbering 66,500 (8%); as well as 3,900 Czechs (1%) and 7,300 Jews (1%).[36] The Liegnitz Regency was inhabited by Germans with a small Sorbian minority.

Table 1. Ethno-linguistic structure of Prussian Silesia in early 19th century (1800–1825)
Ethnic group acc. G. Hassel[36] % acc. S. Plater[37] % acc. T. Ładogórski[38] %
Germans 1,561,570 75.6 1,550,000 70.5 1,303,300 74.6
Poles 444,000 21.5 600,000 27.3 401,900 23.0
Sorbs 24,500 1.2 30,000 1.4 900 0.1
Czechs 5,500 0.3 32,600 1.9
Moravians 12,000 0.6
Jews 16,916 0.8 20,000 0.9 8,900 0.5
Population c. 2.1 million 100 c. 2.2 million 100 c. 1.8 million 100

Prussian Upper Silesia edit

The earliest exact census figures on ethnolinguistic or national structure (Nationalverschiedenheit) of the Prussian part of Upper Silesia, come from year 1819. The last pre-WW1 general census figures available, are from 1910 (if not including the 1911 census of school children—Sprachzählung unter den Schulkindern—which revealed a higher percent of Polish-speakers among school children than the 1910 census among the general populace). Figures (Table 1.) show that large demographic changes took place between 1819 and 1910, with the region's total population quadrupling, the percent of German-speakers increasing significantly, and that of Polish-speakers declining considerably. Also the total land area in which Polish language was spoken, as well as the land area in which it was spoken by the majority, declined between 1790 and 1890.[39] Polish authors before 1918 estimated the number of Poles in Prussian Upper Silesia as slightly higher than according to official German censuses.[32]

Plebiscite in Prussian Upper Silesia edit

In the 1921 plebiscite, 40.6% of eligible voters (people over 20 years old – a minimum age that favoured the German-speaking population, whose median age was greater than that of Polish-speakers of Upper Silesia, according to censuses of 1900–1910[44]) decided to secede from Germany and become Polish citizens.[45] In total, over seven hundred towns and villages voted in favour of Poland, especially in the counties of Pszczyna,[46] Rybnik,[47] Tarnowskie Góry,[48] Toszek-Gliwice,[49] Strzelce Opolskie,[50] Bytom,[51] Katowice,[52] Lubliniec,[53] Zabrze,[54] Racibórz,[55] Olesno,[56] Koźle[57] and Opole.[58]

Historiography edit

See also edit

External links edit

  • Tomasz Kamusella. The Szlonzoks and their Language: Between Germany, Poland and Szlonzokian Nationalism
  • The Silesian Museum: The Architecture of Identity

References edit

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  56. ^ Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921: Rosenberg 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  57. ^ Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921: Cosel 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  58. ^ Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921: Oppeln 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine

silesians, tribe, tribe, silesian, Ślōnzŏki, Ślůnzoki, silesian, german, schläsinger, schläsier, german, schlesier, polish, Ślązacy, czech, slezané, geographical, term, inhabitants, silesia, historical, region, central, europe, divided, current, national, boun. For the tribe see Silesians tribe Silesians Silesian Slōnzŏki or Slunzoki Silesian German Schlasinger or Schlasier German Schlesier Polish Slazacy Czech Slezane is a geographical term 5 for the inhabitants of Silesia a historical region in Central Europe divided by the current national boundaries of Poland Germany and the Czech Republic Historically the region of Silesia Lower and Upper has been inhabited by Polish West Slavic Lechitic people Czechs and later in modern era by Germans 6 Therefore the term Silesian can refer to anyone of these ethnic groups However in 1945 great demographic changes occurred in the region as a result of the Potsdam Agreement leaving most of the region ethnically Polish and or Slavic Upper Silesian Silesian dialect is one of the main dialects of the Polish language and based on Polish Lechitic grammar The term Silesia is a Latinised word of the original Polish Lechitic word Slask that was inhabited by the ancient Lechitic tribe called Slezanie There are many ancient pagan places related to this ancient tribe for example Gora Sleza SilesiansSlōnzŏki Slunzoki Silesian Polish Slazacy Polish OldPolish Slezniecolloquial Polish Slazaki SlazokiSlezane Czech Flag of Upper SilesiaTotal populationSeveral million of which about 0 8 million officially declared Silesian