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The provinces of Bulgaria ... are the first-level administrative subdivisions of the country. Since 1999, Bulgaria has been divided ... Population density (/km 2 ...
The first censuses of the Principality of Bulgaria and the autonomous province of Eastern Rumelia in 1880 recorded 31,786 and 17,970 Bulgarian refugees from Macedonia and Ottoman Thrace, respectively, who accounted for 1.38% of the population of the Principality an 2.20% of the population of the autonomous province, respectively.
Population density (people per km 2) by country. This is a list of countries and dependencies ranked by population density, sorted by inhabitants per square kilometre or square mile. The list includes sovereign states and self-governing dependent territories based upon the ISO standard ISO 3166-1.
List of Philippine provinces by population; List of Romanian counties by population; List of federal subjects of Russia by total fertility rate; List of federal subjects of Russia by population; List of South African provinces by population; List of South African provinces by population density; List of Swedish counties by fertility rate; List ...
All first level administrative units with more than five million inhabitants at the last ascertainable date. Also indicated are the administrative center (capital city), the type of administrative unit, the country to which the administrative unit belongs, the land area and the population density per square kilometer of land area.
The Silistra province had a population of 142,000 according to a 2001 census, of which 49.7% were male and 50.3% were female. [8] As of the end of 2009, the population of the province, announced by the Bulgarian National Statistical Institute, numbered 127,659 [2] of which 25.6% are inhabitants aged over 60 years. [9]
[307] [308] Population density is 55–60 per square kilometre (ultimo 2023), almost half the European Union average. [309] Bulgaria is in a state of demographic crisis. [310] [311] It has had negative population growth since 1989, when the post-Cold War economic collapse caused a long-lasting emigration wave. [312]
The province has a territory of 6,449.5 km 2 (2,490.2 sq mi) and a population of 323,552 [1] (as of 2011).It is the third largest in Bulgaria after Burgas and Sofia Provinces and comprises 5.8% of the country's territory.