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  2. German minority in Poland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_minority_in_Poland

    Example of bilingual labeling in German and Polish on the town hall of the Polish village of Cisek. The registered German minority in Poland (Polish: Mniejszość niemiecka w Polsce; German: Deutsche Minderheit in Polen) is a group of German people that inhabit Poland, being the largest minority of the country. As of 2021, it had the population ...

  3. Silesians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silesians

    About 126,000 people declared themselves as members of the German minority (58,000 declared it jointly with Polish nationality), making it the third largest minority group in the country (93% of Germans living in Poland are in the Polish parts of Silesia). 31,301 people declared Silesian nationality in the Czech National Census of 2021 ...

  4. History of Germans in Poland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Germans_in_Poland

    The remaining German minority in Poland (152,897 people were registered in the 2002 census) enjoys minority rights according to Polish minority law. There are German speakers throughout Poland, and most of the Germans live in the Opole Voivodship in Silesia. Bilingual signs are posted in some towns of the region. In addition, there are ...

  5. Ethnic minorities in Poland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnic_minorities_in_Poland

    Before the war, there were 3,474,000 Jews in Poland. Those who escaped mostly went to the United States, Israel, Great Britain or Latin America. Many survivors willingly emigrated or were expelled by the Communists after the war. In the 2002 census, there were 1,055 Jewish people in Poland. [10] In the 2011 census, that number increased to ...

  6. Poles in Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poles_in_Germany

    Poles in Germany (German: Polen) are the second largest Polish diaspora (Polonia) in the world and the biggest in Europe.Estimates of the number of Poles living in Germany vary from 2 million [3] [4] [5] to about 3 million people living that might be of Polish descent.

  7. Silesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silesia

    However, they could not return, and those who had stayed were expelled and a new Polish population, including people displaced from former Eastern Poland annexed by the Soviet Union and from Central Poland, joined the surviving native Polish inhabitants of the region. After 1945 and in 1946, nearly all of the 4.5 million Silesians of German ...

  8. Flight and expulsion of Germans (1944–1950) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_and_expulsion_of...

    The West German figure for Poland is broken out as 939,000 monolingual German and 432,000 bi-lingual Polish/German. [34] The West German figure for Poland includes 60,000 in Trans-Olza which was annexed by Poland in 1938. In the 1930 census, this region was included in the Czechoslovak population. [34]

  9. German diaspora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_diaspora

    The remaining German minority in Poland (109,000 people were registered in the 2011 census [92]) enjoys minority rights according to Polish minority law. There are German speakers throughout Poland, and most of the Germans live in the Opole Voivodeship in Silesia. Bilingual signs are posted in some towns of the region.