nationality in national censuses in Poland the Czech Republic and Slovakia Regions with significant populations Germanyc 2 4 3 6 million 1 Poland585 700 2 officially declared Silesian nationality Polish Silesian nationality included Czech RepublicNo data 31 301 declared Silesian nationality of which 12 451 declared it as their only nationality 3 Slovakiano data 22 declared Silesian nationality 4 LanguagesSilesianPolish German incl Silesian German dialects Czech Cieszyn Silesian and Lach dialects ReligionRoman CatholicismProtestantism Mainly Lutheranism Related ethnic groupsSorbs Poles Czechs Germans Vilamovians Moravians Slovaks Silesians in the Opole and Silesian Voivodeships of Poland 2011 census Silesians in Czech Silesia 2021 census Woman in Silesian dress from Cieszyn Silesia 1914 Slōnskŏ nacyjŏ bōla je a bydzie which means Silesian Nation was is and will be Eighth Autonomy March Katowice 18 July 2009The name in Silesian dialect Slōnzŏki Slunzoki Silesian in Polish language Slazacy Polish Old Polish Sleznie colloquial Polish Slazaki SlazokiSlezane Czech The Silesian dialect is one of the main dialects of the Polish language based on Polish Lechitic grammar The term Silesia is a Latinised word of the original Polish Lechitic name Slask inhabited by the ancient Lechitic tribes called Slezanie In Silesia there are many places of the ancient Slavic Lechitic pagan cult of these ancient people for example Gora Sleza 847 000 people declared themselves to be of Polish nationality from Silesian region in the 2011 Polish national census including 376 000 who declared it to be their only description and 431 000 who declared joint Silesian and Polish nationality legally there is no Silsian nationality That is about 10 of the population of the Polish part of Upper Silesia declares themselves as only Silesians 2 making them the largest minority group About 126 000 people declared themselves as members of the German minority 58 000 declared it jointly with Polish nationality making it the third largest minority group in the country 93 of Germans living in Poland are in the Polish part of Silesia 31 301 people declared Silesian nationality in the Czech national census of 2021 including 18 850 of those who declared two nationalities 3 44 446 in Czechoslovakia in 1991 7 and 6 361 people declared joint Silesian and Moravian nationality in the Slovak national census 8 Over 85 of the population in the Polish part of Upper Silesia declare themselves as Poles and in the Czech part as Czechs During the German occupation of Poland Nazi authorities conducted a census in East Upper Silesia in 1940 At the time 157 057 people declared Silesian nationality Slonzaken Volk and the Silesian language was declared by 288 445 people However the Silesian nationality could only be declared in the Cieszyn part of the region Approximately 400 500 000 respondents from the other areas of East Upper Silesia who declared Upper Silesian nationality Oberschlesier were assigned to the German nationality category 9 After World War II in Poland the 1945 census showed a sizable group of people in Upper Silesia who declared Silesian nationality According to police reports 22 of people in Zabrze considered themselves to be Silesians and that number was around 50 in Strzelce County 10 Contents 1 History 1 1 Middle Ages 1 2 Modern history 2 Language 3 Historical data 3 1 Prussian Lower Silesia 3 2 Prussian Upper Silesia 3 3 Plebiscite in Prussian Upper Silesia 4 Historiography 5 See also 6 External links 7 ReferencesHistory editArchaeological findings of the 20th century in Silesia confirm the existence of an early settlement inhabited by Celtic tribes 11 Until the 2nd century some parts of Silesia were populated by Celtic Boii predecessors of the states of Bohemia and Bavaria and subsequently until the 5th century by the Germanic Silingi a tribe of the Vandals which moved south and west to invade Andalusia Silesia remained depopulated until the second phase of the migration period The Slavs predominantly White Croats entered the depopulated territory of Silesia in the first half of the 6th century The Slavic territories were mostly abandoned because the Celtic and Germanic tribes that lived there before had moved west 12 Chronologically the first group of Slavs were those that dwelt by the Dnieper River the second was the Sukov Dzidzice type Slavs and the last were groups of Avaro Slavic peoples from the Danube river areas 13 In the early 9th century the settlement stabilized Local West Slavs began to