Ethnic groups in Yugoslavia

The ethnic groups in Yugoslavia were grouped into constitutive peoples and minorities.

Ethnic Groups in Second Yugoslavia 1981

  Serbs (36.3%)
  Croats (19.7%)
  Muslims (8.9%)
  Slovenes (7.8%)
  Albanians (7.7%)
  Macedonians (6.0%)
  Yugoslavs (5.4%)
  Montenegrins (2.6%)
  Hungarians (1.9%)
  Others (3.9%)

First Yugoslavia

"Keep/Protect Yugoslavia" (Čuvajte Jugoslaviju), a variant of the alleged last words of King Alexander, in an illustration of Yugoslav peoples dancing the kolo.

The constituent peoples of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (1918–29), as evident by the official name of the state (it was colloquially known as "Yugoslavia", however) were the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.

The 1921 population census recorded numerous ethnic groups. Based on language, the "Yugoslavs" (collectively Serbs, Croats, Slovenes and Slavic Muslims) constituted 82.87 percent of the country's population.

Identity politics failed to assimilate the South Slavic peoples of Yugoslavia into a Yugoslav identity.[1] During the reign of King Aleksandar I, a modern single Yugoslav identity was unsuccessfully propagated to erase the particularistic identities.[1]

Second Yugoslavia

Communist Yugoslav terminology used the word "nation" (nacija, narod) for the country's constitutive peoples (konstitutivne nacije), that is, for the Serbs, Croats, Slovenes, Muslims, Macedonians, and Montenegrins. The term "nationality" (narodnost) was used to describe the status of the Albanians and Hungarians, and other non-constitutive peoples, distinguishing them from the nations, and "national minorities" (nacionalne manjine) which they were previously described as.[2]

Following the Liberation of Yugoslavia, the Communist Party of Yugoslavia reorganized the country into federal republics (Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Slovenia, Macedonia, and Montenegro). Furthermore, two autonomous provinces were created within the Serbian republic, Vojvodina (inhabited by a Hungarian minority) and Kosovo and Metohija (inhabited by an Albanian minority), based on the significant presence of minorities. This minority criterion (a combination of historical and ethnic criteria) was only applied to Serbia (and not Italian-inhabited Istria, or Serb-inhabited Krajina, for example).[3] The presence of constitutive peoples in territories other than their "nation-state" (i.e. Serbs in Croatia) was rejected as a basis for potential autonomous provinces, as Communist rhetoric maintained that each constituent people had a home republic, and was therefore unable to obtain autonomy status in another republic despite significant presence.[3]

After the war, the slogan "Brotherhood and unity" designated the official policy of inter-ethnic relations in the country. The policy prescribed that Yugoslavia's peoples were equal groups that coexist peacefully in the federation.

The 1974 Yugoslav Constitution provided for equality of the constituent peoples and minorities.

Nationalism

Yugoslavism

Censuses

Second Yugoslavia

Ethnic groups in Yugoslavia, by majority in municipalities, according to the 1981 census (in Serbo-Croatian and English).
Group1953196119711981
Serbs7,065,923 (41.7%)7,806,152 (42.7%)8,143,246 (39.7%)8,136,578 (36.3%)
Croats3,975,550 (23.5%)4,293,809 (23.1%)4,526,782 (22.1%)4,428,135 (19.7%)
Muslims (nationality)998,698 (5.9%)972,940 (5.2%)1,729,932 (8.4%)2,000,034 (8.9%)
Slovenes1,487,100 (8.8%)1,589,211 (8.6%)1,678,032 (8.2%)1,753,605 (7.8%)
Albanians754,245 (4.5%)914,733 (4.9%)1,309,523 (6.4%)1,731,252 (7.7%)
Macedonians893,427 (5.3%)1,045,513 (5.3%)1,194,784 (5.8%)1,341,420 (6.0%)
YugoslavsN/A317,124 (1.7%)273,077 (1.3%)1,216,463 (5.4%)
Montenegrins466,093 (2.7%)513,832 (2.8%)508,843 (2.5%)577,298 (2.6%)
Hungarians502,175 (3.0%)504,369 (2.7%)477,374 (2.3%)426,865 (1.9%)
Others[a]

Terminology

  • narod (pl.narodi)
  • nacija (pl.nacije)
  • nacionalnost (pl.nacionalnosti)
  • narodnost (pl.narodnosti)

Annotations

  1. ^ Including ethnic groups lesser than 1% (1981 census), such as Romani, Turks, Slovaks, Romanians, Bulgarians, Vlachs, Ruthenians, Czechs, Italians, Ukrainians, Germans, Russians, Jews, Poles, and Greeks. There were also "others" and "unspecified".

References

Sources

  • Jović, Dejan (2009). Yugoslavia: A State that Withered Away. Purdue University Press. ISBN 978-1-55753-495-8.
  • Nielsen, Christian Axboe (2014). Making Yugoslavs: Identity in King Aleksandar's Yugoslavia. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-2750-5.
  • Sobolevski, Mihael (2000). H.-G. Fleck, I. Graovac, eds. "Nacionalne manjine u Kraljevini Jugoslaviji". Dijalog povjesničara–istoričara. 2: 395–410.
  • Stojković, L.; Martić, M. (1952). National minorities in Yugoslavia. Jugoslavija.
  • Trbovich, Ana S. (2008). A Legal Geography of Yugoslavia's Disintegration. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-533343-5.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.