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Germans

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The Germans (German: die Deutschen) are people of German descent, i.e. ones associating themselves with the heritage of German culture.

The concept of who is a German has varied. Until the 19th century, it denoted the speakers of German, and was a much more distinct concept than that of Germany, the land of the Germans. The Dutch and the Swiss had already split off and shaped separate national identities. The German Swiss, however, retained their cultural identity as Germans, although a specific kind of Germans.

In the 19th century, after the Napoleonic Wars and the fall of the Holy Roman Empire (of the German nation), Austria and Prussia would emerge as two opposite poles in Germany, trying to re-establish the divided German nation. In 1871, Prussia attracted even Bavaria at the founding of her German Empire, and the multi-ethnic Austrian Habsburg monarchy was effectively excluded from the attempt to create a German nation state. From this and on, the connotation of Germans came to shift gradually from "speakers of the German language" to "Imperial Germans" and today "nationals of the Federal Republic of Germany".

Before the second world war, most Austrians considered themselves Germans and denied the existence of a distinct Austrian ethnic identity. It was only after the German defeat in World War II, that this began to change. After the world war, the Austrians increasingly saw themselves as a nation distinct from the other German-speaking areas of Europe, and today no more than 10% of the German-speaking Austrians see themselves as part of a larger German nation ("volk") linked by blood or language.

Ethnic Germans form an important minority group in several Central and Eastern European countries (Poland, Hungary, Romania and the Commonwealth of Independent States) as well as in Namibia and in southern Brazil.

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