erect a series of defensive systems such as the Silesian Przesieka and the Silesia Walls to guard them from invaders The north eastern border with Western Polans was not reinforced due to their common culture and language 14 The 9th century Bavarian Geographer records the tribal names of the Opolanie Dadosesani Golenzizi Lupiglaa and the Slezanie The 1086 Prague Document which is believed to document the 10th century settlements 14 also mentions the Bobrzanie and Trzebowianie tribes Later sources classified those tribes as Silesian tribes which were also jointly classified as part of Polish tribes 15 16 17 18 The reason for this classification was the fundamentally common culture and language of Silesian Polan Masovian Vistulan and Pomeranian tribes that were considerably more closely related to one another than were the Germanic tribes 19 According to Perspectives on Ethnicity written by anthropologist V I Kozlov and edited by R Holloman the Silesian tribes together with other Polish tribes formed what is now Polish ethnicity and culture This process is called ethnic consolidation in which several ethnic communities of the same origin and cognate languages merge into one 16 Middle Ages edit The Silesians lived on the territory that became part of the Great Moravia in 875 Later in 990 the first Polish state was created by Duke Mieszko I and then expanded by king Boleslaw I at the beginning of the 11th century He established the Bishopric of Wroclaw in Lower Silesia in the year 1000 In the Middle Ages Slavic tribal confederacies and then Slavic states dominated Silesia was part of Great Moravia then Kingdom of Bohemia and finally the Piast monarchy of Poland The tribal differences started to disappear after the consolidation of Poland in the 10th and 11th centuries The main factors of this process were the establishment of a single monarchy that ruled over all Polish tribes as well as creation of a separate ecclesiastical organization within the boundaries of the newly established Polish state 20 The names of the smaller tribes disappeared from historical records as well as the names of some prominent tribes However in some places the names of the most important tribes transformed into names representing the whole region such as Mazovians for Mazovia and Silesians for Silesia As a result of the fragmentation of Poland some of those regions were again divided into smaller entities such as the division of Silesia into Lower Silesia and Upper Silesia However the tribal era was already over and these divisions reflected only political subdivisions of the Polish realm 21 Within Poland from 1177 onward Silesia was divided into many smaller duchies In 1178 parts of the Duchy of Krakow around Bytom Oswiecim Chrzanow and Siewierz were transferred to the Silesian Piasts although their population was of Vistulan and not of Silesian descent 22 Parts of those territories were bought by the Polish kings in the second half of the 15th century but the Bytom area remained in the possession of the Silesian Piasts even though it remained a part of the Diocese of Krakow 22 Between 1327 and 1348 the duchies of Silesia came under the suzerainty of the Crown of Bohemia which was then passed to the Habsburg monarchy of Austria in 1526 Beginning in the 13th century Slavic Silesia began to be settled by Germans from various parts of Germany including Prussia and Austria This led to changes in the ethnic structure of the province In the Middle Ages various German dialects of the new settlers became widely used throughout Lower Silesia and some Upper Silesian cities However after the era of German colonization the Polish language was still predominant in Upper Silesia and parts of Lower and Middle Silesia north of the Odra river Germans usually dominated large cities and Poles mostly lived in rural areas This required the Prussian authorities to issue official documents in Polish or in German and Polish The Polish speaking territories of Lower and Middle Silesia commonly called the Polish side until the end of the 19th century were mostly Germanized in the 18th and 19th centuries except for some areas along the northeastern frontier 23 24 Modern history edit In 1742 most of Silesia was seized in the War of the Austrian Succession by King Frederick the Great of Prussia who named himself a Piast prince he was actually a remote descendant in his first declaration The remainder of Silesia known as Cieszyn Silesia remained in the Austrian Empire The Prussian part of Silesia constituted the