Romanians in Bulgaria explained

Group:Romanians in Bulgaria
Population:891 (2011 census; restricted exclusively to those who declared Romanian ethnicity); 1,643 (2021 census; including all groups designated as "Vlach-speakers", i.e. Romanians, Aromanians and Vlax and Boyash Gypsies)[1]
Popplace:Northern Bulgaria, primarily along the Danube
Langs:Romanian (native), Bulgarian
Rels:Eastern Orthodoxy (Bulgarian Orthodox Church and Romanian Orthodox Church)
Related:Aromanians in Bulgaria

The Romanians in Bulgaria (Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan: români or Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan: rumâni; Bulgarian: румънци, rumŭntsi, or Bulgarian: власи, vlasi), are a small ethnic minority in Bulgaria. In the country, Romanians live in several northern regions, mostly along the Danube. This includes a region between the city of Vidin and the Timok river; these Romanians form a continuous community with the Romanian community in the Timok Valley of Serbia. Another region with a high density of Romanians is located between the towns of Oryahovo and Svishtov. Another goes from Tutrakan to the Bulgaria–Romania border at Northern Dobruja. There also are scattered groups of Romanians within the interior of Bulgaria, such as in Pleven or around Vratsa. The Romanians in Bulgaria are not recognized as a national minority, and they lack minority rights such as schools or churches in their own Romanian language. Many are subject to assimilation.[2]

In Bulgaria, the local Romanians are commonly referred to as "Vlachs". This term is also applied to the Aromanians of the country,[3] as well as to Romanian-speaking Boyash Gypsies.[4] The German linguist Gustav Weigand dealt in the most detailed and concrete way with the Vlach population south of the Danube. In 1905 he undertook a special trip through Bulgaria to establish where the Vlach settlements are located and to characterize their language. According to Weigand, the largest group of Vlach population moved to the Bulgarian lands in the 1830s, when the so-called Organic statute (1831), was introduced in Walachia, by virtue of which men were subject to mandatory military service. Using the data from the population census in the Principality of Bulgaria in 1900, he pointed out that, at the end of the 19th century, 86,000 Vlachs were registered in Bulgaria, of which 11,708 (about 15%) were born north of the river, which means that they moved south of the Danube in the second half of the 19th century.[5]

The Romanians of Bulgaria have several organizations of their own, one of them being the AVE Union of Romanian Ethnicities of Bulgaria (Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan: AVE Uniunea Etnicilor Români din Bulgaria), presided by Ivo Gheorghiev, which often organizes cultural events.[6] One example are celebrations for the Romanian Language Day organized in Vidin by this organization.[7] According to the Treaty of Craiova of 1940, Bulgaria and Romania exchanged a large part of the minorities living on their territory.[8]

The following are historical census results showing the presence of Romanians in Bulgaria:

 
Year
"Vlachs"Romanians
188149,063[9]  
190573,773
191079,429
192669,080
193716,405
200110,566 1,088
20113,684[10] 891
20211643


Out of 3,598 self-identified Vlachs, 165 declared their mother tongue as Bulgarian, 1,462 as Vlach, 1,964 as Romanian and 4 as "other" in 2011.Out of 866 self-identified Romanians, 37 declared their mother tongue as Bulgarian, 3 as Vlach, and 822 as Romanian in 2011.[10]

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://www.nsi.bg/sites/default/files/files/publications/StatBook_Census2021.pdf Official data from Bulgarian census in 2021, p. 38. (in Bulgarian).
  2. Web site: CERCETĂRI ETNOGRAFICE LA ROMÂNII DINTRE KOZLODUI ȘI ȘIȘTOV. 15 November 2023.
  3. News: Oltenii din Bulgaria. Adam. Popescu. Evenimentul Zilei. 15 January 2007. ro.
  4. Book: Sorescu Marinković, Annemarie. The Romance-speaking Balkans: Language and the Politics of Identity. https://brill.com/view/book/9789004456174/BP000009.xml. "What language do we speak?" The Bayash in the Balkans and mother tongue education. Annemarie. Sorescu Marinković. Mihai. Dragnea. Thede. Kahl. Blagovest. Nyagulov. Donald L.. Dyer. Angelo. Costanzo. Brill Publishers. Brill's Studies in Language, Cognition and Culture. 29. 207–232. 2021. 9789004452770. 10.1163/9789004456174_010. 242757808.
  5. https://balgarskaetnografia.com/grupi-i-obshtosti/etnicheski-grupi-i-obshtnosti/vlasi.html Валентина Васева, Етнически групи и етно-религиозни общности в България. Власи.
  6. https://rgnpress.ro/2022/05/02/uniunea-etnicilor-romani-din-bulgaria-ave-a-organizat-la-vidin-lansarea-cartii-calatorii-identitare-romanii-megiesi/ Uniunea Etnicilor Români din Bulgaria AVE a organizat la Vidin lansarea cărții "Călătorii identitare: Românii megieși"
  7. News: Ziua Limbii Române, sărbătorită în Vidin, Bulgaria. Raluca. Ungureanu. Agenția de presă RADOR. 24 August 2016. ro.
  8. Deletant, Dennis (2006). Hitler's forgotten ally: Ion Antonescu and his regime, Romania 1940-1944. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 376. .
  9. General results of the population census of 1 January 1881, Statistics of the Principality of Bulgaria, p.11
  10. Web site: Census Bulgaria 2011 . 2013-03-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151219105400/http://censusresults.nsi.bg/Census/Reports/2/2/R9.aspx . 2015-12-19 . dead. bg .