Silesians

Silesians

Ethnic group
group=Silesians


poptime=200,000 - 2 million [It is Silesians' theoretical number declaring the Silesian nationality together with number all indigenous occupants of Silesia different the nationality: the Polish, Czech or German nationality. Number this as well span diaspora in whole world. Only in Poland lives about 2 million Silesians (sources: [http://nasz-czas.tripod.com/309/kaszubi.html Weekly "Our Time" Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia] , [http://www.ies.ee/iesp/grabowska.pdf The Institute for European Studies, Ethnological institute of UW] ).]
|popplace=Poland: 173,200 nationality declarations (2002), less than 2 million including Polish nationality declarations
Czech Republic: 10,878 nationality declarations (2001), several hundred thousand including non nationality declarations
Germany: unknown
langs=Silesian, Polish, German, Czech.
rels=Roman Catholicism, Lutheran Protestantism
related=West Slavs, Germanic peoples

Silesians (Silesian: "Ślůnzoki"; _pl. Ślązacy; _cz. Slezané; _de. Schlesier) are the inhabitants of Silesia in Poland, Germany and the Czech Republic.

There has been some debate over whether or not the Silesians (historically Upper Silesians) constitute a distinct ethnic group. In modern history, they have been often pressured to declare themselves to be either German or Polish and embrace the language of the current governing nation. Nevertheless, more than 170,000 people declared Silesian nationality in the Polish national census in 2002, making them the largest minority group in Poland alongside the German minority and more than 10,000 people declared Silesian nationality in the Czech national census in 2001.

The term Silesian can also be applied in a more general manner to describe an inhabitant of Silesia, regardless of ethnicity.

History

Inhabited from time immemorial and exceptionally rich in natural resources, Silesia has been long contested by various peoples, states and principalities. The constant shifting of Silesia between (alphabetically) Austrian, Czech, German and Polish control over several centuries resulted in the multilingual Silesians developing a separate culture that borrowed heavily from (alphabetically) Czech, German and Polish (and vice versa).

In the Middle Ages, Silesia was a Piast duchy, which subsequently became a possession of the Bohemian crown under the Holy Roman Empire in the 14th century and passed with that crown to the Habsburg Monarchy of Austria in 1526. In 1742, most of Silesia was seized by King Frederick the Great of Prussia in the War of the Austrian Succession. This part of Silesia constituted the Province of Silesia (later the Prussian provinces of Upper and Lower Silesia) until 1945.

Following World War II, the vast majority of the region of Silesia was incorporated into Poland, with smaller regions remaining in the German Democrat Republic and Czechoslovakia. Millions of ethnic German Silesians were subsequently expelled, but those Silesians classified by the Polish authorities as "autochthons" or "ethnic Poles insufficiently aware of their Polishness" were allowed to remain, after being sifted out from the ethnic Germans by a process of "national verification". [cite web
last = Kamusella
first = Tomasz
authorlink =
coauthors =
date =
year = 2005
month = November
url = http://www.tol.cz/look/TOL/article.tpl?IdLanguage=1&IdPublication=4&NrIssue=141&NrSection=4&NrArticle=15229
title = Doing It Our Way
format =
work =
pages =
publisher = Transitions Online
accessdate = 2006-07-25
accessyear =
] In order to qualify, it was enough to speak some of the Upper Silesian dialect, or just to have a Slavic-sounding surname. Many such Silesians were allowed to remain in the city of Opole.

During the Communist era, nearly 600,000 Silesians emigrated to West Germany.

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 law court 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.

Language

The Silesian language (or often Upper Silesian) is spoken by the Silesian ethnic group or nationality inside Upper Silesia. According to the last census in Poland (2002), some 60,000 people declared Silesian as their native language.

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

The Lower Silesian dialect of German was (in some cases remains) spoken by all former - or even some few remaining - inhabitants of Lower Silesia.

ee also

*List of Silesians
*

External links

* [http://cadmus.iue.it/dspace/bitstream/1814/1351/1/HEC03-01.pdf Tomasz Kamusella. The Szlonzoks and their Language: Between Germany, Poland and Szlonzokian Nationalism]

References


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