Province of Silesia until 1918 Later the province was split into the Prussian provinces of Upper and Lower Silesia Owing to the development of education a rebirth of Polish culture took place in the second half of the 1800s in Silesia which was connected with the emergence of a Polish national movement of a clearly Catholic character At the beginning of the twentieth century the fact that Silesians were part of the Polish nation was not questioned 25 The language and culture of the self declared Polish Silesians were put under the pressure of the Prussian Kulturkampf policies which attempted to Germanize them in culture and language The process of Germanisation was never completely successful The cultural distance of Upper Silesians from the German population resulted in the development of Polish national awareness at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries culminating in the pro Polish movements at the end of World War I 26 After the Silesian Uprisings the eastern minor but richer part of Upper Silesia became part of the newly restored Poland most of the land that had been ruled by the Habsburgs following the 1742 war went to Czechoslovakia while Lower Silesia and most of Upper Silesia remained in Germany The ethnic situation of the region became more complex as the division of Upper Silesia into Polish and German parts led to ethnic polarization The people that lived in the western part of Upper Silesia were subject to a strong German Ostsiedlung where those living in the eastern part of Silesia started to identify with the Polish culture and statehood 25 World War II and its aftermath amplified this polarization Three groups took shape within the Silesian population The Polish speaking group was the largest while the German speaking group which primarily lived in central Silesia was noticeably smaller A third group supported separatism and an independent Silesian nation state The separatists were of marginal importance finding little support among native Silesians 27 nbsp Silesians in traditional costumes during the 2015 Autonomy MarchThe reasons for these transitions were boundary shifts and population changes that came after World War II As a result the vast majority of the former German Silesia even Lower Silesia which did not have sizeable Polish speaking population was incorporated into Poland with smaller regions remaining under the control of the German Democratic Republic which later became a part of unified Germany Czechoslovakia obtained most of Cieszyn Silesia Millions of Silesians mostly of German ethnicity were subsequently expelled but after being sifted out from the ethnic Germans by a process of national verification the Silesians classified as autochthons by the Polish communist authorities were allowed to remain and they were intensely polonized 28 Between 1955 and 1959 under the supervision of the Red Cross some of the remaining Silesians were able to emigrate to West and East Germany to reunite with their families there 29 But some had to wait for years Until 1989 nearly 600 000 Silesians emigrated to Germany Between 1945 and 1949 millions of ethnic Poles from the former pre 1939 eastern Poland especially Lviv Volhynia Podolia Vilnius etc and central Poland moved into Silesia particularly in Lower Silesia Since the end of Communist rule in Poland there have been calls for greater political representation for the Silesian ethnic minority In 1997 a Katowice court of law registered the Union of People of Silesian Nationality ZLNS as the political representative organization of the Silesian ethnic minority but after two months the registration was revoked by a regional court 30 According to M E Sharpe Silesians inhabiting Poland are considered to belong to a Polish ethnographic group and they speak a dialect of Polish United States Immigration Commission also counted Silesian as one of the dialects of Polish 31 As a result of German influence 32 33 Silesians have been influenced by German culture 25 Many German and their descendants who inhabited both Lower and Upper Silesia have been displaced to Germany in 1945 47 Language editMain article Silesian language The Slavic Silesian language 34 often called Upper Silesian is spoken by the Silesian ethnic group or nationality inside Polish Upper Silesia According to the last census in Poland 2011 some 509 000 35 people declared Silesian to be their native language however as many as 817 000 people declared themselves to be of Silesian nationality not necessarily speaking