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- This article is about the Germans as an ethnic group (also refer to Ethnic Germans). For information on citizens or nationals of Germany, see demographics of Germany; for information on German speakers, see German language.
Regions with significant populations | |
---|---|
Germany: 68 million United States: 73,000 | |
Languages | |
German, English ( USA, Canada, Australia ), other. | |
Religion | |
Catholicism, Lutheranism, Atheism, Agnosticism, others. | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Dutch, Flemish, Frisians, Danes, other Germanic peoples |
Germans (German: die Deutschen) are defined as an ethnic group, or Volk, in the sense of sharing a common German culture, speaking the German language as a mother tongue and being of German descent. Germans are also defined by their national citizenship, which had - in the course of German history varying relations to the above (German culture), the influence of subcultures and society in general (Also refer to Imperial Germans, Federal Germans etc. and Demographics of Germany).
While there are approximately 100 million native German speakers in the world, about 75 million consider themselves Germans. There are an additional number of 20 to 70 million people of German ancestry (mainly in the USA, Brazil and Canada) who are not native speakers of German and who may still consider themselves ethnic Germans, so that the total number of Germans worldwide lies between 75 and 160 million, according to the criteria applied (native speakers, single-ancestry ethnic Germans or partial German ancestry).
History of the term
The English term as used to day translates German Deutsch. It is derived from Latin Germanus and has used since the 16th century symonymously with "Teuton", after teutonicus used in Latin since the 9th century to refer to the German language, from the name of the Teutones. Before the 16th century, the terms used in English were Almain, from the name of the Alemanni, or Dutch, after the native deutsch. The diffuse nature of the term mirrors the heterogenous nature of the Holy Roman Empire, from the 16th century also known as "Holy Roman Empire of the German nation". Until the rise of nation-states in the 19th century, the term denoted speakers of continental West Germanic. The linguistic affiliation of the English language itself was hotly debated at the time, and English academia was split into "Germanophiles" who preferred to include English as one of the "Germanic" or "Teutonic" languages, and "Scandophiles" who preferred to classify English as "Scandinavian" (now known as North Germanic).
With the rise of the German Empire as a threat to British interests in Hamburg, the "Germanophile" position came out of fashion and British romanticism turned to Scandinavia (see Viking revival). "German" from this period refers to the German Empire, already to the exclusion of Austria, the Netherlands and Switzerland. Usage of Dutch was narrowed to refer to the Netherlands exclusively during the early 16th century.
Ethnic Germans
The term Ethnic Germans may be used in several ways. It may serve to distinguish German citizens of "foreign" immigrant heritage, or it may indicate members of the German culture living as minorities in other nations. In English usage, but less often in German, Ethnic Germans may be used for assimilated descendents of German emigrants. A more controversial usage of the term Ethnic Germans refers to people with German as their mother tongue and culture but citizens of other countries than the Federal Republic of Germany, as for instance Austria.
Ethnic Germans form an important minority group in several countries in central and eastern Europe (Poland, Hungary, Romania, Russia) as well as in Namibia and in southern Brazil (German-Brazilian).
For different reasons, some groups may be noted as "Ethnic Germans" despite no longer having German as their mother tongue or belonging to a distinct German culture. Until the 1990s two million Ethnic Germans lived throughout the former Soviet Union, especially in Russia and Kazakhstan. In the United States 1990 census, 57 million people are fully or partly of German ancestry, forming the largest single ethnic group in the country. Most Americans of German descent live in the Mid-Atlantic states (especially Pennsylvania) and the northern Midwest (especially in Iowa, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin, Illinois, North Dakota, South Dakota, and eastern Missouri.)
Origin
The Germans are a Germanic people. Ethnographers hypothesize that all Germanic speakers expanded from Jutland and the southwest shores of the Baltic Sea before the Migrations Period. Prior to that time, their ancestors may have migrated slowly from the Black Sea region and arrived in southern Scandinavia. Assimilation with other peoples is postulated, both with the (Fenno-Ugric) prior inhabitants of Scandinavia and with peoples encountered on their way from Asia. Celtic peoples were then either assimilated, exterminated, or driven out during the expansion southwards from the Baltic. Later in history, Germans - as most other European people - slightly mixed with bordering ethnic groups such as Romans and Slavs.
For the global genetic make-up of the Germans and other peoples, see also: and
Expansion
After the Migrations Period, Slavs expanded westwards at the same time as Germans expanded eastwards. The result was German colonization as far East as Romania, and Slavic colonization as far west as present-day Lübeck (at the Baltic Sea), Hamburg (connected to the North Sea), and along the river Elbe and its tributary Saale further South. After Christianization, the superior organization of the Catholic Church lent the upper hand for a German expansion at the expense of the Slavs, giving the medieval Drang nach Osten as a result. At the same time, naval innovations led to a German domination of trade in the Baltic Sea and Central–Eastern Europe through the Hanseatic League. Along the trade routes, Hanseatic trade stations became centers of Germanness where German urban law (Stadtrecht) was promoted by the presence of large, relatively wealthy German populations and their influence on the worldly powers.
This means that people whom we today often consider "Germans", with a common culture and worldview very different from that of the surrounding rural peoples, colonized as far north of present-day Germany as Bergen (in Norway), Stockholm (in Sweden), and Vyborg (now in Russia). At the same time, it's important to note that the Hanseatic League was not exclusively German in any ethnic sense. Many towns who joined the league were outside of the Holy Roman Empire, and some of them ought not at all be characterized as German.
