Macedonians in the Czech Republic
There is a small community of ethnic Macedonians in the Czech Republic. Among the refugees of the Greek Civil War who were admitted to Czechoslovakia in the late 1940s, roughly 4,000 were of Macedonian ethnicity; they resettled primarily in the Czech portion of the country.[4]
Total population | |
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1,785 [1] – 11,623 [2][3] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Prague | |
Languages | |
Primarily Macedonian and Czech | |
Religion | |
Predominantly Macedonian Orthodox | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Macedonians |
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Macedonians |
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By region or country |
Macedonia (region) |
Diaspora |
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Subgroups and related groups |
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Other topics |
Notes
- census 2007
- Balkan monitor 1996 Archived 2008-07-05 at the Wayback Machine
- (pdf)
- Sloboda 2003
Sources
- Sloboda, Marián (2003), "Řecká a makedonská etnická skupina v Česku: lingvistické aspekty jejich vzniku a vývoje", in Nábělková, M.; Šimková, M. (eds.), Varia X: Zborník materiálov z X. kolokvia mladých jazykovedcov (PDF), Bratislava: Slovenská jazykovedná spoločnosť pri SAV, pp. 103–113, ISBN 80-89037-04-6
gollark: Fortunately, all the genes for tails are still there but commented out.
gollark: Reject cat eyes, use octopus eyes. Or maybe cuttlefish.
gollark: If you change one base pair it probably shouldn't affect more than one protein.
gollark: Each gene makes one protein in normal circumstances as far as I know. A protein is a sequence of animo acids, which are defined by 3 base pairs each.
gollark: Some things are simple and controlled by one gene, like basic hair color and some genetic diseases, but others are horribly complex and have a ton of related genes and environmental factors, like intelligence and height.
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