Silesian even though the Silesian nationality has not been recognized by Polish governments since its creation in 1945 There is some contention over whether Silesian is a dialect or a language in its own right Most Polish linguists consider Silesian to be a prominent regional dialect of Polish However many Silesians regard it to be a separate language belonging to the West Slavic branch of Slavic languages together with Polish and other Lechitic languages such as Upper and Lower Sorbian Czech and Slovak In July 2007 the Silesian language was officially recognized by the Library of Congress and SIL International The language was attributed an ISO code SZL The first official dictation contest of the Silesian language took place in August 2007 Although the German language is still spoken in Silesia as it has a sizable minority of speakers in the Opole Voivodship in Poland the vast majority of native speakers were expelled during or after 1945 Therefore the number of German speakers in the region was radically and significantly decreased after World War II even though the Germans had settled there for centuries The Silesian German dialect is a distinct variety of East Central German with some West Slavic influence likely caused by centuries of contact between Germans and Slavs in the region the dialect is related to contemporary Saxon in some ways The Silesian German dialect is often misleading referred to as Lower Silesian in the German language The usage of this dialect appears to be decreasing as most Silesian Germans prefer either Standard German or even Polish Historical data editPrussian Lower Silesia edit In year 1819 the Breslau Regency had 833 253 inhabitants the majority of whom 755 553 90 were German speakers with a Polish speaking minority numbering 66 500 8 as well as 3 900 Czechs 1 and 7 300 Jews 1 36 The Liegnitz Regency was inhabited by Germans with a small Sorbian minority Table 1 Ethno linguistic structure of Prussian Silesia in early 19th century 1800 1825 Ethnic group acc G Hassel 36 acc S Plater 37 acc T Ladogorski 38 Germans 1 561 570 75 6 1 550 000 70 5 1 303 300 74 6Poles 444 000 21 5 600 000 27 3 401 900 23 0Sorbs 24 500 1 2 30 000 1 4 900 0 1Czechs 5 500 0 3 32 600 1 9Moravians 12 000 0 6Jews 16 916 0 8 20 000 0 9 8 900 0 5Population c 2 1 million 100 c 2 2 million 100 c 1 8 million 100Prussian Upper Silesia edit The earliest exact census figures on ethnolinguistic or national structure Nationalverschiedenheit of the Prussian part of Upper Silesia come from year 1819 The last pre WW1 general census figures available are from 1910 if not including the 1911 census of school children Sprachzahlung unter den Schulkindern which revealed a higher percent of Polish speakers among school children than the 1910 census among the general populace Figures Table 1 show that large demographic changes took place between 1819 and 1910 with the region s total population quadrupling the percent of German speakers increasing significantly and that of Polish speakers declining considerably Also the total land area in which Polish language was spoken as well as the land area in which it was spoken by the majority declined between 1790 and 1890 39 Polish authors before 1918 estimated the number of Poles in Prussian Upper Silesia as slightly higher than according to official German censuses 32 Table 1 Numbers of Polish German and other inhabitants Regierungsbezirk Oppeln 40 41 42 Year 1819 1828 1831 1834 1837 1840 1843 1846 1852 1855 1858 1861 1867 1890 1900 1905 1910Polish 377 100 67 2 418 837 61 1 443 084 62 0 468 691 62 6 495 362 62 1 525 395 58 6 540 402 58 1 568 582 58 1 584 293 58 6 590 248 58 7 612 849 57 3 665 865 59 1 742 153 59 8 918 728 58 2 1 048 230 56 1 1 158 805 57 0 Census monolingual Polish 1 169 340 53 0 43 or up to 1 560 000 together with bilinguals 32 German 162 600 29 0 255 483 37 3 257 852 36 1 266 399 35 6 290 168 36 3 330 099 36 8 348 094 37 4 364 175 37 2 363 990 36 5 366 562 36 5 406 950 38 1 409 218 36 3 457 545 36 8 566 523 35 9 684 397 36 6 757 200 37 2 884 045 40 0 Other 21 503 3 8 10 904 1 6 13 254 1 9 13 120 1 8 12 679 1 6 41 570 4 6 42 292 4 5 45 736 4 7 49 445 4 9 48 270 4 8 49 037 4 6 51 187 4 6 41 611 3 4 92 480 5 9 135 519 7 3 117 651 5 8 Total population 2 207 981Plebiscite in Prussian Upper Silesia edit Main article Upper Silesia plebiscite In the 1921 plebiscite 40 6 of eligible voters people over 20 years old a minimum age that favoured the German speaking population whose median age was greater than that of Polish