Also the "German" Holy Roman Empire was not in any way exclusively German, and its course became much different from that of France or Great Britain. The Thirty Years' War confirmed its dissolution; the Napoleonic Wars gave it its coup de grâce.
Ethnic nationalism
The reaction evoked in the decades after the Napoleonic Wars was a strong ethnic nationalism that emphasized, and sometimes overemphasized, the cultural bond between Germans. Later alloyed with the high standing and world-wide influence of German science at the end of the 19th century, and to some degree enhanced by Bismarck's military successes and the following 40 years of almost perpetual economic boom (the Gründerzeit), it gave the Germans an impression of cultural supremacy, particularly compared to the Slavs. However, also Germans had to endure their share of prejudice, this was particularly evident in the post-war expulsion of not only Nazi but also non-Nazi Germans from their homes in Eastern Europe.
The Divided Germany
The idea that Germany is a divided nation is not new and not peculiar. Foreign powers had long interceeded in German affairs, pitting one German principality against the other. Since the Peace of Westphalia, Germany has been "one nation split in many countries". The Austrian–Prussian split, confirmed when Austria remained outside of the 1871 created Imperial Germany, was only the most prominent example. The initial unification of Germany came as a great shock to these foreign powers, who have been trying to undo Germany as a national entity ever since. Most recently, the division between East Germany and West Germany kept the idea alive.
The beginnings of the divided Germany may be traced back much further; to a Roman occupied Germania in the west and to Free Germania in the east. Starkly different ideologies have many times been developed due to conquerors and occupiers of sections of Germany. Poets talked of Zwei Seelen in einem Herz (Two souls in one heart).
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 1870, Prussia attracted even Bavaria in the Franco-Prussian War and the creation of the German Empire as a German nation-state, effectively excluding the multi-ethnic Austrian Habsburg monarchy. From this time on, the connotation of Germans came to shift gradually from "speakers of the German language" to "Imperial Germans."
The dissolution of the Austrian-Hungarian Empire after World War I led to a strong desire of the population of the new Republic of Austria to be integrated into Germany. This was, however, prevented by the Treaty of Versailles.
Trying to overcome the shortfall of Chancellor Bismarck's creation, the Nazis attempted to unite "all Germans" in one realm. This was welcome in parts of Czechoslovakia, Austria, Poland, Danzig and Western Lithuania, but met resistance among the Swiss and the Dutch, who mostly were perfectly content with their perception of separate nations established in 1648.The Dutch especially as they did not speak or considered themselves German.
Before World War II, most Austrians considered themselves German and denied the existence of a distinct Austrian ethnic identity. It was only after the defeat of Nazi Germany 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, polls indicate that no more than ten percent of the German-speaking Austrians see themselves as part of a larger German nation linked by blood or language.
Religion
The Protestant Reformation started in the German cultural sphere, and the German identity includes both Protestants and Catholics. The groups are about equally represented in Germany, contrary to the belief that it is mostly Protestant. In terms of Protestants, the Lutherans are well represented by the Germans. The late 19th century saw a strong movement among the Jewry in Germany and Austria to assimilate and define themselves as à priori Germans, i.e. as Germans of Jewish faith (a similar movement occurred in Hungary). In conservative circles, this was not always embraced, and for the Nazis it was an anathema. The Nazi rule led to the annihilation of almost all domestic Jews. Today Germany attempts to successfully integrate the Gastarbeiter and later arrived refugees from ex-Yugoslavia, who often are Muslims.
Minorities
In recent years, the German-speaking countries of Europe have been confronted with demographic changes due to decades of immigration. These changes have led to renewed debates (especially in the Federal Republic of Germany) about who should be considered German. Non-ethnic Germans now make up more than 8% of the German population, mostly the descendants of guest workers who arrived in the 1960s and 1970s. Turks, Italians, Greeks, and people from the Balkans in southeast Europe form the largest single groups of non-ethnic Germans in the country.
In addition, a significant number of German citizens (close t
- Note: This includes a large number of Germanized Poles, assimilated in the course of several migration waves- for more information, see Germanization, Ostflucht, Ruhrpolen, Warmiaks, Masurians, Silesians, Polish-Germans.
- According to the United States Census, 2000 , there are some 45 million US citizens claiming German ancestry, including Swiss, Alsatian, Austrian and Transylvania Germans, and 2.95% (c. 8 million) of the US population speak German natively. See also German Americans, Languages in the United States#German.
- The Brazilian Census? reports 1 million Brazilians with German "single-ancestry" and 12 million with partly German ancestry. See German-Brazilian
- 2001 Canadian Census gives 2,742,765 total respondents stating their ethnic origin as partly German, with 705,600 stating "single-ancestry", see List of Canadians by ethnicity.
- mainly in Opole Voivodship, see Demographics of Poland.
- The Australian Bureau of Statistics reports 742,200 people of German ancestry in the 2001 Census. German is spoken by ca. 135,000 , about 105,000 of them Germany-born, see Demographics of Australia
- 112,348 resident aliens as of 2000 , see Demographics of Switzerland.
- 0.9% of the population (2001 census)
- English is today classified as West Germanic, although as within a separate North Sea Germanic subgroup.