speakers of Upper Silesia according to censuses of 1900 1910 44 decided to secede from Germany and become Polish citizens 45 In total over seven hundred towns and villages voted in favour of Poland especially in the counties of Pszczyna 46 Rybnik 47 Tarnowskie Gory 48 Toszek Gliwice 49 Strzelce Opolskie 50 Bytom 51 Katowice 52 Lubliniec 53 Zabrze 54 Raciborz 55 Olesno 56 Kozle 57 and Opole 58 Historiography editSee also List of Slavic studies journalsSee also editSilesian uprising List of Silesians People by city in SilesiaExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Silesians Tomasz Kamusella The Szlonzoks and their Language Between Germany Poland and Szlonzokian Nationalism The Silesian Museum The Architecture of IdentityReferences edit Volkszahlung vom 27 Mai 1970 Germany West Statistisches Bundesamt Kohlhammer Verlag 1972 OCLC Number 760396 a b Przynaleznosc narodowo etniczna ludnosci wyniki spisu ludnosci i mieszkan 2021 Retrieved 2021 04 11 a b Narodnost Census 2021 in Czech Czech Statistical Office Retrieved 8 December 2022 Bilancia podľa narodnosti a pohlavia SR oblast kraj okres m v om7002rr in Slovak Statistics of Slovakia Retrieved 31 July 2019 Dillingham William Paul Folkmar Daniel Folkmar Elnora 1911 Dictionary of Races or Peoples Washington D C Washington Government Printing Office p 128 Kunce Aleksandra 2019 Being at Home in a Place The Philosophy of Localness PDF Elipsa pp 41 112 ISBN 978 83 8017 270 8 Narodnost ve scitani lidu v ceskych zemich PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2009 10 07 Retrieved 2012 08 16 Archived copy www greekhelsinki gr Archived from the original on 6 April 2003 Retrieved 15 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Gorny Slask szczegolny przypadek kulturowy en Upper Silesia special case of cultural Miroslawa Blaszczak Waclawik Wojciech Blasiak Tomasz Nawrocki University of Warsaw 1990 p 63 Polityka antyniemiecka na Gornym Slasku w latach 1945 1950 Bernard Linek Opole 2000 ISBN 978 83 7126 142 8 Opole county Powiatopolski pl 2011 05 25 Retrieved 2012 08 16 R Zerelik in M Czplinski red Historia Slaska Wroclaw 2007 p 34 37 ISBN 978 83 229 2872 1 R Zerelik in M Czplinski red Historia Slaska Wroclaw 2007 p 37 38 ISBN 978 83 229 2872 1 a b R Zerelik in M Czplinski red Historia Slaska Wroclaw 2007 p 40 ISBN 978 83 229 2872 1 Raymond Breton National Survival in Dependent Societies Social Change in Canada and Poland McGill Queen s Press MQUP 1990 p 106 ISBN 0 88629 127 5 Google Books Charles William Previte Orton The Shorter Cambridge Medieval History Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1962 V II p 744 ISBN 0 521 09976 5 Google Books a b V I Kozlov in Regina E Holloman Serghei A Arutiunov ed Perspectives on Ethnicity Walter de Gruyter 1978 p 391 ISBN 311080770X 9783110807707 Google Books Raymond Breton W Kwasniewicz National Survival in Dependent Societies Social Change in Canada and Poland McGill Queen s Press MQUP 1990 p 106 ISBN 0 88629 127 5 Google Books S Arnold M Zychowski Outline history of Poland From the beginning of the state to the present time Warsaw 1962 p 7 11 Google Books John Blacking Anna Czekanowska Polish Folk Music Slavonic Heritage Polish Tradition Contemporary Trends Cambridge University Press 2006 p 3 ISBN 0 521 02797 7 Google Books same conclusions in Mark Salter Jonathan Bousfield Poland Rough Guides 2002 p 675 ISBN 1 85828 849 5 Google Books S Rosik in W Wrzesinski red Historia Dolnego Slaska Wroclaw 2006 p 49 ISBN 978 83 229 2763 2 S Rosik in W Wrzesinski red Historia Dolnego Slaska Wroclaw 2006 p 53 54 ISBN 978 83 229 2763 2 a b R Zerelik in M Czplinski red Historia Slaska Wroclaw 2007 p 21 22 ISBN 978 83 229 2872 1 Badstubner Ernst 2005 Dehio Handbuch der Kunstdenkmaler in Polen Schlesien Dietmar Popp Andrzej Tomaszewski Dethard von Winterfeld Munchen Berlin Deutscher Kunstverlag 2005 p 4 ISBN 3 422 03109 X M Czaplinski in M Czaplinski red Historia Slaska Wroclaw 2007 s 290 ISBN 978 83 229 2872 1 a b c P Eberhardt Ethnic Groups and Population Changes in Twentieth century Central Eastern Europe History Data and Analysis M E Sharpe 2003 p 166 ISBN 0765618338 9780765618337 Google books David M Smith Enid Wistrich Regional Identity and Diversity in Europe Experience in Wales Silesia and Flanders The Federal Trust for Education amp Research 2008 p 65 ISBN 1903403871 9781903403877 Google books P Eberhardt Ethnic Groups and Population Changes in Twentieth century Central Eastern Europe History Data and Analysis M E Sharpe 2003 p 166 ISBN 0765618338 9780765618337 Google books Kamusella Tomasz November 2005 Doing It Our Way Transitions Online Retrieved 2006 07 25 Bundeszentrale fur politische Bildung in German Bpb de 2005 03 15 Retrieved 2012 08 16 Zgoda Swietochlowice labour camp history and list of the dead ipn gov pl Dillingham William Paul Folkmar Daniel Folkmar Elnora 1911 Dictionary of Races or Peoples United States Immigration Commission 1907 1910 Washington D C Washington Government Printing Office pp 105 128 a b c Kozicki Stanislas 1918 The Poles under Prussian rule Toronto London Polish Press Bur pp 2 3 Weinhold Karl 1887 Die Verbreitung und die Herkunft der Deutschen in Schlesien The Spread and the Origin of Germans in Silesia in German Stuttgart J Engelhorn Dillingham William Paul Folkmar Daniel Folkmar Elnora 1911 Dictionary of Races or Peoples United States Immigration Commission 1907 1910 Washington D C Washington Government Printing Office pp 104 105 Central Statistical Office of Poland 2012 07 26 Jezyk uzywany w domu Narodowy Spis Powszechny Ludnosci i Mieszkan 2011 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 08 16 a b Georg Hassel 1823 Statistischer Umriss der sammtlichen europaischen und der vornehmsten aussereuropaischen Staaten in Hinsicht ihrer Entwickelung Grosse Volksmenge Finanz und Militarverfassung tabellarisch dargestellt Erster Heft Welcher die beiden grossen Machte Osterreich und Preussen und den Deutschen Staatenbund darstellt in German Verlag des Geographischen Instituts Weimar pp 33 34 Nationalverschiedenheit 1819 Plater Stanislaw 1825 Jeografia wschodniey czesci Europy czyli opis krajow przez wielorakie narody slawianskie zamieszkanych obeymujacy Prussy Xieztwo Poznanskie Szlask Pruski Gallicya Rzeczpospolite Krakowska Krolestwo Polskie i Litwe in Polish Wroclaw Wilhelm Bogumil Korn p 60 Ladogorski Tadeusz 1966 Ludnosc in Historia Slaska vol II 1763 1850 part 1 1763 1806 in Polish Wroclaw edited by W Dlugoborski p 150 Joseph Partsch 1896 Die Sprachgrenze 1790 und 1890 Schlesien eine Landeskunde fur das deutsche Volk T 1 Das ganze Land in German Breslau Verlag Ferdinand Hirt pp 364 367 Georg Hassel 1823 Statistischer Umriss der sammtlichen europaischen und der vornehmsten aussereuropaischen Staaten in Hinsicht ihrer Entwickelung Grosse Volksmenge Finanz und Militarverfassung tabellarisch dargestellt Erster Heft Welcher die beiden grossen Machte Osterreich und Preussen und den Deutschen Staatenbund darstellt in German Verlag des Geographischen Instituts Weimar p 34 Nationalverschiedenheit 1819 Polen 377 100 Deutsche 162 600 Mahrer 12 000 Juden 8 000 Tschechen 1 600 Gesamtbevolkerung 561 203 Paul Weber 1913 Die Polen in Oberschlesien eine statistische Untersuchung in German Berlin Verlagsbuchhandlung von Julius Springer Kalisch Johannes Bochinski Hans 1958 Stosunki narodowosciowe na Slasku w swietle relacji pruskich urzednikow z roku 1882 PDF Slaski Kwartalnik Historyczny Sobotka Leipzig 13 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 02 01 Paul Weber 1913 Die Polen in Oberschlesien eine statistische Untersuchung in German Berlin Verlagsbuchhandlung von Julius Springer p 27 Lakomy Ludwik 1936 Plebiscyt Gornoslaski 1921 20 III 1936 Wydawnictwo pamiatkowe w 15 letnia rocznice 54731 III in Polish Katowice Drukarnia Merkur 33 35 Oberschlesien Volksabstimmung 1920 und 1922 Gonschior de Retrieved 10 January 2018 Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921 Pless Archived 2015 05 02 at the Wayback Machine Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921 Rybnik Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921 Tarnowitz Archived 2014 02 01 at the Wayback Machine Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921 Gleiwitz und Tost Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921 Gross Strehlitz Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921 Beuthen Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921 Kattowitz Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921 Lublinitz Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921 Hindenburg Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921 Ratibor Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921 Rosenberg Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921 Cosel Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Die Volksabstimmung in Oberschlesien 1921 Oppeln Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Silesians amp oldid 1184485263, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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